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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of Whirligigs, by O. Henry
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: Whirligigs
+
+Author: O. Henry
+
+Release Date: January, 1999 [eBook #1595]
+[Most recently updated: June 28, 2023]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+Produced by: anonymous Project Gutenberg Volunteers and Joseph E.
+Loewenstein, M.D.
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHIRLIGIGS ***
+
+
+
+
+Whirligigs
+
+by O. Henry
+
+
+Contents
+
+ CHAPTER I THE WORLD AND THE DOOR
+ CHAPTER II THE THEORY AND THE HOUND
+ CHAPTER III THE HYPOTHESES OF FAILURE
+ CHAPTER IV CALLOWAY’S CODE
+ CHAPTER V A MATTER OF MEAN ELEVATION
+ CHAPTER VI “GIRL”
+ CHAPTER VII SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW
+ CHAPTER VIII THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF
+ CHAPTER IX THE MARRY MONTH OF MAY
+ CHAPTER X A TECHNICAL ERROR
+ CHAPTER XI SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE
+ CHAPTER XII THE WHIRLIGIG OF LIFE
+ CHAPTER XIII A SACRIFICE HIT
+ CHAPTER XIV THE ROADS WE TAKE
+ CHAPTER XV A BLACKJACK BARGAINER
+ CHAPTER XVI THE SONG AND THE SERGEANT
+ CHAPTER XVII ONE DOLLAR’S WORTH
+ CHAPTER XVIII A NEWSPAPER STORY
+ CHAPTER XIX TOMMY’S BURGLAR
+ CHAPTER XX A CHAPARRAL CHRISTMAS GIFT
+ CHAPTER XXI A LITTLE LOCAL COLOUR
+ CHAPTER XXII GEORGIA’S RULING
+ CHAPTER XXIII BLIND MAN’S HOLIDAY
+ CHAPTER XXIV MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES
+
+
+
+
+I
+THE WORLD AND THE DOOR
+
+
+A favourite dodge to get your story read by the public is to assert
+that it is true, and then add that Truth is stranger than Fiction. I do
+not know if the yarn I am anxious for you to read is true; but the
+Spanish purser of the fruit steamer _El Carrero_ swore to me by the
+shrine of Santa Guadalupe that he had the facts from the U. S.
+vice-consul at La Paz—a person who could not possibly have been
+cognizant of half of them.
+
+As for the adage quoted above, I take pleasure in puncturing it by
+affirming that I read in a purely fictional story the other day the
+line: “‘Be it so,’ said the policeman.” Nothing so strange has yet
+cropped out in Truth.
+
+When H. Ferguson Hedges, millionaire promoter, investor and
+man-about-New-York, turned his thoughts upon matters convivial, and
+word of it went “down the line,” bouncers took a precautionary turn at
+the Indian clubs, waiters put ironstone china on his favourite tables,
+cab drivers crowded close to the curbstone in front of all-night cafés,
+and careful cashiers in his regular haunts charged up a few bottles to
+his account by way of preface and introduction.
+
+As a money power a one-millionaire is of small account in a city where
+the man who cuts your slice of beef behind the free-lunch counter rides
+to work in his own automobile. But Hedges spent his money as lavishly,
+loudly and showily as though he were only a clerk squandering a week’s
+wages. And, after all, the bartender takes no interest in your reserve
+fund. He would rather look you up on his cash register than in
+Bradstreet.
+
+On the evening that the material allegation of facts begins, Hedges was
+bidding dull care begone in the company of five or six good
+fellows—acquaintances and friends who had gathered in his wake.
+
+Among them were two younger men—Ralph Merriam, a broker, and Wade, his
+friend.
+
+Two deep-sea cabmen were chartered. At Columbus Circle they hove to
+long enough to revile the statue of the great navigator,
+unpatriotically rebuking him for having voyaged in search of land
+instead of liquids. Midnight overtook the party marooned in the rear of
+a cheap café far uptown.
+
+Hedges was arrogant, overriding and quarrelsome. He was burly and
+tough, iron-gray but vigorous, “good” for the rest of the night. There
+was a dispute—about nothing that matters—and the five-fingered words
+were passed—the words that represent the glove cast into the lists.
+Merriam played the rôle of the verbal Hotspur.
+
+Hedges rose quickly, seized his chair, swung it once and smashed wildly
+down at Merriam’s head. Merriam dodged, drew a small revolver and shot
+Hedges in the chest. The leading roysterer stumbled, fell in a wry
+heap, and lay still.
+
+Wade, a commuter, had formed that habit of promptness. He juggled
+Merriam out a side door, walked him to the corner, ran him a block and
+caught a hansom. They rode five minutes and then got out on a dark
+corner and dismissed the cab. Across the street the lights of a small
+saloon betrayed its hectic hospitality.
+
+“Go in the back room of that saloon,” said Wade, “and wait. I’ll go
+find out what’s doing and let you know. You may take two drinks while I
+am gone—no more.”
+
+At ten minutes to one o’clock Wade returned. “Brace up, old chap,” he
+said. “The ambulance got there just as I did. The doctor says he’s
+dead. You may have one more drink. You let me run this thing for you.
+You’ve got to skip. I don’t believe a chair is legally a deadly weapon.
+You’ve got to make tracks, that’s all there is to it.”
+
+Merriam complained of the cold querulously, and asked for another
+drink. “Did you notice what big veins he had on the back of his hands?”
+he said. “I never could stand—I never could—”
+
+“Take one more,” said Wade, “and then come on. I’ll see you through.”
+
+Wade kept his promise so well that at eleven o’clock the next morning
+Merriam, with a new suit case full of new clothes and hair-brushes,
+stepped quietly on board a little 500-ton fruit steamer at an East
+River pier. The vessel had brought the season’s first cargo of limes
+from Port Limon, and was homeward bound. Merriam had his bank balance
+of $2,800 in his pocket in large bills, and brief instructions to pile
+up as much water as he could between himself and New York. There was no
+time for anything more.
+
+From Port Limon Merriam worked down the coast by schooner and sloop to
+Colon, thence across the isthmus to Panama, where he caught a tramp
+bound for Callao and such intermediate ports as might tempt the
+discursive skipper from his course.
+
+It was at La Paz that Merriam decided to land—La Paz the Beautiful, a
+little harbourless town smothered in a living green ribbon that banded
+the foot of a cloud-piercing mountain. Here the little steamer stopped
+to tread water while the captain’s dory took him ashore that he might
+feel the pulse of the cocoanut market. Merriam went too, with his suit
+case, and remained.
+
+Kalb, the vice-consul, a Græco-Armenian citizen of the United States,
+born in Hessen-Darmstadt, and educated in Cincinnati ward primaries,
+considered all Americans his brothers and bankers. He attached himself
+to Merriam’s elbow, introduced him to every one in La Paz who wore
+shoes, borrowed ten dollars and went back to his hammock.
+
+There was a little wooden hotel in the edge of a banana grove, facing
+the sea, that catered to the tastes of the few foreigners that had
+dropped out of the world into the _triste_ Peruvian town. At Kalb’s
+introductory: “Shake hands with ––––,” he had obediently exchanged
+manual salutations with a German doctor, one French and two Italian
+merchants, and three or four Americans who were spoken of as gold men,
+rubber men, mahogany men—anything but men of living tissue.
+
+After dinner Merriam sat in a corner of the broad front _galeria_ with
+Bibb, a Vermonter interested in hydraulic mining, and smoked and drank
+Scotch “smoke.” The moonlit sea, spreading infinitely before him,
+seemed to separate him beyond all apprehension from his old life. The
+horrid tragedy in which he had played such a disastrous part now began,
+for the first time since he stole on board the fruiter, a wretched
+fugitive, to lose its sharper outlines. Distance lent assuagement to
+his view. Bibb had opened the flood-gates of a stream of long-dammed
+discourse, overjoyed to have captured an audience that had not suffered
+under a hundred repetitions of his views and theories.
+
+“One year more,” said Bibb, “and I’ll go back to God’s country. Oh, I
+know it’s pretty here, and you get _dolce far niente_ handed to you in
+chunks, but this country wasn’t made for a white man to live in. You’ve
+got to have to plug through snow now and then, and see a game of
+baseball and wear a stiff collar and have a policeman cuss you. Still,
+La Paz is a good sort of a pipe-dreamy old hole. And Mrs. Conant is
+here. When any of us feels particularly like jumping into the sea we
+rush around to her house and propose. It’s nicer to be rejected by Mrs.
+Conant than it is to be drowned. And they say drowning is a delightful
+sensation.”
+
+“Many like her here?” asked Merriam.
+
+“Not anywhere,” said Bibb, with a comfortable sigh. She’s the only
+white woman in La Paz. The rest range from a dappled dun to the colour
+of a b-flat piano key. She’s been here a year. Comes from—well, you
+know how a woman can talk—ask ’em to say ‘string’ and they’ll say
+‘crow’s foot’ or ‘cat’s cradle.’ Sometimes you’d think she was from
+Oshkosh, and again from Jacksonville, Florida, and the next day from
+Cape Cod.”
+
+“Mystery?” ventured Merriam.
+
+“M—well, she looks it; but her talk’s translucent enough. But that’s a
+woman. I suppose if the Sphinx were to begin talking she’d merely say:
+‘Goodness me! more visitors coming for dinner, and nothing to eat but
+the sand which is here.’ But you won’t think about that when you meet
+her, Merriam. You’ll propose to her too.”
+
+To make a hard story soft, Merriam did meet her and propose to her. He
+found her to be a woman in black with hair the colour of a bronze
+turkey’s wings, and mysterious, _remembering_ eyes that—well, that
+looked as if she might have been a trained nurse looking on when Eve
+was created. Her words and manner, though, were translucent, as Bibb
+had said. She spoke, vaguely, of friends in California and some of the
+lower parishes in Louisiana. The tropical climate and indolent life
+suited her; she had thought of buying an orange grove later on; La Paz,
+all in all, charmed her.
+
+Merriam’s courtship of the Sphinx lasted three months, although he did
+not know that he was courting her. He was using her as an antidote for
+remorse, until he found, too late, that he had acquired the habit.
+During that time he had received no news from home. Wade did not know
+where he was; and he was not sure of Wade’s exact address, and was
+afraid to write. He thought he had better let matters rest as they were
+for a while.
+
+One afternoon he and Mrs. Conant hired two ponies and rode out along
+the mountain trail as far as the little cold river that came tumbling
+down the foothills. There they stopped for a drink, and Merriam spoke
+his piece—he proposed, as Bibb had prophesied.
+
+Mrs. Conant gave him one glance of brilliant tenderness, and then her
+face took on such a strange, haggard look that Merriam was shaken out
+of his intoxication and back to his senses.
+
+“I beg your pardon, Florence,” he said, releasing her hand; “but I’ll
+have to hedge on part of what I said. I can’t ask you to marry me, of
+course. I killed a man in New York—a man who was my friend—shot him
+down—in quite a cowardly manner, I understand. Of course, the drinking
+didn’t excuse it. Well, I couldn’t resist having my say; and I’ll
+always mean it. I’m here as a fugitive from justice, and—I suppose that
+ends our acquaintance.”
+
+Mrs. Conant plucked little leaves assiduously from the low-hanging
+branch of a lime tree.
+
+“I suppose so,” she said, in low and oddly uneven tones; “but that
+depends upon you. I’ll be as honest as you were. I poisoned my husband.
+I am a self-made widow. A man cannot love a murderess. So I suppose
+that ends our acquaintance.”
+
+She looked up at him slowly. His face turned a little pale, and he
+stared at her blankly, like a deaf-and-dumb man who was wondering what
+it was all about.
+
+She took a swift step toward him, with stiffened arms and eyes blazing.
+
+“Don’t look at me like that!” she cried, as though she were in acute
+pain. “Curse me, or turn your back on me, but don’t look that way. Am I
+a woman to be beaten? If I could show you—here on my arms, and on my
+back are scars—and it has been more than a year—scars that he made in
+his brutal rages. A holy nun would have risen and struck the fiend
+down. Yes, I killed him. The foul and horrible words that he hurled at
+me that last day are repeated in my ears every night when I sleep. And
+then came his blows, and the end of my endurance. I got the poison that
+afternoon. It was his custom to drink every night in the library before
+going to bed a hot punch made of rum and wine. Only from my fair hands
+would he receive it— because he knew the fumes of spirits always
+sickened me. That night when the maid brought it to me I sent her
+downstairs on an errand. Before taking him his drink I went to my
+little private cabinet and poured into it more than a tea-spoonful of
+tincture of aconite—enough to kill three men, so I had learned. I had
+drawn $6,000 that I had in bank, and with that and a few things in a
+satchel I left the house without any one seeing me. As I passed the
+library I heard him stagger up and fall heavily on a couch. I took a
+night train for New Orleans, and from there I sailed to the Bermudas. I
+finally cast anchor in La Paz. And now what have you to say? Can you
+open your mouth?”
+
+Merriam came back to life.
+
+“Florence,” he said earnestly, “I want you. I don’t care what you’ve
+done. If the world—”
+
+“Ralph,” she interrupted, almost with a scream, “be my world!”
+
+Her eyes melted; she relaxed magnificently and swayed toward Merriam so
+suddenly that he had to jump to catch her.
+
+Dear me! in such scenes how the talk runs into artificial prose. But it
+can’t be helped. It’s the subconscious smell of the footlights’ smoke
+that’s in all of us. Stir the depths of your cook’s soul sufficiently
+and she will discourse in Bulwer-Lyttonese.
+
+Merriam and Mrs. Conant were very happy. He announced their engagement
+at the Hotel Orilla del Mar. Eight foreigners and four native Astors
+pounded his back and shouted insincere congratulations at him. Pedrito,
+the Castilian-mannered barkeep, was goaded to extra duty until his
+agility would have turned a Boston cherry-phosphate clerk a pale lilac
+with envy.
+
+They were both very happy. According to the strange mathematics of the
+god of mutual affinity, the shadows that clouded their pasts when
+united became only half as dense instead of darker. They shut the world
+out and bolted the doors. Each was the other’s world. Mrs. Conant lived
+again. The remembering look left her eyes. Merriam was with her every
+moment that was possible. On a little plateau under a grove of palms
+and calabash trees they were going to build a fairy bungalow. They were
+to be married in two months. Many hours of the day they had their heads
+together over the house plans. Their joint capital would set up a
+business in fruit or woods that would yield a comfortable support.
+“Good night, my world,” would say Mrs. Conant every evening when
+Merriam left her for his hotel. They were very happy. Their love had,
+circumstantially, that element of melancholy in it that it seems to
+require to attain its supremest elevation. And it seemed that their
+mutual great misfortune or sin was a bond that nothing could sever.
+
+One day a steamer hove in the offing. Bare-legged and bare-shouldered
+La Paz scampered down to the beach, for the arrival of a steamer was
+their loop-the-loop, circus, Emancipation Day and four-o’clock tea.
+
+When the steamer was near enough, wise ones proclaimed that she was the
+_Pajaro_, bound up-coast from Callao to Panama.
+
+The _Pajaro_ put on brakes a mile off shore. Soon a boat came bobbing
+shoreward. Merriam strolled down on the beach to look on. In the
+shallow water the Carib sailors sprang out and dragged the boat with a
+mighty rush to the firm shingle. Out climbed the purser, the captain
+and two passengers, ploughing their way through the deep sand toward
+the hotel. Merriam glanced toward them with the mild interest due to
+strangers. There was something familiar to him in the walk of one of
+the passengers. He looked again, and his blood seemed to turn to
+strawberry ice cream in his veins. Burly, arrogant, debonair as ever,
+H. Ferguson Hedges, the man he had killed, was coming toward him ten
+feet away.
+
+When Hedges saw Merriam his face flushed a dark red. Then he shouted in
+his old, bluff way: “Hello, Merriam. Glad to see you. Didn’t expect to
+find you out here. Quinby, this is my old friend Merriam, of New
+York—Merriam, Mr. Quinby.”
+
+Merriam gave Hedges and then Quinby an ice-cold hand. “Br-r-r-r!” said
+Hedges. “But you’ve got a frappéd flipper! Man, you’re not well. You’re
+as yellow as a Chinaman. Malarial here? Steer us to a bar if there is
+such a thing, and let’s take a prophylactic.”
+
+Merriam, still half comatose, led them toward the Hotel Orilla del Mar.
+
+“Quinby and I,” explained Hedges, puffing through the slippery sand,
+“are looking out along the coast for some investments. We’ve just come
+up from Concepción and Valparaiso and Lima. The captain of this
+subsidized ferry boat told us there was some good picking around here
+in silver mines. So we got off. Now, where is that café, Merriam? Oh,
+in this portable soda water pavilion?”
+
+Leaving Quinby at the bar, Hedges drew Merriam aside.
+
+“Now, what does this mean?” he said, with gruff kindness. “Are you
+sulking about that fool row we had?”
+
+“I thought,” stammered Merriam—“I heard—they told me you were—that I
+had—”
+
+“Well, you didn’t, and I’m not,” said Hedges. “That fool young
+ambulance surgeon told Wade I was a candidate for a coffin just because
+I’d got tired and quit breathing. I laid up in a private hospital for a
+month; but here I am, kicking as hard as ever. Wade and I tried to find
+you, but couldn’t. Now, Merriam, shake hands and forget it all. I was
+as much to blame as you were; and the shot really did me good—I came
+out of the hospital as healthy and fit as a cab horse. Come on; that
+drink’s waiting.”
+
+“Old man,” said Merriam, brokenly, “I don’t know how to thank
+you—I—well, you know—”
+
+“Oh, forget it,” boomed Hedges. “Quinby’ll die of thirst if we don’t
+join him.”
+
+Bibb was sitting on the shady side of the gallery waiting for the
+eleven-o’clock breakfast. Presently Merriam came out and joined him.
+His eye was strangely bright.
+
+“Bibb, my boy,” said he, slowly waving his hand, “do you see those
+mountains and that sea and sky and sunshine?—they’re mine, Bibbsy—all
+mine.”
+
+“You go in,” said Bibb, “and take eight grains of quinine, right away.
+It won’t do in this climate for a man to get to thinking he’s
+Rockefeller, or James O’Neill either.”
+
+Inside, the purser was untying a great roll of newspapers, many of them
+weeks old, gathered in the lower ports by the _Pajaro_ to be
+distributed at casual stopping-places. Thus do the beneficent voyagers
+scatter news and entertainment among the prisoners of sea and
+mountains.
+
+Tio Pancho, the hotel proprietor, set his great silver-rimmed
+_anteojos_ upon his nose and divided the papers into a number of
+smaller rolls. A barefooted _muchacho_ dashed in, desiring the post of
+messenger.
+
+“_Bien venido_,” said Tio Pancho. “This to Señora Conant; that to el
+Doctor S-S-Schlegel—_Dios_! what a name to say!—that to Señor Davis—one
+for Don Alberto. These two for the _Casa de Huespedes_, _Numero 6_, _en
+la calle de las Buenas Gracias_. And say to them all, _muchacho_, that
+the _Pajaro_ sails for Panama at three this afternoon. If any have
+letters to send by the post, let them come quickly, that they may first
+pass through the _correo_.”
+
+Mrs. Conant received her roll of newspapers at four o’clock. The boy
+was late in delivering them, because he had been deflected from his
+duty by an iguana that crossed his path and to which he immediately
+gave chase. But it made no hardship, for she had no letters to send.
+
+She was idling in a hammock in the patio of the house that she
+occupied, half awake, half happily dreaming of the paradise that she
+and Merriam had created out of the wrecks of their pasts. She was
+content now for the horizon of that shimmering sea to be the horizon of
+her life. They had shut out the world and closed the door.
+
+Merriam was coming to her house at seven, after his dinner at the
+hotel. She would put on a white dress and an apricot-coloured lace
+mantilla, and they would walk an hour under the cocoanut palms by the
+lagoon. She smiled contentedly, and chose a paper at random from the
+roll the boy had brought.
+
+At first the words of a certain headline of a Sunday newspaper meant
+nothing to her; they conveyed only a visualized sense of familiarity.
+The largest type ran thus: “Lloyd B. Conant secures divorce.” And then
+the subheadings: “Well-known Saint Louis paint manufacturer wins suit,
+pleading one year’s absence of wife.” “Her mysterious disappearance
+recalled.” “Nothing has been heard of her since.”
+
+Twisting herself quickly out of the hammock, Mrs. Conant’s eye soon
+traversed the half-column of the “Recall.” It ended thus: “It will be
+remembered that Mrs. Conant disappeared one evening in March of last
+year. It was freely rumoured that her marriage with Lloyd B. Conant
+resulted in much unhappiness. Stories were not wanting to the effect
+that his cruelty toward his wife had more than once taken the form of
+physical abuse. After her departure a full bottle of tincture of
+aconite, a deadly poison, was found in a small medicine cabinet in her
+bedroom. This might have been an indication that she meditated suicide.
+It is supposed that she abandoned such an intention if she possessed
+it, and left her home instead.”
+
+Mrs. Conant slowly dropped the paper, and sat on a chair, clasping her
+hands tightly.
+
+“Let me think—O God!—let me think,” she whispered. “I took the bottle
+with me . . . I threw it out of the window of the train . . . I— . . .
+there was another bottle in the cabinet . . . there were two, side by
+side—the aconite—and the valerian that I took when I could not sleep .
+. . If they found the aconite bottle full, why—but, he is alive, of
+course—I gave him only a harmless dose of valerian . . . I am not a
+murderess in fact . . . Ralph, I—O God, don’t let this be a dream!”
+
+She went into the part of the house that she rented from the old
+Peruvian man and his wife, shut the door, and walked up and down her
+room swiftly and feverishly for half an hour. Merriam’s photograph
+stood in a frame on a table. She picked it up, looked at it with a
+smile of exquisite tenderness, and—dropped four tears on it. And
+Merriam only twenty rods away! Then she stood still for ten minutes,
+looking into space. She looked into space through a slowly opening
+door. On her side of the door was the building material for a castle of
+Romance—love, an Arcady of waving palms, a lullaby of waves on the
+shore of a haven of rest, respite, peace, a lotus land of dreamy ease
+and security—a life of poetry and heart’s ease and refuge. Romanticist,
+will you tell me what Mrs. Conant saw on the other side of the door?
+You cannot?—that is, you will not? Very well; then listen.
+
+_She saw herself go into a department store and buy five spools of silk
+thread and three yards of gingham to make an apron for the cook. “Shall
+I charge it, ma’am?” asked the clerk. As she walked out a lady whom she
+met greeted her cordially. “Oh, where did you get the pattern for those
+sleeves, dear Mrs. Conant?” she said. At the corner a policeman helped
+her across the street and touched his helmet. “Any callers?” she asked
+the maid when she reached home. “Mrs. Waldron,” answered the maid, “and
+the two Misses Jenkinson.” “Very well,” she said. “You may bring me a
+cup of tea, Maggie.”_
+
+Mrs. Conant went to the door and called Angela, the old Peruvian woman.
+“If Mateo is there send him to me.” Mateo, a half-breed, shuffling and
+old but efficient, came.
+
+“Is there a steamer or a vessel of any kind leaving this coast to-night
+or to-morrow that I can get passage on?” she asked.
+
+Mateo considered.
+
+“At Punta Reina, thirty miles down the coast, señora,” he answered,
+“there is a small steamer loading with cinchona and dyewoods. She sails
+for San Francisco to-morrow at sunrise. So says my brother, who arrived
+in his sloop to-day, passing by Punta Reina.”
+
+“You must take me in that sloop to that steamer to-night. Will you do
+that?”
+
+“Perhaps—” Mateo shrugged a suggestive shoulder. Mrs. Conant took a
+handful of money from a drawer and gave it to him.
+
+“Get the sloop ready behind the little point of land below the town,”
+she ordered. “Get sailors, and be ready to sail at six o’clock. In half
+an hour bring a cart partly filled with straw into the patio here, and
+take my trunk to the sloop. There is more money yet. Now, hurry.”
+
+For one time Mateo walked away without shuffling his feet.
+
+“Angela,” cried Mrs. Conant, almost fiercely, “come and help me pack. I
+am going away. Out with this trunk. My clothes first. Stir yourself.
+Those dark dresses first. Hurry.”
+
+From the first she did not waver from her decision. Her view was clear
+and final. Her door had opened and let the world in. Her love for
+Merriam was not lessened; but it now appeared a hopeless and
+unrealizable thing. The visions of their future that had seemed so
+blissful and complete had vanished. She tried to assure herself that
+her renunciation was rather for his sake than for her own. Now that she
+was cleared of her burden—at least, technically—would not his own weigh
+too heavily upon him? If she should cling to him, would not the
+difference forever silently mar and corrode their happiness? Thus she
+reasoned; but there were a thousand little voices calling to her that
+she could feel rather than hear, like the hum of distant, powerful
+machinery—the little voices of the world, that, when raised in unison,
+can send their insistent call through the thickest door.
+
+Once while packing, a brief shadow of the lotus dream came back to her.
+She held Merriam’s picture to her heart with one hand, while she threw
+a pair of shoes into the trunk with her other.
+
+At six o’clock Mateo returned and reported the sloop ready. He and his
+brother lifted the trunk into the cart, covered it with straw and
+conveyed it to the point of embarkation. From there they transferred it
+on board in the sloop’s dory. Then Mateo returned for additional
+orders.
+
+Mrs. Conant was ready. She had settled all business matters with
+Angela, and was impatiently waiting. She wore a long, loose black-silk
+duster that she often walked about in when the evenings were chilly. On
+her head was a small round hat, and over it the apricot-coloured lace
+mantilla.
+
+Dusk had quickly followed the short twilight. Mateo led her by dark and
+grass-grown streets toward the point behind which the sloop was
+anchored. On turning a corner they beheld the Hotel Orilla del Mar
+three streets away, nebulously aglow with its array of kerosene lamps.
+
+Mrs. Conant paused, with streaming eyes. “I must, I _must_ see him once
+before I go,” she murmured in anguish. But even then she did not falter
+in her decision. Quickly she invented a plan by which she might speak
+to him, and yet make her departure without his knowing. She would walk
+past the hotel, ask some one to call him out and talk a few moments on
+some trivial excuse, leaving him expecting to see her at her home at
+seven.
+
+She unpinned her hat and gave it to Mateo. “Keep this, and wait here
+till I come,” she ordered. Then she draped the mantilla over her head
+as she usually did when walking after sunset, and went straight to the
+Orilla del Mar.
+
+She was glad to see the bulky, white-clad figure of Tio Pancho standing
+alone on the gallery.
+
+“Tio Pancho,” she said, with a charming smile, “may I trouble you to
+ask Mr. Merriam to come out for just a few moments that I may speak
+with him?”
+
+Tio Pancho bowed as an elephant bows.
+
+“Buenas tardes, Señora Conant,” he said, as a cavalier talks. And then
+he went on, less at his ease:
+
+“But does not the señora know that Señor Merriam sailed on the _Pajaro_
+for Panama at three o’clock of this afternoon?”
+
+
+
+
+II
+THE THEORY AND THE HOUND
+
+
+Not many days ago my old friend from the tropics, J. P. Bridger, United
+States consul on the island of Ratona, was in the city. We had wassail
+and jubilee and saw the Flatiron building, and missed seeing the
+Bronxless menagerie by about a couple of nights. And then, at the ebb
+tide, we were walking up a street that parallels and parodies Broadway.
+
+A woman with a comely and mundane countenance passed us, holding in
+leash a wheezing, vicious, waddling, brute of a yellow pug. The dog
+entangled himself with Bridger’s legs and mumbled his ankles in a
+snarling, peevish, sulky bite. Bridger, with a happy smile, kicked the
+breath out of the brute; the woman showered us with a quick rain of
+well-conceived adjectives that left us in no doubt as to our place in
+her opinion, and we passed on. Ten yards farther an old woman with
+disordered white hair and her bankbook tucked well hidden beneath her
+tattered shawl begged. Bridger stopped and disinterred for her a
+quarter from his holiday waistcoat.
+
+On the next corner a quarter of a ton of well-clothed man with a
+rice-powdered, fat, white jowl, stood holding the chain of a devil-born
+bulldog whose forelegs were strangers by the length of a dachshund. A
+little woman in a last-season’s hat confronted him and wept, which was
+plainly all she could do, while he cursed her in low sweet, practised
+tones.
+
+Bridger smiled again—strictly to himself—and this time he took out a
+little memorandum book and made a note of it. This he had no right to
+do without due explanation, and I said so.
+
+“It’s a new theory,” said Bridger, “that I picked up down in Ratona.
+I’ve been gathering support for it as I knock about. The world isn’t
+ripe for it yet, but—well I’ll tell you; and then you run your mind
+back along the people you’ve known and see what you make of it.”
+
+And so I cornered Bridger in a place where they have artificial palms
+and wine; and he told me the story which is here in my words and on his
+responsibility.
+
+One afternoon at three o’clock, on the island of Ratona, a boy raced
+along the beach screaming, “_Pajaro_, ahoy!”
+
+Thus he made known the keenness of his hearing and the justice of his
+discrimination in pitch.
+
+He who first heard and made oral proclamation concerning the toot of an
+approaching steamer’s whistle, and correctly named the steamer, was a
+small hero in Ratona—until the next steamer came. Wherefore, there was
+rivalry among the barefoot youth of Ratona, and many fell victims to
+the softly blown conch shells of sloops which, as they enter harbour,
+sound surprisingly like a distant steamer’s signal. And some could name
+you the vessel when its call, in your duller ears, sounded no louder
+than the sigh of the wind through the branches of the cocoanut palms.
+
+But to-day he who proclaimed the _Pajaro_ gained his honours. Ratona
+bent its ear to listen; and soon the deep-tongued blast grew louder and
+nearer, and at length Ratona saw above the line of palms on the low
+“point” the two black funnels of the fruiter slowly creeping toward the
+mouth of the harbour.
+
+You must know that Ratona is an island twenty miles off the south of a
+South American republic. It is a port of that republic; and it sleeps
+sweetly in a smiling sea, toiling not nor spinning; fed by the abundant
+tropics where all things “ripen, cease and fall toward the grave.”
+
+Eight hundred people dream life away in a green-embowered village that
+follows the horseshoe curve of its bijou harbour. They are mostly
+Spanish and Indian _mestizos_, with a shading of San Domingo Negroes, a
+lightening of pure-blood Spanish officials and a slight leavening of
+the froth of three or four pioneering white races. No steamers touch at
+Ratona save the fruit steamers which take on their banana inspectors
+there on their way to the coast. They leave Sunday newspapers, ice,
+quinine, bacon, watermelons and vaccine matter at the island and that
+is about all the touch Ratona gets with the world.
+
+The _Pajaro_ paused at the mouth of the harbour, rolling heavily in the
+swell that sent the whitecaps racing beyond the smooth water inside.
+Already two dories from the village—one conveying fruit inspectors, the
+other going for what it could get—were halfway out to the steamer.
+
+The inspectors’ dory was taken on board with them, and the _Pajaro_
+steamed away for the mainland for its load of fruit.
+
+The other boat returned to Ratona bearing a contribution from the
+_Pajaro’s_ store of ice, the usual roll of newspapers and one
+passenger—Taylor Plunkett, sheriff of Chatham County, Kentucky.
+
+Bridger, the United States consul at Ratona, was cleaning his rifle in
+the official shanty under a bread-fruit tree twenty yards from the
+water of the harbour. The consul occupied a place somewhat near the
+tail of his political party’s procession. The music of the band wagon
+sounded very faintly to him in the distance. The plums of office went
+to others. Bridger’s share of the spoils—the consulship at Ratona—was
+little more than a prune—a dried prune from the boarding-house
+department of the public crib. But $900 yearly was opulence in Ratona.
+Besides, Bridger had contracted a passion for shooting alligators in
+the lagoons near his consulate, and was not unhappy.
+
+He looked up from a careful inspection of his rifle lock and saw a
+broad man filling his doorway. A broad, noiseless, slow-moving man,
+sunburned almost to the brown of Vandyke. A man of forty-five, neatly
+clothed in homespun, with scanty light hair, a close-clipped
+brown-and-gray beard and pale-blue eyes expressing mildness and
+simplicity.
+
+“You are Mr. Bridger, the consul,” said the broad man. “They directed
+me here. Can you tell me what those big bunches of things like gourds
+are in those trees that look like feather dusters along the edge of the
+water?”
+
+“Take that chair,” said the consul, reoiling his cleaning rag. “No, the
+other one—that bamboo thing won’t hold you. Why, they’re
+cocoanuts—green cocoanuts. The shell of ’em is always a light green
+before they’re ripe.”
+
+“Much obliged,” said the other man, sitting down carefully. “I didn’t
+quite like to tell the folks at home they were olives unless I was sure
+about it. My name is Plunkett. I’m sheriff of Chatham County, Kentucky.
+I’ve got extradition papers in my pocket authorizing the arrest of a
+man on this island. They’ve been signed by the President of this
+country, and they’re in correct shape. The man’s name is Wade Williams.
+He’s in the cocoanut raising business. What he’s wanted for is the
+murder of his wife two years ago. Where can I find him?”
+
+The consul squinted an eye and looked through his rifle barrel.
+
+“There’s nobody on the island who calls himself ‘Williams,’” he
+remarked.
+
+“Didn’t suppose there was,” said Plunkett mildly. “He’ll do by any
+other name.”
+
+“Besides myself,” said Bridger, “there are only two Americans on
+Ratona—Bob Reeves and Henry Morgan.”
+
+“The man I want sells cocoanuts,” suggested Plunkett.
+
+“You see that cocoanut walk extending up to the point?” said the
+consul, waving his hand toward the open door. “That belongs to Bob
+Reeves. Henry Morgan owns half the trees to loo’ard on the island.”
+
+“One, month ago,” said the sheriff, “Wade Williams wrote a confidential
+letter to a man in Chatham county, telling him where he was and how he
+was getting along. The letter was lost; and the person that found it
+gave it away. They sent me after him, and I’ve got the papers. I reckon
+he’s one of your cocoanut men for certain.”
+
+“You’ve got his picture, of course,” said Bridger. “It might be Reeves
+or Morgan, but I’d hate to think it. They’re both as fine fellows as
+you’d meet in an all-day auto ride.”
+
+“No,” doubtfully answered Plunkett; “there wasn’t any picture of
+Williams to be had. And I never saw him myself. I’ve been sheriff only
+a year. But I’ve got a pretty accurate description of him. About 5 feet
+11; dark-hair and eyes; nose inclined to be Roman; heavy about the
+shoulders; strong, white teeth, with none missing; laughs a good deal,
+talkative; drinks considerably but never to intoxication; looks you
+square in the eye when talking; age thirty-five. Which one of your men
+does that description fit?”
+
+The consul grinned broadly.
+
+“I’ll tell you what you do,” he said, laying down his rifle and
+slipping on his dingy black alpaca coat. “You come along, Mr. Plunkett,
+and I’ll take you up to see the boys. If you can tell which one of ’em
+your description fits better than it does the other you have the
+advantage of me.”
+
+Bridger conducted the sheriff out and along the hard beach close to
+which the tiny houses of the village were distributed. Immediately back
+of the town rose sudden, small, thickly wooded hills. Up one of these,
+by means of steps cut in the hard clay, the consul led Plunkett. On the
+very verge of an eminence was perched a two-room wooden cottage with a
+thatched roof. A Carib woman was washing clothes outside. The consul
+ushered the sheriff to the door of the room that overlooked the
+harbour.
+
+Two men were in the room, about to sit down, in their shirt sleeves, to
+a table spread for dinner. They bore little resemblance one to the
+other in detail; but the general description given by Plunkett could
+have been justly applied to either. In height, colour of hair, shape of
+nose, build and manners each of them tallied with it. They were fair
+types of jovial, ready-witted, broad-gauged Americans who had
+gravitated together for companionship in an alien land.
+
+“Hello, Bridger” they called in unison at sight Of the consul. “Come
+and have dinner with us!” And then they noticed Plunkett at his heels,
+and came forward with hospitable curiosity.
+
+“Gentlemen,” said the consul, his voice taking on unaccustomed
+formality, “this is Mr. Plunkett. Mr. Plunkett—Mr. Reeves and Mr.
+Morgan.”
+
+The cocoanut barons greeted the newcomer joyously. Reeves seemed about
+an inch taller than Morgan, but his laugh was not quite as loud.
+Morgan’s eyes were deep brown; Reeves’s were black. Reeves was the host
+and busied himself with fetching other chairs and calling to the Carib
+woman for supplemental table ware. It was explained that Morgan lived
+in a bamboo shack to “loo’ard,” but that every day the two friends
+dined together. Plunkett stood still during the preparations, looking
+about mildly with his pale-blue eyes. Bridger looked apologetic and
+uneasy.
+
+At length two other covers were laid and the company was assigned to
+places. Reeves and Morgan stood side by side across the table from the
+visitors. Reeves nodded genially as a signal for all to seat
+themselves. And then suddenly Plunkett raised his hand with a gesture
+of authority. He was looking straight between Reeves and Morgan.
+
+“Wade Williams,” he said quietly, “you are under arrest for murder.”
+
+Reeves and Morgan instantly exchanged a quick, bright glance, the
+quality of which was interrogation, with a seasoning of surprise. Then,
+simultaneously they turned to the speaker with a puzzled and frank
+deprecation in their gaze.
+
+“Can’t say that we understand you, Mr. Plunkett,” said Morgan,
+cheerfully. “Did you say ‘Williams’?”
+
+“What’s the joke, Bridgy?” asked Reeves, turning, to the consul with a
+smile.
+
+Before Bridger could answer Plunkett spoke again.
+
+“I’ll explain,” he said, quietly. “One of you don’t need any
+explanation, but this is for the other one. One of you is Wade Williams
+of Chatham County, Kentucky. You murdered your wife on May 5, two years
+ago, after ill-treating and abusing her continually for five years. I
+have the proper papers in my pocket for taking you back with me, and
+you are going. We will return on the fruit steamer that comes back by
+this island to-morrow to leave its inspectors. I acknowledge,
+gentlemen, that I’m not quite sure which one of you is Williams. But
+Wade Williams goes back to Chatham County to-morrow. I want you to
+understand that.”
+
+A great sound of merry laughter from Morgan and Reeves went out over
+the still harbour. Two or three fishermen in the fleet of sloops
+anchored there looked up at the house of the diablos Americanos on the
+hill and wondered.
+
+“My dear Mr. Plunkett,” cried Morgan, conquering his mirth, “the dinner
+is getting, cold. Let us sit down and eat. I am anxious to get my spoon
+into that shark-fin soup. Business afterward.”
+
+“Sit down, gentlemen, if you please,” added Reeves, pleasantly. “I am
+sure Mr. Plunkett will not object. Perhaps a little time may be of
+advantage to him in identifying—the gentleman he wishes to arrest.”
+
+“No objections, I’m sure,” said Plunkett, dropping into his chair
+heavily. “I’m hungry myself. I didn’t want to accept the hospitality of
+you folks without giving you notice; that’s all.”
+
+Reeves set bottles and glasses on the table.
+
+“There’s cognac,” he said, “and anisada, and Scotch ‘smoke,’ and rye.
+Take your choice.”
+
+Bridger chose rye, Reeves poured three fingers of Scotch for himself,
+Morgan took the same. The sheriff, against much protestation, filled
+his glass from the water bottle.
+
+“Here’s to the appetite,” said Reeves, raising his glass, “of Mr.
+Williams!” Morgan’s laugh and his drink encountering sent him into a
+choking splutter. All began to pay attention to the dinner, which was
+well cooked and palatable.
+
+“Williams!” called Plunkett, suddenly and sharply.
+
+All looked up wonderingly. Reeves found the sheriff’s mild eye resting
+upon him. He flushed a little.
+
+“See here,” he said, with some asperity, “my name’s Reeves, and I don’t
+want you to—” But the comedy of the thing came to his rescue, and he
+ended with a laugh.
+
+“I suppose, Mr. Plunkett,” said Morgan, carefully seasoning an
+alligator pear, “that you are aware of the fact that you will import a
+good deal of trouble for yourself into Kentucky if you take back the
+wrong man—that is, of course, if you take anybody back?”
+
+“Thank you for the salt,” said the sheriff. “Oh, I’ll take somebody
+back. It’ll be one of you two gentlemen. Yes, I know I’d get stuck for
+damages if I make a mistake. But I’m going to try to get the right
+man.”
+
+“I’ll tell you what you do,” said Morgan, leaning forward with a jolly
+twinkle in his eyes. “You take me. I’ll go without any trouble. The
+cocoanut business hasn’t panned out well this year, and I’d like to
+make some extra money out of your bondsmen.”
+
+“That’s not fair,” chimed in Reeves. “I got only $16 a thousand for my
+last shipment. Take me, Mr. Plunkett.”
+
+“I’ll take Wade Williams,” said the sheriff, patiently, “or I’ll come
+pretty close to it.”
+
+“It’s like dining with a ghost,” remarked Morgan, with a pretended
+shiver. “The ghost of a murderer, too! Will somebody pass the
+toothpicks to the shade of the naughty Mr. Williams?”
+
+Plunkett seemed as unconcerned as if he were dining at his own table in
+Chatham County. He was a gallant trencherman, and the strange tropic
+viands tickled his palate. Heavy, commonplace, almost slothful in his
+movements, he appeared to be devoid of all the cunning and watchfulness
+of the sleuth. He even ceased to observe, with any sharpness or
+attempted discrimination, the two men, one of whom he had undertaken
+with surprising self-confidence, to drag away upon the serious charge
+of wife-murder. Here, indeed, was a problem set before him that if
+wrongly solved would have amounted to his serious discomfiture, yet
+there he sat puzzling his soul (to all appearances) over the novel
+flavour of a broiled iguana cutlet.
+
+The consul felt a decided discomfort. Reeves and Morgan were his
+friends and pals; yet the sheriff from Kentucky had a certain right to
+his official aid and moral support. So Bridger sat the silentest around
+the board and tried to estimate the peculiar situation. His conclusion
+was that both Reeves and Morgan, quickwitted, as he knew them to be,
+had conceived at the moment of Plunkett’s disclosure of his mission—and
+in the brief space of a lightning flash—the idea that the other might
+be the guilty Williams; and that each of them had decided in that
+moment loyally to protect his comrade against the doom that threatened
+him. This was the consul’s theory and if he had been a bookmaker at a
+race of wits for life and liberty he would have offered heavy odds
+against the plodding sheriff from Chatham County, Kentucky.
+
+When the meal was concluded the Carib woman came and removed the dishes
+and cloth. Reeves strewed the table with excellent cigars, and
+Plunkett, with the others, lighted one of these with evident
+gratification.
+
+“I may be dull,” said Morgan, with a grin and a wink at Bridger; “but I
+want to know if I am. Now, I say this is all a joke of Mr. Plunkett’s,
+concocted to frighten two babes-in-the-woods. Is this Williamson to be
+taken seriously or not?”
+
+“‘Williams,’” corrected Plunkett gravely. “I never got off any jokes in
+my life. I know I wouldn’t travel 2,000 miles to get off a poor one as
+this would be if I didn’t take Wade Williams back with me. Gentlemen!”
+continued the sheriff, now letting his mild eyes travel impartially
+from one of the company to another, “see if you can find any joke in
+this case. Wade Williams is listening to the words I utter now; but out
+of politeness, I will speak of him as a third person. For five years he
+made his wife lead the life of a dog—No; I’ll take that back. No dog in
+Kentucky was ever treated as she was. He spent the money that she
+brought him—spent it at races, at the card table and on horses and
+hunting. He was a good fellow to his friends, but a cold, sullen demon
+at home. He wound up the five years of neglect by striking her with his
+closed hand—a hand as hard as a stone—when she was ill and weak from
+suffering. She died the next day; and he skipped. That’s all there is
+to it. It’s enough. I never saw Williams; but I knew his wife. I’m not
+a man to tell half. She and I were keeping company when she met him.
+She went to Louisville on a visit and saw him there. I’ll admit that he
+spoilt my chances in no time. I lived then on the edge of the
+Cumberland mountains. I was elected sheriff of Chatham County a year
+after Wade Williams killed his wife. My official duty sends me out here
+after him; but I’ll admit that there’s personal feeling, too. And he’s
+going back with me. Mr.—er—Reeves, will you pass me a match?
+
+“Awfully imprudent of Williams,” said Morgan, putting his feet up
+against the wall, “to strike a Kentucky lady. Seems to me I’ve heard
+they were scrappers.”
+
+“Bad, bad Williams,” said Reeves, pouring out more Scotch.
+
+The two men spoke lightly, but the consul saw and felt the tension and
+the carefulness in their actions and words. “Good old fellows,” he said
+to himself; “they’re both all right. Each of ’em is standing by the
+other like a little brick church.”
+
+And then a dog walked into the room where they sat—a black-and-tan
+hound, long-eared, lazy, confident of welcome.
+
+Plunkett turned his head and looked at the animal, which halted,
+confidently, within a few feet of his chair.
+
+Suddenly the sheriff, with a deep-mouthed oath, left his seat and,
+bestowed upon the dog a vicious and heavy kick, with his ponderous
+shoe.
+
+The hound, heartbroken, astonished, with flapping ears and incurved
+tail, uttered a piercing yelp of pain and surprise.
+
+Reeves and the consul remained in their chairs, saying nothing, but
+astonished at the unexpected show of intolerance from the easy-going
+man from Chatham county.
+
+But Morgan, with a suddenly purpling face, leaped, to his feet and
+raised a threatening arm above the guest.
+
+“You—brute!” he shouted, passionately; “why did you do that?”
+
+Quickly the amenities returned, Plunkett muttered some indistinct
+apology and regained his seat. Morgan with a decided effort controlled
+his indignation and also returned to his chair.
+
+And then Plunkett with the spring of a tiger, leaped around the corner
+of the table and snapped handcuffs on the paralyzed Morgan’s wrists.
+
+“Hound-lover and woman-killer!” he cried; “get ready to meet your God.”
+
+When Bridger had finished I asked him:
+
+“Did he get the right man?”
+
+“He did,” said the Consul.
+
+“And how did he know?” I inquired, being in a kind of bewilderment.
+
+“When he put Morgan in the dory,” answered Bridger, “the next day to
+take him aboard the _Pajaro_, this man Plunkett stopped to shake hands
+with me and I asked him the same question.”
+
+“‘Mr. Bridger,’ said he, ‘I’m a Kentuckian, and I’ve seen a great deal
+of both men and animals. And I never yet saw a man that was overfond of
+horses and dogs but what was cruel to women.’”
+
+
+
+
+III
+THE HYPOTHESES OF FAILURE
+
+
+Lawyer Gooch bestowed his undivided attention upon the engrossing arts
+of his profession. But one flight of fancy did he allow his mind to
+entertain. He was fond of likening his suite of office rooms to the
+bottom of a ship. The rooms were three in number, with a door opening
+from one to another. These doors could also be closed.
+
+“Ships,” Lawyer Gooch would say, “are constructed for safety, with
+separate, water-tight compartments in their bottoms. If one compartment
+springs a leak it fills with water; but the good ship goes on unhurt.
+Were it not for the separating bulkheads one leak would sink the
+vessel. Now it often happens that while I am occupied with clients,
+other clients with conflicting interests call. With the assistance of
+Archibald—an office boy with a future—I cause the dangerous influx to
+be diverted into separate compartments, while I sound with my legal
+plummet the depth of each. If necessary, they may be baled into the
+hallway and permitted to escape by way of the stairs, which we may term
+the lee scuppers. Thus the good ship of business is kept afloat;
+whereas if the element that supports her were allowed to mingle freely
+in her hold we might be swamped—ha, ha, ha!”
+
+The law is dry. Good jokes are few. Surely it might be permitted Lawyer
+Gooch to mitigate the bore of briefs, the tedium of torts and the
+prosiness of processes with even so light a levy upon the good property
+of humour.
+
+Lawyer Gooch’s practice leaned largely to the settlement of marital
+infelicities. Did matrimony languish through complications, he
+mediated, soothed and arbitrated. Did it suffer from implications, he
+readjusted, defended and championed. Did it arrive at the extremity of
+duplications, he always got light sentences for his clients.
+
+But not always was Lawyer Gooch the keen, armed, wily belligerent,
+ready with his two-edged sword to lop off the shackles of Hymen. He had
+been known to build up instead of demolishing, to reunite instead of
+severing, to lead erring and foolish ones back into the fold instead of
+scattering the flock. Often had he by his eloquent and moving appeals
+sent husband and wife, weeping, back into each other’s arms. Frequently
+he had coached childhood so successfully that, at the psychological
+moment (and at a given signal) the plaintive pipe of “Papa, won’t you
+tum home adain to me and muvver?” had won the day and upheld the
+pillars of a tottering home.
+
+Unprejudiced persons admitted that Lawyer Gooch received as big fees
+from these reyoked clients as would have been paid him had the cases
+been contested in court. Prejudiced ones intimated that his fees were
+doubled, because the penitent couples always came back later for the
+divorce, anyhow.
+
+There came a season in June when the legal ship of Lawyer Gooch (to
+borrow his own figure) was nearly becalmed. The divorce mill grinds
+slowly in June. It is the month of Cupid and Hymen.
+
+Lawyer Gooch, then, sat idle in the middle room of his clientless
+suite. A small anteroom connected—or rather separated—this apartment
+from the hallway. Here was stationed Archibald, who wrested from
+visitors their cards or oral nomenclature which he bore to his master
+while they waited.
+
+Suddenly, on this day, there came a great knocking at the outermost
+door.
+
+Archibald, opening it, was thrust aside as superfluous by the visitor,
+who without due reverence at once penetrated to the office of Lawyer
+Gooch and threw himself with good-natured insolence into a comfortable
+chair facing that gentlemen.
+
+“You are Phineas C. Gooch, attorney-at-law?” said the visitor, his tone
+of voice and inflection making his words at once a question, an
+assertion and an accusation.
+
+Before committing himself by a reply, the lawyer estimated his possible
+client in one of his brief but shrewd and calculating glances.
+
+The man was of the emphatic type—large-sized, active, bold and debonair
+in demeanour, vain beyond a doubt, slightly swaggering, ready and at
+ease. He was well-clothed, but with a shade too much ornateness. He was
+seeking a lawyer; but if that fact would seem to saddle him with
+troubles they were not patent in his beaming eye and courageous air.
+
+“My name is Gooch,” at length the lawyer admitted. Upon pressure he
+would also have confessed to the Phineas C. But he did not consider it
+good practice to volunteer information. “I did not receive your card,”
+he continued, by way of rebuke, “so I—”
+
+“I know you didn’t,” remarked the visitor, coolly; “And you won’t just
+yet. Light up?” He threw a leg over an arm of his chair, and tossed a
+handful of rich-hued cigars upon the table. Lawyer Gooch knew the
+brand. He thawed just enough to accept the invitation to smoke.
+
+“You are a divorce lawyer,” said the cardless visitor. This time there
+was no interrogation in his voice. Nor did his words constitute a
+simple assertion. They formed a charge—a denunciation—as one would say
+to a dog: “You are a dog.” Lawyer Gooch was silent under the
+imputation.
+
+“You handle,” continued the visitor, “all the various ramifications of
+busted-up connubiality. You are a surgeon, we might say, who extracts
+Cupid’s darts when he shoots ’em into the wrong parties. You furnish
+patent, incandescent lights for premises where the torch of Hymen has
+burned so low you can’t light a cigar at it. Am I right, Mr. Gooch?”
+
+“I have undertaken cases,” said the lawyer, guardedly, “in the line to
+which your figurative speech seems to refer. Do you wish to consult me
+professionally, Mr. ––––” The lawyer paused, with significance.
+
+“Not yet,” said the other, with an arch wave of his cigar, “not just
+yet. Let us approach the subject with the caution that should have been
+used in the original act that makes this pow-wow necessary. There
+exists a matrimonial jumble to be straightened out. But before I give
+you names I want your honest—well, anyhow, your professional opinion on
+the merits of the mix-up. I want you to size up the
+catastrophe—abstractly—you understand? I’m Mr. Nobody; and I’ve got a
+story to tell you. Then you say what’s what. Do you get my wireless?”
+
+“You want to state a hypothetical case?” suggested Lawyer Gooch.
+
+“That’s the word I was after. ‘Apothecary’ was the best shot I could
+make at it in my mind. The hypothetical goes. I’ll state the case.
+Suppose there’s a woman—a deuced fine-looking woman—who has run away
+from her husband and home? She’s badly mashed on another man who went
+to her town to work up some real estate business. Now, we may as well
+call this woman’s husband Thomas R. Billings, for that’s his name. I’m
+giving you straight tips on the cognomens. The Lothario chap is Henry
+K. Jessup. The Billingses lived in a little town called Susanville—a
+good many miles from here. Now, Jessup leaves Susanville two weeks ago.
+The next day Mrs. Billings follows him. She’s dead gone on this man
+Jessup; you can bet your law library on that.”
+
+Lawyer Gooch’s client said this with such unctuous satisfaction that
+even the callous lawyer experienced a slight ripple of repulsion. He
+now saw clearly in his fatuous visitor the conceit of the lady-killer,
+the egoistic complacency of the successful trifler.
+
+“Now,” continued the visitor, “suppose this Mrs. Billings wasn’t happy
+at home? We’ll say she and her husband didn’t gee worth a cent. They’ve
+got incompatibility to burn. The things she likes, Billings wouldn’t
+have as a gift with trading-stamps. It’s Tabby and Rover with them all
+the time. She’s an educated woman in science and culture, and she reads
+things out loud at meetings. Billings is not on. He don’t appreciate
+progress and obelisks and ethics, and things of that sort. Old Billings
+is simply a blink when it comes to such things. The lady is out and out
+above his class. Now, lawyer, don’t it look like a fair equalization of
+rights and wrongs that a woman like that should be allowed to throw
+down Billings and take the man that can appreciate her?
+
+“Incompatibility,” said Lawyer Gooch, “is undoubtedly the source of
+much marital discord and unhappiness. Where it is positively proved,
+divorce would seem to be the equitable remedy. Are you—excuse me—is
+this man Jessup one to whom the lady may safely trust her future?”
+
+“Oh, you can bet on Jessup,” said the client, with a confident wag of
+his head. “Jessup’s all right. He’ll do the square thing. Why, he left
+Susanville just to keep people from talking about Mrs. Billings. But
+she followed him up, and now, of course, he’ll stick to her. When she
+gets a divorce, all legal and proper, Jessup will do the proper thing.”
+
+“And now,” said Lawyer Gooch, “continuing the hypothesis, if you
+prefer, and supposing that my services should be desired in the case,
+what—”
+
+The client rose impulsively to his feet.
+
+“Oh, dang the hypothetical business,” he exclaimed, impatiently. “Let’s
+let her drop, and get down to straight talk. You ought to know who I am
+by this time. I want that woman to have her divorce. I’ll pay for it.
+The day you set Mrs. Billings free I’ll pay you five hundred dollars.”
+
+Lawyer Gooch’s client banged his fist upon the table to punctuate his
+generosity.
+
+“If that is the case—” began the lawyer.
+
+“Lady to see you, sir,” bawled Archibald, bouncing in from his
+anteroom. He had orders to always announce immediately any client that
+might come. There was no sense in turning business away.
+
+Lawyer Gooch took client number one by the arm and led him suavely into
+one of the adjoining rooms. “Favour me by remaining here a few minutes,
+sir,” said he. “I will return and resume our consultation with the
+least possible delay. I am rather expecting a visit from a very wealthy
+old lady in connection with a will. I will not keep you waiting long.”
+
+The breezy gentleman seated himself with obliging acquiescence, and
+took up a magazine. The lawyer returned to the middle office, carefully
+closing behind him the connecting door.
+
+“Show the lady in, Archibald,” he said to the office boy, who was
+awaiting the order.
+
+A tall lady, of commanding presence and sternly handsome, entered the
+room. She wore robes—robes; not clothes—ample and fluent. In her eye
+could be perceived the lambent flame of genius and soul. In her hand
+was a green bag of the capacity of a bushel, and an umbrella that also
+seemed to wear a robe, ample and fluent. She accepted a chair.
+
+“Are you Mr. Phineas C. Gooch, the lawyer?” she asked, in formal and
+unconciliatory tones.
+
+“I am,” answered Lawyer Gooch, without circumlocution. He never
+circumlocuted when dealing with a woman. Women circumlocute. Time is
+wasted when both sides in debate employ the same tactics.
+
+“As a lawyer, sir,” began the lady, “you may have acquired some
+knowledge of the human heart. Do you believe that the pusillanimous and
+petty conventions of our artificial social life should stand as an
+obstacle in the way of a noble and affectionate heart when it finds its
+true mate among the miserable and worthless wretches in the world that
+are called men?”
+
+“Madam,” said Lawyer Gooch, in the tone that he used in curbing his
+female clients, “this is an office for conducting the practice of law.
+I am a lawyer, not a philosopher, nor the editor of an ‘Answers to the
+Lovelorn’ column of a newspaper. I have other clients waiting. I will
+ask you kindly to come to the point.”
+
+“Well, you needn’t get so stiff around the gills about it,” said the
+lady, with a snap of her luminous eyes and a startling gyration of her
+umbrella. “Business is what I’ve come for. I want your opinion in the
+matter of a suit for divorce, as the vulgar would call it, but which is
+really only the readjustment of the false and ignoble conditions that
+the short-sighted laws of man have interposed between a loving—”
+
+“I beg your pardon, madam,” interrupted Lawyer Gooch, with some
+impatience, “for reminding you again that this is a law office. Perhaps
+Mrs. Wilcox—”
+
+“Mrs. Wilcox is all right,” cut in the lady, with a hint of asperity.
+“And so are Tolstoi, and Mrs. Gertrude Atherton, and Omar Khayyam, and
+Mr. Edward Bok. I’ve read ’em all. I would like to discuss with you the
+divine right of the soul as opposed to the freedom-destroying
+restrictions of a bigoted and narrow-minded society. But I will proceed
+to business. I would prefer to lay the matter before you in an
+impersonal way until you pass upon its merits. That is to describe it
+as a supposable instance, without—”
+
+“You wish to state a hypothetical case?” said Lawyer Gooch.
+
+“I was going to say that,” said the lady, sharply. “Now, suppose there
+is a woman who is all soul and heart and aspirations for a complete
+existence. This woman has a husband who is far below her in intellect,
+in taste—in everything. Bah! he is a brute. He despises literature. He
+sneers at the lofty thoughts of the world’s great thinkers. He thinks
+only of real estate and such sordid things. He is no mate for a woman
+with soul. We will say that this unfortunate wife one day meets with
+her ideal—a man with brain and heart and force. She loves him. Although
+this man feels the thrill of a new-found affinity he is too noble, too
+honourable to declare himself. He flies from the presence of his
+beloved. She flies after him, trampling, with superb indifference, upon
+the fetters with which an unenlightened social system would bind her.
+Now, what will a divorce cost? Eliza Ann Timmins, the poetess of
+Sycamore Gap, got one for three hundred and forty dollars. Can I—I mean
+can this lady I speak of get one that cheap?”
+
+“Madam,” said Lawyer Gooch, “your last two or three sentences delight
+me with their intelligence and clearness. Can we not now abandon the
+hypothetical and come down to names and business?”
+
+“I should say so,” exclaimed the lady, adopting the practical with
+admirable readiness. “Thomas R. Billings is the name of the low brute
+who stands between the happiness of his legal—his legal, but not his
+spiritual—wife and Henry K. Jessup, the noble man whom nature intended
+for her mate. I,” concluded the client, with an air of dramatic
+revelation, “am Mrs. Billings!”
+
+“Gentlemen to see you, sir,” shouted Archibald, invading the room
+almost at a handspring. Lawyer Gooch arose from his chair.
+
+“Mrs. Billings,” he said courteously, “allow me to conduct you into the
+adjoining office apartment for a few minutes. I am expecting a very
+wealthy old gentleman on business connected with a will. In a very
+short while I will join you, and continue our consultation.”
+
+With his accustomed chivalrous manner, Lawyer Gooch ushered his soulful
+client into the remaining unoccupied room, and came out, closing the
+door with circumspection.
+
+The next visitor introduced by Archibald was a thin, nervous,
+irritable-looking man of middle age, with a worried and apprehensive
+expression of countenance. He carried in one hand a small satchel,
+which he set down upon the floor beside the chair which the lawyer
+placed for him. His clothing was of good quality, but it was worn
+without regard to neatness or style, and appeared to be covered with
+the dust of travel.
+
+“You make a specialty of divorce cases,” he said, in, an agitated but
+business-like tone.
+
+“I may say,” began Lawyer Gooch, “that my practice has not altogether
+avoided—”
+
+“I know you do,” interrupted client number three. “You needn’t tell me.
+I’ve heard all about you. I have a case to lay before you without
+necessarily disclosing any connection that I might have with it—that
+is—”
+
+“You wish,” said Lawyer Gooch, “to state a hypothetical case.
+
+“You may call it that. I am a plain man of business. I will be as brief
+as possible. We will first take up hypothetical woman. We will say she
+is married uncongenially. In many ways she is a superior woman.
+Physically she is considered to be handsome. She is devoted to what she
+calls literature—poetry and prose, and such stuff. Her husband is a
+plain man in the business walks of life. Their home has not been happy,
+although the husband has tried to make it so. Some time ago a man—a
+stranger—came to the peaceful town in which they lived and engaged in
+some real estate operations. This woman met him, and became
+unaccountably infatuated with him. Her attentions became so open that
+the man felt the community to be no safe place for him, so he left it.
+She abandoned husband and home, and followed him. She forsook her home,
+where she was provided with every comfort, to follow this man who had
+inspired her with such a strange affection. Is there anything more to
+be deplored,” concluded the client, in a trembling voice, “than the
+wrecking of a home by a woman’s uncalculating folly?”
+
+Lawyer Gooch delivered the cautious opinion that there was not.
+
+“This man she has gone to join,” resumed the visitor, “is not the man
+to make her happy. It is a wild and foolish self-deception that makes
+her think he will. Her husband, in spite of their many disagreements,
+is the only one capable of dealing with her sensitive and peculiar
+nature. But this she does not realize now.”
+
+“Would you consider a divorce the logical cure in the case you
+present?” asked Lawyer Gooch, who felt that the conversation was
+wandering too far from the field of business.
+
+“A divorce!” exclaimed the client, feelingly—almost tearfully. “No,
+no—not that. I have read, Mr. Gooch, of many instances where your
+sympathy and kindly interest led you to act as a mediator between
+estranged husband and wife, and brought them together again. Let us
+drop the hypothetical case—I need conceal no longer that it is I who am
+the sufferer in this sad affair—the names you shall have—Thomas R.
+Billings and wife—and Henry K. Jessup, the man with whom she is
+infatuated.”
+
+Client number three laid his hand upon Mr. Gooch’s arm. Deep emotion
+was written upon his careworn face. “For Heaven’s sake”, he said
+fervently, “help me in this hour of trouble. Seek out Mrs. Billings,
+and persuade her to abandon this distressing pursuit of her lamentable
+folly. Tell her, Mr. Gooch, that her husband is willing to receive her
+back to his heart and home—promise her anything that will induce her to
+return. I have heard of your success in these matters. Mrs. Billings
+cannot be very far away. I am worn out with travel and weariness. Twice
+during the pursuit I saw her, but various circumstances prevented our
+having an interview. Will you undertake this mission for me, Mr. Gooch,
+and earn my everlasting gratitude?”
+
+“It is true,” said Lawyer Gooch, frowning slightly at the other’s last
+words, but immediately calling up an expression of virtuous
+benevolence, “that on a number of occasions I have been successful in
+persuading couples who sought the severing of their matrimonial bonds
+to think better of their rash intentions and return to their homes
+reconciled. But I assure you that the work is often exceedingly
+difficult. The amount of argument, perseverance, and, if I may be
+allowed to say it, eloquence that it requires would astonish you. But
+this is a case in which my sympathies would be wholly enlisted. I feel
+deeply for you sir, and I would be most happy to see husband and wife
+reunited. But my time,” concluded the lawyer, looking at his watch as
+if suddenly reminded of the fact, “is valuable.”
+
+“I am aware of that,” said the client, “and if you will take the case
+and persuade Mrs. Billings to return home and leave the man alone that
+she is following—on that day I will pay you the sum of one thousand
+dollars. I have made a little money in real estate during the recent
+boom in Susanville, and I will not begrudge that amount.”
+
+“Retain your seat for a few moments, please,” said Lawyer Gooch,
+arising, and again consulting his watch. “I have another client waiting
+in an adjoining room whom I had very nearly forgotten. I will return in
+the briefest possible space.”
+
+The situation was now one that fully satisfied Lawyer Gooch’s love of
+intricacy and complication. He revelled in cases that presented such
+subtle problems and possibilities. It pleased him to think that he was
+master of the happiness and fate of the three individuals who sat,
+unconscious of one another’s presence, within his reach. His old figure
+of the ship glided into his mind. But now the figure failed, for to
+have filled every compartment of an actual vessel would have been to
+endanger her safety; with his compartments full, his ship of affairs
+could but sail on to the advantageous port of a fine, fat fee. The
+thing for him to do, of course, was to wring the best bargain he could
+from some one of his anxious cargo.
+
+First he called to the office boy: “Lock the outer door, Archibald, and
+admit no one.” Then he moved, with long, silent strides into the room
+in which client number one waited. That gentleman sat, patiently
+scanning the pictures in the magazine, with a cigar in his mouth and
+his feet upon a table.
+
+“Well,” he remarked, cheerfully, as the lawyer entered, “have you made
+up your mind? Does five hundred dollars go for getting the fair lady a
+divorce?”
+
+“You mean that as a retainer?” asked Lawyer Gooch, softly
+interrogative.
+
+“Hey? No; for the whole job. It’s enough, ain’t it?”
+
+“My fee,” said Lawyer Gooch, “would be one thousand five hundred
+dollars. Five hundred dollars down, and the remainder upon issuance of
+the divorce.”
+
+A loud whistle came from client number one. His feet descended to the
+floor.
+
+“Guess we can’t close the deal,” he said, arising, “I cleaned up five
+hundred dollars in a little real estate dicker down in Susanville. I’d
+do anything I could to free the lady, but it out-sizes my pile.”
+
+“Could you stand one thousand two hundred dollars?” asked the lawyer,
+insinuatingly.
+
+“Five hundred is my limit, I tell you. Guess I’ll have to hunt up a
+cheaper lawyer.” The client put on his hat.
+
+“Out this way, please,” said Lawyer Gooch, opening the door that led
+into the hallway.
+
+As the gentleman flowed out of the compartment and down the stairs,
+Lawyer Gooch smiled to himself. “Exit Mr. Jessup,” he murmured, as he
+fingered the Henry Clay tuft of hair at his ear. “And now for the
+forsaken husband.” He returned to the middle office, and assumed a
+businesslike manner.
+
+“I understand,” he said to client number three, “that you agree to pay
+one thousand dollars if I bring about, or am instrumental in bringing
+about, the return of Mrs. Billings to her home, and her abandonment of
+her infatuated pursuit of the man for whom she has conceived such a
+violent fancy. Also that the case is now unreservedly in my hands on
+that basis. Is that correct?”
+
+“Entirely”, said the other, eagerly. “And I can produce the cash any
+time at two hours’ notice.”
+
+Lawyer Gooch stood up at his full height. His thin figure seemed to
+expand. His thumbs sought the arm-holes of his vest. Upon his face was
+a look of sympathetic benignity that he always wore during such
+undertakings.
+
+“Then, sir,” he said, in kindly tones, “I think I can promise you an
+early relief from your troubles. I have that much confidence in my
+powers of argument and persuasion, in the natural impulses of the human
+heart toward good, and in the strong influence of a husband’s
+unfaltering love. Mrs. Billings, sir, is here—in that room—” the
+lawyer’s long arm pointed to the door. “I will call her in at once; and
+our united pleadings—”
+
+Lawyer Gooch paused, for client number three had leaped from his chair
+as if propelled by steel springs, and clutched his satchel.
+
+“What the devil,” he exclaimed, harshly, “do you mean? That woman in
+there! I thought I shook her off forty miles back.”
+
+He ran to the open window, looked out below, and threw one leg over the
+sill.
+
+“Stop!” cried Lawyer Gooch, in amazement. “What would you do? Come, Mr.
+Billings, and face your erring but innocent wife. Our combined
+entreaties cannot fail to—”
+
+“Billings!” shouted the now thoroughly moved client. “I’ll Billings
+you, you old idiot!”
+
+Turning, he hurled his satchel with fury at the lawyer’s head. It
+struck that astounded peacemaker between the eyes, causing him to
+stagger backward a pace or two. When Lawyer Gooch recovered his wits he
+saw that his client had disappeared. Rushing to the window, he leaned
+out, and saw the recreant gathering himself up from the top of a shed
+upon which he had dropped from the second-story window. Without
+stopping to collect his hat he then plunged downward the remaining ten
+feet to the alley, up which he flew with prodigious celerity until the
+surrounding building swallowed him up from view.
+
+Lawyer Gooch passed his hand tremblingly across his brow. It was a
+habitual act with him, serving to clear his thoughts. Perhaps also it
+now seemed to soothe the spot where a very hard alligator-hide satchel
+had struck.
+
+The satchel lay upon the floor, wide open, with its contents spilled
+about. Mechanically, Lawyer Gooch stooped to gather up the articles.
+The first was a collar; and the omniscient eye of the man of law
+perceived, wonderingly, the initials H. K. J. marked upon it. Then came
+a comb, a brush, a folded map, and a piece of soap. Lastly, a handful
+of old business letters, addressed—every one of them—to “Henry K.
+Jessup, Esq.”
+
+Lawyer Gooch closed the satchel, and set it upon the table. He
+hesitated for a moment, and then put on his hat and walked into the
+office boy’s anteroom.
+
+“Archibald,” he said mildly, as he opened the hall door, “I am going
+around to the Supreme Court rooms. In five minutes you may step into
+the inner office, and inform the lady who is waiting there that”—here
+Lawyer Gooch made use of the vernacular—“that there’s nothing doing.”
+
+
+
+
+IV
+CALLOWAY’S CODE
+
+
+The New York _Enterprise_ sent H. B. Calloway as special correspondent
+to the Russo-Japanese-Portsmouth war.
+
+For two months Calloway hung about Yokohama and Tokio, shaking dice
+with the other correspondents for drinks of ‘rickshaws—oh, no, that’s
+something to ride in; anyhow, he wasn’t earning the salary that his
+paper was paying him. But that was not Calloway’s fault. The little
+brown men who held the strings of Fate between their fingers were not
+ready for the readers of the _Enterprise_ to season their breakfast
+bacon and eggs with the battles of the descendants of the gods.
+
+But soon the column of correspondents that were to go out with the
+First Army tightened their field-glass belts and went down to the Yalu
+with Kuroki. Calloway was one of these.
+
+Now, this is no history of the battle of the Yalu River. That has been
+told in detail by the correspondents who gazed at the shrapnel smoke
+rings from a distance of three miles. But, for justice’s sake, let it
+be understood that the Japanese commander prohibited a nearer view.
+
+Calloway’s feat was accomplished before the battle. What he did was to
+furnish the _Enterprise_ with the biggest beat of the war. That paper
+published exclusively and in detail the news of the attack on the lines
+of the Russian General on the same day that it was made. No other paper
+printed a word about it for two days afterward, except a London paper,
+whose account was absolutely incorrect and untrue.
+
+Calloway did this in face of the fact that General Kuroki was making
+his moves and laying his plans with the profoundest secrecy as far as
+the world outside his camps was concerned. The correspondents were
+forbidden to send out any news whatever of his plans; and every message
+that was allowed on the wires was censored with rigid severity.
+
+The correspondent for the London paper handed in a cablegram describing
+Kuroki’s plans; but as it was wrong from beginning to end the censor
+grinned and let it go through.
+
+So, there they were—Kuroki on one side of the Yalu with forty-two
+thousand infantry, five thousand cavalry, and one hundred and
+twenty-four guns. On the other side, Zassulitch waited for him with
+only twenty-three thousand men, and with a long stretch of river to
+guard. And Calloway had got hold of some important inside information
+that he knew would bring the _Enterprise_ staff around a cablegram as
+thick as flies around a Park Row lemonade stand. If he could only get
+that message past the censor—the new censor who had arrived and taken
+his post that day!
+
+Calloway did the obviously proper thing. He lit his pipe and sat down
+on a gun carriage to think it over. And there we must leave him; for
+the rest of the story belongs to Vesey, a sixteen-dollar-a-week
+reporter on the _Enterprise_.
+
+Calloway’s cablegram was handed to the managing editor at four o’clock
+in the afternoon. He read it three times; and then drew a pocket mirror
+from a pigeon-hole in his desk, and looked at his reflection carefully.
+Then he went over to the desk of Boyd, his assistant (he usually called
+Boyd when he wanted him), and laid the cablegram before him.
+
+“It’s from Calloway,” he said. “See what you make of it.”
+
+The message was dated at Wi-ju, and these were the words of it:
+
+Foregone preconcerted rash witching goes muffled rumour mine dark
+silent unfortunate richmond existing great hotly brute select mooted
+parlous beggars ye angel incontrovertible.
+
+
+Boyd read it twice.
+
+“It’s either a cipher or a sunstroke,” said he.
+
+“Ever hear of anything like a code in the office—a secret code?” asked
+the m. e., who had held his desk for only two years. Managing editors
+come and go.
+
+“None except the vernacular that the lady specials write in,” said
+Boyd. “Couldn’t be an acrostic, could it?”
+
+“I thought of that,” said the m. e., “but the beginning letters contain
+only four vowels. It must be a code of some sort.”
+
+“Try em in groups,” suggested Boyd. “Let’s see—‘Rash witching goes’—not
+with me it doesn’t. ‘Muffled rumour mine’—must have an underground
+wire. ‘Dark silent unfortunate richmond’—no reason why he should knock
+that town so hard. ‘Existing great hotly’—no it doesn’t pan out. I’ll
+call Scott.”
+
+The city editor came in a hurry, and tried his luck. A city editor must
+know something about everything; so Scott knew a little about
+cipher-writing.
+
+“It may be what is called an inverted alphabet cipher,” said he. “I’ll
+try that. ‘R’ seems to be the oftenest used initial letter, with the
+exception of ‘m.’ Assuming ‘r’ to mean ‘e’, the most frequently used
+vowel, we transpose the letters—so.”
+
+Scott worked rapidly with his pencil for two minutes; and then showed
+the first word according to his reading—the word “Scejtzez.”
+
+“Great!” cried Boyd. “It’s a charade. My first is a Russian general. Go
+on, Scott.”
+
+“No, that won’t work,” said the city editor. “It’s undoubtedly a code.
+It’s impossible to read it without the key. Has the office ever used a
+cipher code?”
+
+“Just what I was asking,” said the m.e. “Hustle everybody up that ought
+to know. We must get at it some way. Calloway has evidently got hold of
+something big, and the censor has put the screws on, or he wouldn’t
+have cabled in a lot of chop suey like this.”
+
+Throughout the office of the _Enterprise_ a dragnet was sent, hauling
+in such members of the staff as would be likely to know of a code, past
+or present, by reason of their wisdom, information, natural
+intelligence, or length of servitude. They got together in a group in
+the city room, with the m. e. in the centre. No one had heard of a
+code. All began to explain to the head investigator that newspapers
+never use a code, anyhow—that is, a cipher code. Of course the
+Associated Press stuff is a sort of code—an abbreviation, rather—but—
+
+The m. e. knew all that, and said so. He asked each man how long he had
+worked on the paper. Not one of them had drawn pay from an _Enterprise_
+envelope for longer than six years. Calloway had been on the paper
+twelve years.
+
+“Try old Heffelbauer,” said the m. e. “He was here when Park Row was a
+potato patch.”
+
+Heffelbauer was an institution. He was half janitor, half handy-man
+about the office, and half watchman—thus becoming the peer of thirteen
+and one-half tailors. Sent for, he came, radiating his nationality.
+
+“Heffelbauer,” said the m. e., “did you ever hear of a code belonging
+to the office a long time ago—a private code? You know what a code is,
+don’t you?”
+
+“Yah,” said Heffelbauer. “Sure I know vat a code is. Yah, apout dwelf
+or fifteen year ago der office had a code. Der reborters in der
+city-room haf it here.”
+
+“Ah!” said the m. e. “We’re getting on the trail now. Where was it
+kept, Heffelbauer? What do you know about it?”
+
+“Somedimes,” said the retainer, “dey keep it in der little room behind
+der library room.”
+
+“Can you find it?” asked the m. e. eagerly. “Do you know where it is?”
+
+“Mein Gott!” said Heffelbauer. “How long you dink a code live? Der
+reborters call him a maskeet. But von day he butt mit his head der
+editor, und—”
+
+“Oh, he’s talking about a goat,” said Boyd. “Get out, Heffelbauer.”
+
+Again discomfited, the concerted wit and resource of the _Enterprise_
+huddled around Calloway’s puzzle, considering its mysterious words in
+vain.
+
+Then Vesey came in.
+
+Vesey was the youngest reporter. He had a thirty-two-inch chest and
+wore a number fourteen collar; but his bright Scotch plaid suit gave
+him presence and conferred no obscurity upon his whereabouts. He wore
+his hat in such a position that people followed him about to see him
+take it off, convinced that it must be hung upon a peg driven into the
+back of his head. He was never without an immense, knotted, hard-wood
+cane with a German-silver tip on its crooked handle. Vesey was the best
+photograph hustler in the office. Scott said it was because no living
+human being could resist the personal triumph it was to hand his
+picture over to Vesey. Vesey always wrote his own news stories, except
+the big ones, which were sent to the rewrite men. Add to this fact that
+among all the inhabitants, temples, and groves of the earth nothing
+existed that could abash Vesey, and his dim sketch is concluded.
+
+Vesey butted into the circle of cipher readers very much as
+Heffelbauer’s “code” would have done, and asked what was up. Some one
+explained, with the touch of half-familiar condescension that they
+always used toward him. Vesey reached out and took the cablegram from
+the m. e.’s hand. Under the protection of some special Providence, he
+was always doing appalling things like that, and coming, off unscathed.
+
+“It’s a code,” said Vesey. “Anybody got the key?”
+
+“The office has no code,” said Boyd, reaching for the message. Vesey
+held to it.
+
+“Then old Calloway expects us to read it, anyhow,” said he. “He’s up a
+tree, or something, and he’s made this up so as to get it by the
+censor. It’s up to us. Gee! I wish they had sent me, too. Say—we can’t
+afford to fall down on our end of it. ‘Foregone, preconcerted rash,
+witching’—h’m.”
+
+Vesey sat down on a table corner and began to whistle softly, frowning
+at the cablegram.
+
+“Let’s have it, please,” said the m. e. “We’ve got to get to work on
+it.”
+
+“I believe I’ve got a line on it,” said Vesey. “Give me ten minutes.”
+
+He walked to his desk, threw his hat into a waste-basket, spread out
+flat on his chest like a gorgeous lizard, and started his pencil going.
+The wit and wisdom of the _Enterprise_ remained in a loose group, and
+smiled at one another, nodding their heads toward Vesey. Then they
+began to exchange their theories about the cipher.
+
+It took Vesey exactly fifteen minutes. He brought to the m. e. a pad
+with the code-key written on it.
+
+“I felt the swing of it as soon as I saw it,” said Vesey. “Hurrah for
+old Calloway! He’s done the Japs and every paper in town that prints
+literature instead of news. Take a look at that.”
+
+Thus had Vesey set forth the reading of the code:
+
+Foregone—conclusion
+Preconcerted—arrangement
+Rash—act
+Witching—hour of midnight
+Goes—without saying
+Muffled—report
+Rumour—hath it
+Mine—host
+Dark—horse
+Silent—majority
+Unfortunate—pedestrians*
+Richmond—in the field
+Existing—conditions
+Great—White Way
+Hotly—contested
+Brute—force
+Select—few
+Mooted—question
+Parlous—times
+Beggars—description
+Ye—correspondent
+Angel—unawares
+Incontrovertible—fact
+
+
+* Mr. Vesey afterward explained that the logical journalistic
+complement of the word “unfortunate” was once the word “victim.” But,
+since the automobile became so popular, the correct following word is
+now “pedestrians”. Of course, in Calloway’s code it meant infantry.
+
+
+“It’s simply newspaper English,” explained Vesey. “I’ve been reporting
+on the _Enterprise_ long enough to know it by heart. Old Calloway gives
+us the cue word, and we use the word that naturally follows it just as
+we use ’em in the paper. Read it over, and you’ll see how pat they drop
+into their places. Now, here’s the message he intended us to get.”
+
+Vesey handed out another sheet of paper.
+
+Concluded arrangement to act at hour of midnight without saying. Report
+hath it that a large body of cavalry and an overwhelming force of
+infantry will be thrown into the field. Conditions white. Way contested
+by only a small force. Question the _Times_ description. Its
+correspondent is unaware of the facts.
+
+
+“Great stuff!” cried Boyd excitedly. “Kuroki crosses the Yalu to-night
+and attacks. Oh, we won’t do a thing to the sheets that make up with
+Addison’s essays, real estate transfers, and bowling scores!”
+
+“Mr. Vesey,” said the m. e., with his
+jollying-which-you-should-regard-as-a-favour manner, “you have cast a
+serious reflection upon the literary standards of the paper that
+employs you. You have also assisted materially in giving us the biggest
+‘beat’ of the year. I will let you know in a day or two whether you are
+to be discharged or retained at a larger salary. Somebody send Ames to
+me.”
+
+Ames was the king-pin, the snowy-petalled Marguerite, the star-bright
+looloo of the rewrite men. He saw attempted murder in the pains of
+green-apple colic, cyclones in the summer zephyr, lost children in
+every top-spinning urchin, an uprising of the down-trodden masses in
+every hurling of a derelict potato at a passing automobile. When not
+rewriting, Ames sat on the porch of his Brooklyn villa playing checkers
+with his ten-year-old son.
+
+Ames and the “war editor” shut themselves in a room. There was a map in
+there stuck full of little pins that represented armies and divisions.
+Their fingers had been itching for days to move those pins along the
+crooked line of the Yalu. They did so now; and in words of fire Ames
+translated Calloway’s brief message into a front page masterpiece that
+set the world talking. He told of the secret councils of the Japanese
+officers; gave Kuroki’s flaming speeches in full; counted the cavalry
+and infantry to a man and a horse; described the quick and silent
+building of the bridge at Suikauchen, across which the Mikado’s
+legions were hurled upon the surprised Zassulitch, whose troops were
+widely scattered along the river. And the battle!—well, you know what
+Ames can do with a battle if you give him just one smell of smoke for a
+foundation. And in the same story, with seemingly supernatural
+knowledge, he gleefully scored the most profound and ponderous paper in
+England for the false and misleading account of the intended movements
+of the Japanese First Army printed in its issue of _the same date_.
+
+Only one error was made; and that was the fault of the cable operator
+at Wi-ju. Calloway pointed it out after he came back. The word “great”
+in his code should have been “gage,” and its complemental words “of
+battle.” But it went to Ames “conditions white,” and of course he took
+that to mean snow. His description of the Japanese army struggling
+through the snowstorm, blinded by the whirling flakes, was thrillingly
+vivid. The artists turned out some effective illustrations that made a
+hit as pictures of the artillery dragging their guns through the
+drifts. But, as the attack was made on the first day of May,
+“conditions white” excited some amusement. But it in made no difference
+to the _Enterprise_, anyway.
+
+It was wonderful. And Calloway was wonderful in having made the new
+censor believe that his jargon of words meant no more than a complaint
+of the dearth of news and a petition for more expense money. And Vesey
+was wonderful. And most wonderful of all are words, and how they make
+friends one with another, being oft associated, until not even obituary
+notices them do part.
+
+On the second day following, the city editor halted at Vesey’s desk
+where the reporter was writing the story of a man who had broken his
+leg by falling into a coal-hole—Ames having failed to find a murder
+motive in it.
+
+“The old man says your salary is to be raised to twenty a week,” said
+Scott.
+
+“All right,” said Vesey. “Every little helps. Say—Mr. Scott, which
+would you say—‘We can state without fear of successful contradiction,’
+or, ‘On the whole it can be safely asserted’?”
+
+
+
+
+V
+A MATTER OF MEAN ELEVATION
+
+
+One winter the Alcazar Opera Company of New Orleans made a speculative
+trip along the Mexican, Central American and South American coasts. The
+venture proved a most successful one. The music-loving, impressionable
+Spanish-Americans deluged the company with dollars and “vivas.” The
+manager waxed plump and amiable. But for the prohibitive climate he
+would have put forth the distinctive flower of his prosperity—the
+overcoat of fur, braided, frogged and opulent. Almost was he persuaded
+to raise the salaries of his company. But with a mighty effort he
+conquered the impulse toward such an unprofitable effervescence of joy.
+
+At Macuto, on the coast of Venezuela, the company scored its greatest
+success. Imagine Coney Island translated into Spanish and you will
+comprehend Macuto. The fashionable season is from November to March.
+Down from La Guayra and Caracas and Valencia and other interior towns
+flock the people for their holiday season. There are bathing and
+fiestas and bull fights and scandal. And then the people have a passion
+for music that the bands in the plaza and on the sea beach stir but do
+not satisfy. The coming of the Alcazar Opera Company aroused the utmost
+ardour and zeal among the pleasure seekers.
+
+The illustrious Guzman Blanco, President and Dictator of Venezuela,
+sojourned in Macuto with his court for the season. That potent
+ruler—who himself paid a subsidy of 40,000 pesos each year to grand
+opera in Caracas—ordered one of the Government warehouses to be cleared
+for a temporary theatre. A stage was quickly constructed and rough
+wooden benches made for the audience. Private boxes were added for the
+use of the President and the notables of the army and Government.
+
+The company remained in Macuto for two weeks. Each performance filled
+the house as closely as it could be packed. Then the music-mad people
+fought for room in the open doors and windows, and crowded about,
+hundreds deep, on the outside. Those audiences formed a brilliantly
+diversified patch of colour. The hue of their faces ranged from the
+clear olive of the pure-blood Spaniards down through the yellow and
+brown shades of the Mestizos to the coal-black Carib and the Jamaica
+Negro. Scattered among them were little groups of Indians with faces
+like stone idols, wrapped in gaudy fibre-woven blankets—Indians down
+from the mountain states of Zamora and Los Andes and Miranda to trade
+their gold dust in the coast towns.
+
+The spell cast upon these denizens of the interior fastnesses was
+remarkable. They sat in petrified ecstasy, conspicuous among the
+excitable Macutians, who wildly strove with tongue and hand to give
+evidence of their delight. Only once did the sombre rapture of these
+aboriginals find expression. During the rendition of “Faust,” Guzman
+Blanco, extravagantly pleased by the “Jewel Song,” cast upon the stage
+a purse of gold pieces. Other distinguished citizens followed his lead
+to the extent of whatever loose coin they had convenient, while some of
+the fair and fashionable señoras were moved, in imitation, to fling a
+jewel or a ring or two at the feet of the Marguerite—who was, according
+to the bills, Mlle. Nina Giraud. Then, from different parts of the
+house rose sundry of the stolid hillmen and cast upon the stage little
+brown and dun bags that fell with soft “thumps” and did not rebound. It
+was, no doubt, pleasure at the tribute to her art that caused Mlle.
+Giraud’s eyes to shine so brightly when she opened these little
+deerskin bags in her dressing room and found them to contain pure gold
+dust. If so, the pleasure was rightly hers, for her voice in song,
+pure, strong and thrilling with the feeling of the emotional artist,
+deserved the tribute that it earned.
+
+But the triumph of the Alcazar Opera Company is not the theme—it but
+leans upon and colours it. There happened in Macuto a tragic thing, an
+unsolvable mystery, that sobered for a time the gaiety of the happy
+season.
+
+One evening between the short twilight and the time when she should
+have whirled upon the stage in the red and black of the ardent Carmen,
+Mlle. Nina Giraud disappeared from the sight and ken of 6,000 pairs of
+eyes and as many minds in Macuto. There was the usual turmoil and
+hurrying to seek her. Messengers flew to the little French-kept hotel
+where she stayed; others of the company hastened here or there where
+she might be lingering in some tienda or unduly prolonging her bath
+upon the beach. All search was fruitless. Mademoiselle had vanished.
+
+Half an hour passed and she did not appear. The dictator, unused to the
+caprices of prime donne, became impatient. He sent an aide from his box
+to say to the manager that if the curtain did not at once rise he would
+immediately hale the entire company to the calabosa, though it would
+desolate his heart, indeed, to be compelled to such an act. Birds in
+Macuto could be made to sing.
+
+The manager abandoned hope for the time of Mlle. Giraud. A member of
+the chorus, who had dreamed hopelessly for years of the blessed
+opportunity, quickly Carmenized herself and the opera went on.
+
+Afterward, when the lost cantatrice appeared not, the aid of the
+authorities was invoked. The President at once set the army, the police
+and all citizens to the search. Not one clue to Mlle. Giraud’s
+disappearance was found. The Alcazar left to fill engagements farther
+down the coast.
+
+On the way back the steamer stopped at Macuto and the manager made
+anxious inquiry. Not a trace of the lady had been discovered. The
+Alcazar could do no more. The personal belongings of the missing lady
+were stored in the hotel against her possible later reappearance and
+the opera company continued upon its homeward voyage to New Orleans.
+
+
+On the _camino real_ along the beach the two saddle mules and the four
+pack mules of Don Señor Johnny Armstrong stood, patiently awaiting the
+crack of the whip of the _arriero_, Luis. That would be the signal for
+the start on another long journey into the mountains. The pack mules
+were loaded with a varied assortment of hardware and cutlery. These
+articles Don Johnny traded to the interior Indians for the gold dust
+that they washed from the Andean streams and stored in quills and bags
+against his coming. It was a profitable business, and Señor Armstrong
+expected soon to be able to purchase the coffee plantation that he
+coveted.
+
+Armstrong stood on the narrow sidewalk, exchanging garbled Spanish with
+old Peralto, the rich native merchant who had just charged him four
+prices for half a gross of pot-metal hatchets, and abridged English
+with Rucker, the little German who was Consul for the United States.
+
+“Take with you, señor,” said Peralto, “the blessings of the saints upon
+your journey.”
+
+“Better try quinine,” growled Rucker through his pipe. “Take two grains
+every night. And don’t make your trip too long, Johnny, because we haf
+needs of you. It is ein villainous game dot Melville play of whist, and
+dere is no oder substitute. _Auf wiedersehen_, und keep your eyes dot
+mule’s ears between when you on der edge of der brecipices ride.”
+
+The bells of Luis’s mule jingled and the pack train filed after the
+warning note. Armstrong, waved a good-bye and took his place at the
+tail of the procession. Up the narrow street they turned, and passed
+the two-story wooden Hotel Ingles, where Ives and Dawson and Richards
+and the rest of the chaps were dawdling on the broad piazza, reading
+week-old newspapers. They crowded to the railing and shouted many
+friendly and wise and foolish farewells after him. Across the plaza
+they trotted slowly past the bronze statue of Guzman Blanco, within its
+fence of bayoneted rifles captured from revolutionists, and out of the
+town between the rows of thatched huts swarming with the unclothed
+youth of Macuto. They plunged into the damp coolness of banana groves
+at length to emerge upon a bright stream, where brown women in scant
+raiment laundered clothes destructively upon the rocks. Then the pack
+train, fording the stream, attacked the sudden ascent, and bade adieu
+to such civilization as the coast afforded.
+
+For weeks Armstrong, guided by Luis, followed his regular route among
+the mountains. After he had collected an arroba of the precious metal,
+winning a profit of nearly $5,000, the heads of the lightened mules
+were turned down-trail again. Where the head of the Guarico River
+springs from a great gash in the mountain-side, Luis halted the train.
+
+“Half a day’s journey from here, Señor,” said he, “is the village of
+Tacuzama, which we have never visited. I think many ounces of gold may
+be procured there. It is worth the trial.”
+
+Armstrong concurred, and they turned again upward toward Tacuzama. The
+trail was abrupt and precipitous, mounting through a dense forest. As
+night fell, dark and gloomy, Luis once more halted. Before them was a
+black chasm, bisecting the path as far as they could see.
+
+Luis dismounted. “There should be a bridge,” he called, and ran along
+the cleft a distance. “It is here,” he cried, and remounting, led the
+way. In a few moments Armstrong, heard a sound as though a thunderous
+drum were beating somewhere in the dark. It was the falling of the
+mules’ hoofs upon the bridge made of strong hides lashed to poles and
+stretched across the chasm. Half a mile further was Tacuzama. The
+village was a congregation of rock and mud huts set in the profundity
+of an obscure wood. As they rode in a sound inconsistent with that
+brooding solitude met their ears. From a long, low mud hut that they
+were nearing rose the glorious voice of a woman in song. The words were
+English, the air familiar to Armstrong’s memory, but not to his musical
+knowledge.
+
+He slipped from his mule and stole to a narrow window in one end of the
+house. Peering cautiously inside, he saw, within three feet of him, a
+woman of marvellous, imposing beauty, clothed in a splendid loose robe
+of leopard skins. The hut was packed close to the small space in which
+she stood with the squatting figures of Indians.
+
+The woman finished her song and seated herself close to the little
+window, as if grateful for the unpolluted air that entered it. When she
+had ceased several of the audience rose and cast little softly-falling
+bags at her feet. A harsh murmur—no doubt a barbarous kind of applause
+and comment—went through the grim assembly.
+
+Armstrong, was used to seizing opportunities promptly. Taking advantage
+of the noise he called to the woman in a low but distinct voice: “Do
+not turn your head this way, but listen. I am an American. If you need
+assistance tell me how I can render it. Answer as briefly as you can.”
+
+The woman was worthy of his boldness. Only by a sudden flush of her
+pale cheek did she acknowledge understanding of his words. Then she
+spoke, scarcely moving her lips.
+
+“I am held a prisoner by these Indians. God knows I need help. In two
+hours come to the little hut twenty yards toward the Mountainside.
+There will be a light and a red curtain in the window. There is always
+a guard at the door, whom you will have to overcome. For the love of
+heaven, do not fail to come.”
+
+The story seems to shrink from adventure and rescue and mystery. The
+theme is one too gentle for those brave and quickening tones. And yet
+it reaches as far back as time itself. It has been named “environment,”
+which is as weak a word as any to express the unnameable kinship of man
+to nature, that queer fraternity that causes stones and trees and salt
+water and clouds to play upon our emotions. Why are we made serious and
+solemn and sublime by mountain heights, grave and contemplative by an
+abundance of overhanging trees, reduced to inconstancy and monkey
+capers by the ripples on a sandy beach? Did the protoplasm—but enough.
+The chemists are looking into the matter, and before long they will
+have all life in the table of the symbols.
+
+Briefly, then, in order to confine the story within scientific bounds,
+John Armstrong, went to the hut, choked the Indian guard and carried
+away Mlle. Giraud. With her was also conveyed a number of pounds of
+gold dust she had collected during her six months’ forced engagement in
+Tacuzama. The Carabobo Indians are easily the most enthusiastic lovers
+of music between the equator and the French Opera House in New Orleans.
+They are also strong believers that the advice of Emerson was good when
+he said: “The thing thou wantest, O discontented man —take it, and pay
+the price.” A number of them had attended the performance of the
+Alcazar Opera Company in Macuto, and found Mlle. Giraud’s style and
+technique satisfactory. They wanted her, so they took her one evening
+suddenly and without any fuss. They treated her with much
+consideration, exacting only one song recital each day. She was quite
+pleased at being rescued by Mr. Armstrong. So much for mystery and
+adventure. Now to resume the theory of the protoplasm.
+
+John Armstrong and Mlle. Giraud rode among the Andean peaks, enveloped
+in their greatness and sublimity. The mightiest cousins, furthest
+removed, in nature’s great family become conscious of the tie. Among
+those huge piles of primordial upheaval, amid those gigantic silences
+and elongated fields of distance the littlenesses of men are
+precipitated as one chemical throws down a sediment from another. They
+moved reverently, as in a temple. Their souls were uplifted in unison
+with the stately heights. They travelled in a zone of majesty and
+peace.
+
+To Armstrong the woman seemed almost a holy thing. Yet bathed in the
+white, still dignity of her martyrdom that purified her earthly beauty
+and gave out, it seemed, an aura of transcendent loveliness, in those
+first hours of companionship she drew from him an adoration that was
+half human love, half the worship of a descended goddess.
+
+Never yet since her rescue had she smiled. Over her dress she still
+wore the robe of leopard skins, for the mountain air was cold. She
+looked to be some splendid princess belonging to those wild and awesome
+altitudes. The spirit of the region chimed with hers. Her eyes were
+always turned upon the sombre cliffs, the blue gorges and the snow-clad
+turrets, looking a sublime melancholy equal to their own. At times on
+the journey she sang thrilling te deums and misereres that struck the
+true note of the hills, and made their route seem like a solemn march
+down a cathedral aisle. The rescued one spoke but seldom, her mood
+partaking of the hush of nature that surrounded them. Armstrong looked
+upon her as an angel. He could not bring himself to the sacrilege of
+attempting to woo her as other women may be wooed.
+
+On the third day they had descended as far as the _tierra templada_,
+the zona of the table lands and foot hills. The mountains were receding
+in their rear, but still towered, exhibiting yet impressively their
+formidable heads. Here they met signs of man. They saw the white houses
+of coffee plantations gleam across the clearings. They struck into a
+road where they met travellers and pack-mules. Cattle were grazing on
+the slopes. They passed a little village where the round-eyed _niños_
+shrieked and called at sight of them.
+
+Mlle. Giraud laid aside her leopard-skin robe. It seemed to be a trifle
+incongruous now. In the mountains it had appeared fitting and natural.
+And if Armstrong was not mistaken she laid aside with it something of
+the high dignity of her demeanour. As the country became more populous
+and significant of comfortable life he saw, with a feeling of joy, that
+the exalted princess and priestess of the Andean peaks was changing to
+a woman—an earth woman, but no less enticing. A little colour crept to
+the surface of her marble cheek. She arranged the conventional dress
+that the removal of the robe now disclosed with the solicitous touch of
+one who is conscious of the eyes of others. She smoothed the careless
+sweep of her hair. A mundane interest, long latent in the chilling
+atmosphere of the ascetic peaks, showed in her eyes.
+
+This thaw in his divinity sent Armstrong’s heart going faster. So might
+an Arctic explorer thrill at his first ken of green fields and
+liquescent waters. They were on a lower plane of earth and life and
+were succumbing to its peculiar, subtle influence. The austerity of the
+hills no longer thinned the air they breathed. About them was the
+breath of fruit and corn and builded homes, the comfortable smell of
+smoke and warm earth and the consolations man has placed between
+himself and the dust of his brother earth from which he sprung. While
+traversing those awful mountains, Mlle. Giraud had seemed to be wrapped
+in their spirit of reverent reserve. Was this that same woman—now
+palpitating, warm, eager, throbbing with conscious life and charm,
+feminine to her finger-tips? Pondering over this, Armstrong felt
+certain misgivings intrude upon his thoughts. He wished he could stop
+there with this changing creature, descending no farther. Here was the
+elevation and environment to which her nature seemed to respond with
+its best. He feared to go down upon the man-dominated levels. Would her
+spirit not yield still further in that artificial zone to which they
+were descending?
+
+Now from a little plateau they saw the sea flash at the edge of the
+green lowlands. Mlle. Giraud gave a little, catching sigh.
+
+“Oh! look, Mr. Armstrong, there is the sea! Isn’t it lovely? I’m so
+tired of mountains.” She heaved a pretty shoulder in a gesture of
+repugnance. “Those horrid Indians! Just think of what I suffered!
+Although I suppose I attained my ambition of becoming a stellar
+attraction, I wouldn’t care to repeat the engagement. It was very nice
+of you to bring me away. Tell me, Mr. Armstrong—honestly, now —do I
+look such an awful, awful fright? I haven’t looked into a mirror, you
+know, for months.”
+
+Armstrong made answer according to his changed moods. Also he laid his
+hand upon hers as it rested upon the horn of her saddle. Luis was at
+the head of the pack train and could not see. She allowed it to remain
+there, and her eyes smiled frankly into his.
+
+Then at sundown they dropped upon the coast level under the palms and
+lemons among the vivid greens and scarlets and ochres of the _tierra
+caliente_. They rode into Macuto, and saw the line of volatile bathers
+frolicking in the surf. The mountains were very far away.
+
+Mlle. Giraud’s eyes were shining with a joy that could not have existed
+under the chaperonage of the mountain-tops. There were other spirits
+calling to her—nymphs of the orange groves, pixies from the chattering
+surf, imps, born of the music, the perfumes, colours and the
+insinuating presence of humanity. She laughed aloud, musically, at a
+sudden thought.
+
+“Won’t there be a sensation?” she called to Armstrong. “Don’t I wish I
+had an engagement just now, though! What a picnic the press agent would
+have! ‘Held a prisoner by a band of savage Indians subdued by the spell
+of her wonderful voice’—wouldn’t that make great stuff? But I guess I
+quit the game winner, anyhow—there ought to be a couple of thousand
+dollars in that sack of gold dust I collected as encores, don’t you
+think?”
+
+He left her at the door of the little Hotel de Buen Descansar, where
+she had stopped before. Two hours later he returned to the hotel. He
+glanced in at the open door of the little combined reception room and
+café.
+
+Half a dozen of Macuto’s representative social and official
+_caballeros_ were distributed about the room. Señor Villablanca, the
+wealthy rubber concessionist, reposed his fat figure on two chairs,
+with an emollient smile beaming upon his chocolate-coloured face.
+Guilbert, the French mining engineer, leered through his polished
+nose-glasses. Colonel Mendez, of the regular army, in gold-laced
+uniform and fatuous grin, was busily extracting corks from champagne
+bottles. Other patterns of Macutian gallantry and fashion pranced and
+posed. The air was hazy with cigarette smoke. Wine dripped upon the
+floor.
+
+Perched upon a table in the centre of the room in an attitude of easy
+preëminence was Mlle. Giraud. A chic costume of white lawn and cherry
+ribbons supplanted her travelling garb. There was a suggestion of lace,
+and a frill or two, with a discreet, small implication of
+hand-embroidered pink hosiery. Upon her lap rested a guitar. In her
+face was the light of resurrection, the peace of elysium attained
+through fire and suffering. She was singing to a lively accompaniment a
+little song:
+
+“When you see de big round moon
+Comin’ up like a balloon,
+Dis nigger skips fur to kiss de lips
+Ob his stylish, black-faced coon.”
+
+
+The singer caught sight of Armstrong.
+
+“Hi! there, Johnny,” she called; “I’ve been expecting you for an hour.
+What kept you? Gee! but these smoked guys are the slowest you ever saw.
+They ain’t on, at all. Come along in, and I’ll make this
+coffee-coloured old sport with the gold epaulettes open one for you
+right off the ice.”
+
+“Thank you,” said Armstrong; “not just now, I believe. I’ve several
+things to attend to.”
+
+He walked out and down the street, and met Rucker coming up from the
+Consulate.
+
+“Play you a game of billiards,” said Armstrong. “I want something to
+take the taste of the sea level out of my mouth.”
+
+
+
+
+VI
+“GIRL”
+
+
+In gilt letters on the ground glass of the door of room No. 962 were
+the words: “Robbins & Hartley, Brokers.” The clerks had gone. It was
+past five, and with the solid tramp of a drove of prize Percherons,
+scrub-women were invading the cloud-capped twenty-story office
+building. A puff of red-hot air flavoured with lemon peelings,
+soft-coal smoke and train oil came in through the half-open windows.
+
+Robbins, fifty, something of an overweight beau, and addicted to first
+nights and hotel palm-rooms, pretended to be envious of his partner’s
+commuter’s joys.
+
+“Going to be something doing in the humidity line to-night,” he said.
+“You out-of-town chaps will be the people, with your katydids and
+moonlight and long drinks and things out on the front porch.”
+
+Hartley, twenty-nine, serious, thin, good-looking, nervous, sighed and
+frowned a little.
+
+“Yes,” said he, “we always have cool nights in Floralhurst, especially
+in the winter.”
+
+A man with an air of mystery came in the door and went up to Hartley.
+
+“I’ve found where she lives,” he announced in the portentous
+half-whisper that makes the detective at work a marked being to his
+fellow men.
+
+Hartley scowled him into a state of dramatic silence and quietude. But
+by that time Robbins had got his cane and set his tie pin to his
+liking, and with a debonair nod went out to his metropolitan
+amusements.
+
+“Here is the address,” said the detective in a natural tone, being
+deprived of an audience to foil.
+
+Hartley took the leaf torn out of the sleuth’s dingy memorandum book.
+On it were pencilled the words “Vivienne Arlington, No. 341 East ––––th
+Street, care of Mrs. McComus.”
+
+“Moved there a week ago,” said the detective. “Now, if you want any
+shadowing done, Mr. Hartley, I can do you as fine a job in that line as
+anybody in the city. It will be only $7 a day and expenses. Can send in
+a daily typewritten report, covering—”
+
+“You needn’t go on,” interrupted the broker. “It isn’t a case of that
+kind. I merely wanted the address. How much shall I pay you?”
+
+“One day’s work,” said the sleuth. “A tenner will cover it.”
+
+Hartley paid the man and dismissed him. Then he left the office and
+boarded a Broadway car. At the first large crosstown artery of travel
+he took an eastbound car that deposited him in a decaying avenue, whose
+ancient structures once sheltered the pride and glory of the town.
+
+Walking a few squares, he came to the building that he sought. It was a
+new flathouse, bearing carved upon its cheap stone portal its sonorous
+name, “The Vallambrosa.” Fire-escapes zigzagged down its front—these
+laden with household goods, drying clothes, and squalling children
+evicted by the midsummer heat. Here and there a pale rubber plant
+peeped from the miscellaneous mass, as if wondering to what kingdom it
+belonged—vegetable, animal or artificial.
+
+Hartley pressed the “McComus” button. The door latch clicked
+spasmodically—now hospitably, now doubtfully, as though in anxiety
+whether it might be admitting friends or duns. Hartley entered and
+began to climb the stairs after the manner of those who seek their
+friends in city flat-houses—which is the manner of a boy who climbs an
+apple-tree, stopping when he comes upon what he wants.
+
+On the fourth floor he saw Vivienne standing in an open door. She
+invited him inside, with a nod and a bright, genuine smile. She placed
+a chair for him near a window, and poised herself gracefully upon the
+edge of one of those Jekyll-and-Hyde pieces of furniture that are
+masked and mysteriously hooded, unguessable bulks by day and
+inquisitorial racks of torture by night.
+
+Hartley cast a quick, critical, appreciative glance at her before
+speaking, and told himself that his taste in choosing had been
+flawless.
+
+Vivienne was about twenty-one. She was of the purest Saxon type. Her
+hair was a ruddy golden, each filament of the neatly gathered mass
+shining with its own lustre and delicate graduation of colour. In
+perfect harmony were her ivory-clear complexion and deep sea-blue eyes
+that looked upon the world with the ingenuous calmness of a mermaid or
+the pixie of an undiscovered mountain stream. Her frame was strong and
+yet possessed the grace of absolute naturalness. And yet with all her
+Northern clearness and frankness of line and colouring, there seemed to
+be something of the tropics in her—something of languor in the droop of
+her pose, of love of ease in her ingenious complacency of satisfaction
+and comfort in the mere act of breathing—something that seemed to claim
+for her a right as a perfect work of nature to exist and be admired
+equally with a rare flower or some beautiful, milk-white dove among its
+sober-hued companions.
+
+She was dressed in a white waist and dark skirt—that discreet
+masquerade of goose-girl and duchess.
+
+“Vivienne,” said Hartley, looking at her pleadingly, “you did not
+answer my last letter. It was only by nearly a week’s search that I
+found where you had moved to. Why have you kept me in suspense when you
+knew how anxiously I was waiting to see you and hear from you?”
+
+The girl looked out the window dreamily.
+
+“Mr. Hartley,” she said hesitatingly, “I hardly know what to say to
+you. I realize all the advantages of your offer, and sometimes I feel
+sure that I could be contented with you. But, again, I am doubtful. I
+was born a city girl, and I am afraid to bind myself to a quiet
+suburban life.”
+
+“My dear girl,” said Hartley, ardently, “have I not told you that you
+shall have everything that your heart can desire that is in my power to
+give you? You shall come to the city for the theatres, for shopping and
+to visit your friends as often as you care to. You can trust me, can
+you not?”
+
+“To the fullest,” she said, turning her frank eyes upon him with a
+smile. “I know you are the kindest of men, and that the girl you get
+will be a lucky one. I learned all about you when I was at the
+Montgomerys’.”
+
+“Ah!” exclaimed Hartley, with a tender, reminiscent light in his eye;
+“I remember well the evening I first saw you at the Montgomerys’. Mrs.
+Montgomery was sounding your praises to me all the evening. And she
+hardly did you justice. I shall never forget that supper. Come,
+Vivienne, promise me. I want you. You’ll never regret coming with me.
+No one else will ever give you as pleasant a home.”
+
+The girl sighed and looked down at her folded hands.
+
+A sudden jealous suspicion seized Hartley.
+
+“Tell me, Vivienne,” he asked, regarding her keenly, “is there
+another—is there some one else?”
+
+A rosy flush crept slowly over her fair cheeks and neck.
+
+“You shouldn’t ask that, Mr. Hartley,” she said, in some confusion.
+“But I will tell you. There is one other—but he has no right—I have
+promised him nothing.”
+
+“His name?” demanded Hartley, sternly.
+
+“Townsend.”
+
+“Rafford Townsend!” exclaimed Hartley, with a grim tightening of his
+jaw. “How did that man come to know you? After all I’ve done for him—”
+
+“His auto has just stopped below,” said Vivienne, bending over the
+window-sill. “He’s coming for his answer. Oh I don’t know what to do!”
+
+The bell in the flat kitchen whirred. Vivienne hurried to press the
+latch button.
+
+“Stay here,” said Hartley. “I will meet him in the hall.”
+
+Townsend, looking like a Spanish grandee in his light tweeds, Panama
+hat and curling black mustache, came up the stairs three at a time. He
+stopped at sight of Hartley and looked foolish.
+
+“Go back,” said Hartley, firmly, pointing downstairs with his
+forefinger.
+
+“Hullo!” said Townsend, feigning surprise. “What’s up? What are you
+doing here, old man?”
+
+“Go back,” repeated Hartley, inflexibly. “The Law of the Jungle. Do you
+want the Pack to tear you in pieces? The kill is mine.”
+
+“I came here to see a plumber about the bathroom connections,” said
+Townsend, bravely.
+
+“All right,” said Hartley. “You shall have that lying plaster to stick
+upon your traitorous soul. But, go back.” Townsend went downstairs,
+leaving a bitter word to be wafted up the draught of the staircase.
+Hartley went back to his wooing.
+
+“Vivienne,” said he, masterfully. “I have got to have you. I will take
+no more refusals or dilly-dallying.”
+
+“When do you want me?” she asked.
+
+“Now. As soon as you can get ready.”
+
+She stood calmly before him and looked him in the eye.
+
+“Do you think for one moment,” she said, “that I would enter your home
+while Héloise is there?”
+
+Hartley cringed as if from an unexpected blow. He folded his arms and
+paced the carpet once or twice.
+
+“She shall go,” he declared grimly. Drops stood upon his brow. “Why
+should I let that woman make my life miserable? Never have I seen one
+day of freedom from trouble since I have known her. You are right,
+Vivienne. Héloise must be sent away before I can take you home. But she
+shall go. I have decided. I will turn her from my doors.”
+
+“When will you do this?” asked the girl.
+
+Hartley clinched his teeth and bent his brows together.
+
+“To-night,” he said, resolutely. “I will send her away to-night.”
+
+“Then,” said Vivienne, “my answer is ‘yes.’ Come for me when you will.”
+
+She looked into his eyes with a sweet, sincere light in her own.
+Hartley could scarcely believe that her surrender was true, it was so
+swift and complete.
+
+“Promise me,” he said feelingly, “on your word and honour.”
+
+“On my word and honour,” repeated Vivienne, softly.
+
+At the door he turned and gazed at her happily, but yet as one who
+scarcely trusts the foundations of his joy.
+
+“To-morrow,” he said, with a forefinger of reminder uplifted.
+
+“To-morrow,” she repeated with a smile of truth and candour.
+
+In an hour and forty minutes Hartley stepped off the train at
+Floralhurst. A brisk walk of ten minutes brought him to the gate of a
+handsome two-story cottage set upon a wide and well-tended lawn.
+Halfway to the house he was met by a woman with jet-black braided hair
+and flowing white summer gown, who half strangled him without apparent
+cause.
+
+When they stepped into the hall she said:
+
+“Mamma’s here. The auto is coming for her in half an hour. She came to
+dinner, but there’s no dinner.”
+
+“I’ve something to tell you,” said Hartley. “I thought to break it to
+you gently, but since your mother is here we may as well out with it.”
+
+He stooped and whispered something at her ear.
+
+His wife screamed. Her mother came running into the hall. The
+dark-haired woman screamed again—the joyful scream of a well-beloved
+and petted woman.
+
+“Oh, mamma!” she cried ecstatically, “what do you think? Vivienne is
+coming to cook for us! She is the one that stayed with the Montgomerys
+a whole year. And now, Billy, dear,” she concluded, “you must go right
+down into the kitchen and discharge Héloise. She has been drunk again
+the whole day long.”
+
+
+
+
+VII
+SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW
+
+
+The season of irresponsibility is at hand. Come, let us twine round our
+brows wreaths of poison ivy (that is for idiocy), and wander hand in
+hand with sociology in the summer fields.
+
+Likely as not the world is flat. The wise men have tried to prove that
+it is round, with indifferent success. They pointed out to us a ship
+going to sea, and bade us observe that, at length, the convexity of the
+earth hid from our view all but the vessel’s topmast. But we picked up
+a telescope and looked, and saw the decks and hull again. Then the wise
+men said: “Oh, pshaw! anyhow, the variation of the intersection of the
+equator and the ecliptic proves it.” We could not see this through our
+telescope, so we remained silent. But it stands to reason that, if the
+world were round, the queues of Chinamen would stand straight up from
+their heads instead of hanging down their backs, as travellers assure
+us they do.
+
+Another hot-weather corroboration of the flat theory is the fact that
+all of life, as we know it, moves in little, unavailing circles. More
+justly than to anything else, it can be likened to the game of
+baseball. Crack! we hit the ball, and away we go. If we earn a run (in
+life we call it success) we get back to the home plate and sit upon a
+bench. If we are thrown out, we walk back to the home plate—and sit
+upon a bench.
+
+The circumnavigators of the alleged globe may have sailed the rim of a
+watery circle back to the same port again. The truly great return at
+the high tide of their attainments to the simplicity of a child. The
+billionaire sits down at his mahogany to his bowl of bread and milk.
+When you reach the end of your career, just take down the sign “Goal”
+and look at the other side of it. You will find “Beginning Point”
+there. It has been reversed while you were going around the track.
+
+But this is humour, and must be stopped. Let us get back to the serious
+questions that arise whenever Sociology turns summer boarder. You are
+invited to consider the scene of the story—wild, Atlantic waves,
+thundering against a wooded and rock-bound shore—in the Greater City of
+New York.
+
+The town of Fishampton, on the south shore of Long Island, is noted for
+its clam fritters and the summer residence of the Van Plushvelts.
+
+The Van Plushvelts have a hundred million dollars, and their name is a
+household word with tradesmen and photographers.
+
+On the fifteenth of June the Van Plushvelts boarded up the front door
+of their city house, carefully deposited their cat on the sidewalk,
+instructed the caretaker not to allow it to eat any of the ivy on the
+walls, and whizzed away in a 40-horse-power to Fishampton to stray
+alone in the shade—Amaryllis not being in their class. If you are a
+subscriber to the _Toadies’ Magazine_, you have often—You say you are
+not? Well, you buy it at a news-stand, thinking that the newsdealer is
+not wise to you. But he knows about it all. HE knows—HE knows! I say
+that you have often seen in the _Toadies’ Magazine_ pictures of the Van
+Plushvelts’ summer home; so it will not be described here. Our business
+is with young Haywood Van Plushvelt, sixteen years old, heir to the
+century of millions, darling of the financial gods and great grandson
+of Peter Van Plushvelt, former owner of a particularly fine cabbage
+patch that has been ruined by an intrusive lot of downtown skyscrapers.
+
+One afternoon young Haywood Van Plushvelt strolled out between the
+granite gate posts of “Dolce far Niente”—that’s what they called the
+place; and it was an improvement on dolce Far Rockaway, I can tell you.
+
+Haywood walked down into the village. He was human, after all, and his
+prospective millions weighed upon him. Wealth had wreaked upon him its
+direfullest. He was the product of private tutors. Even under his first
+hobby-horse had tan bark been strewn. He had been born with a gold
+spoon, lobster fork and fish-set in his mouth. For which I hope, later,
+to submit justification, I must ask your consideration of his
+haberdashery and tailoring.
+
+Young Fortunatus was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a neat,
+white straw hat, neat low-cut tan shoes, of the well-known “immaculate”
+trade mark, a neat, narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried a slender,
+neat, bamboo cane.
+
+Down Persimmon Street (there’s never tree north of Hagerstown, Md.)
+came from the village “Smoky” Dodson, fifteen and a half, worst boy in
+Fishampton. “Smoky” was dressed in a ragged red sweater, wrecked and
+weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and trousers of the
+“serviceable” brand. Dust, clinging to the moisture induced by free
+exercise, darkened wide areas of his face. “Smoky” carried a baseball
+bat, and a league ball that advertised itself in the rotundity of his
+trousers pocket. Haywood stopped and passed the time of day.
+
+“Going to play ball?” he asked.
+
+“Smoky’s” eyes and countenance confronted him with a frank
+blue-and-freckled scrutiny.
+
+“Me?” he said, with deadly mildness; “sure not. Can’t you see I’ve got
+a divin’ suit on? I’m goin’ up in a submarine balloon to catch
+butterflies with a two-inch auger.
+
+“Excuse me,” said Haywood, with the insulting politeness of his caste,
+“for mistaking you for a gentleman. I might have known better.”
+
+“How might you have known better if you thought I was one?” said
+“Smoky,” unconsciously a logician.
+
+“By your appearance,” said Haywood. “No gentleman is dirty, ragged and
+a liar.”
+
+“Smoky” hooted once like a ferry-boat, spat on his hand, got a firm
+grip on his baseball bat and then dropped it against the fence.
+
+“Say,” said he, “I knows you. You’re the pup that belongs in that swell
+private summer sanitarium for city-guys over there. I seen you come out
+of the gate. You can’t bluff nobody because you’re rich. And because
+you got on swell clothes. Arabella! Yah!”
+
+“Ragamuffin!” said Haywood.
+
+“Smoky” picked up a fence-rail splinter and laid it on his shoulder.
+
+“Dare you to knock it off,” he challenged.
+
+“I wouldn’t soil my hands with you,” said the aristocrat.
+
+“’Fraid,” said “Smoky” concisely. “Youse city-ducks ain’t got the sand.
+I kin lick you with one-hand.”
+
+“I don’t wish to have any trouble with you,” said Haywood. “I asked you
+a civil question; and you replied, like a—like a—a cad.”
+
+“Wot’s a cad?” asked “Smoky.”
+
+“A cad is a disagreeable person,” answered Haywood, “who lacks manners
+and doesn’t know his place. They sometimes play baseball.”
+
+“I can tell you what a mollycoddle is,” said “Smoky.” “It’s a monkey
+dressed up by its mother and sent out to pick daisies on the lawn.”
+
+“When you have the honour to refer to the members of my family,” said
+Haywood, with some dim ideas of a code in his mind, “you’d better leave
+the ladies out of your remarks.”
+
+“Ho! ladies!” mocked the rude one. “I say ladies! I know what them rich
+women in the city does. They drink cocktails and swear and give parties
+to gorillas. The papers say so.”
+
+Then Haywood knew that it must be. He took off his coat, folded it
+neatly and laid it on the roadside grass, placed his hat upon it and
+began to unknot his blue silk tie.
+
+“Hadn’t yer better ring fer yer maid, Arabella?” taunted “Smoky.” “Wot
+yer going to do—go to bed?”
+
+“I’m going to give you a good trouncing,” said the hero. He did not
+hesitate, although the enemy was far beneath him socially. He
+remembered that his father once thrashed a cabman, and the papers gave
+it two columns, first page. And the _Toadies’ Magazine_ had a special
+article on Upper Cuts by the Upper Classes, and ran new pictures of the
+Van Plushvelt country seat, at Fishampton.
+
+“Wot’s trouncing?” asked “Smoky,” suspiciously. “I don’t want your old
+clothes. I’m no—oh, you mean to scrap! My, my! I won’t do a thing to
+mamma’s pet. Criminy! I’d hate to be a hand-laundered thing like you.
+
+“Smoky” waited with some awkwardness for his adversary to prepare for
+battle. His own decks were always clear for action. When he should spit
+upon the palm of his terrible right it was equivalent to “You may fire
+now, Gridley.”
+
+The hated patrician advanced, with his shirt sleeves neatly rolled up.
+“Smoky” waited, in an attitude of ease, expecting the affair to be
+conducted according to Fishampton’s rules of war. These allowed combat
+to be prefaced by stigma, recrimination, epithet, abuse and insult
+gradually increasing in emphasis and degree. After a round of these
+“you’re anothers” would come the chip knocked from the shoulder, or the
+advance across the “dare” line drawn with a toe on the ground. Next
+light taps given and taken, these also increasing in force until
+finally the blood was up and fists going at their best.
+
+But Haywood did not know Fishampton’s rules. Noblesse oblige kept a
+faint smile on his face as he walked slowly up to “Smoky” and said:
+
+“Going to play ball?”
+
+“Smoky” quickly understood this to be a putting of the previous
+question, giving him the chance to make practical apology by answering
+it with civility and relevance.
+
+“Listen this time,” said he. “I’m goin’ skatin’ on the river. Don’t you
+see me automobile with Chinese lanterns on it standin’ and waitin’ for
+me?”
+
+Haywood knocked him down.
+
+“Smoky” felt wronged. To thus deprive him of preliminary wrangle and
+objurgation was to send an armoured knight full tilt against a crashing
+lance without permitting him first to caracole around the list to the
+flourish of trumpets. But he scrambled up and fell upon his foe, head,
+feet and fists.
+
+The fight lasted one round of an hour and ten minutes. It was
+lengthened until it was more like a war or a family feud than a fight.
+Haywood had learned some of the science of boxing and wrestling from
+his tutors, but these he discarded for the more instinctive methods of
+battle handed down by the cave-dwelling Van Plushvelts.
+
+So, when he found himself, during the mêlée, seated upon the kicking
+and roaring “Smoky’s” chest, he improved the opportunity by vigorously
+kneading handfuls of sand and soil into his adversary’s ears, eyes and
+mouth, and when “Smoky” got the proper leg hold and “turned” him, he
+fastened both hands in the Plushvelt hair and pounded the Plushvelt
+head against the lap of mother earth. Of course, the strife was not
+incessantly active. There were seasons when one sat upon the other,
+holding him down, while each blew like a grampus, spat out the more
+inconveniently large sections of gravel and earth, and strove to subdue
+the spirit of his opponent with a frightful and soul-paralyzing glare.
+
+At last, it seemed that in the language of the ring, their efforts
+lacked steam. They broke away, and each disappeared in a cloud as he
+brushed away the dust of the conflict. As soon as his breath permitted,
+Haywood walked close to “Smoky” and said:
+
+“Going to play ball?”
+
+“Smoky” looked pensively at the sky, at his bat lying on the ground,
+and at the “leaguer” rounding his pocket.
+
+“Sure,” he said, offhandedly. “The ‘Yellowjackets’ plays the ‘Long
+Islands.’ I’m cap’n of the ‘Long Islands.’”
+
+“I guess I didn’t mean to say you were ragged,” said Haywood. “But you
+are dirty, you know.”
+
+“Sure,” said “Smoky.” “Yer get that way knockin’ around. Say, I don’t
+believe them New York papers about ladies drinkin’ and havin’ monkeys
+dinin’ at the table with ’em. I guess they’re lies, like they print
+about people eatin’ out of silver plates, and ownin’ dogs that cost
+$100.”
+
+“Certainly,” said Haywood. “What do you play on your team?”
+
+“Ketcher. Ever play any?”
+
+“Never in my life,” said Haywood. “I’ve never known any fellows except
+one or two of my cousins.”
+
+“Jer like to learn? We’re goin’ to have a practice-game before the
+match. Wanter come along? I’ll put yer in left-field, and yer won’t be
+long ketchin’ on.”
+
+“I’d like it bully,” said Haywood. “I’ve always wanted to play
+baseball.”
+
+The ladies’ maids of New York and the families of Western mine owners
+with social ambitions will remember well the sensation that was created
+by the report that the young multi-millionaire, Haywood Van Plushvelt,
+was playing ball with the village youths of Fishampton. It was conceded
+that the millennium of democracy had come. Reporters and photographers
+swarmed to the island. The papers printed half-page pictures of him as
+short-stop stopping a hot grounder. The _Toadies’ Magazine_ got out a
+Bat and Ball number that covered the subject historically, beginning
+with the vampire bat and ending with the Patriarchs’ ball—illustrated
+with interior views of the Van Plushvelt country seat. Ministers,
+educators and sociologists everywhere hailed the event as the tocsin
+call that proclaimed the universal brotherhood of man.
+
+One afternoon I was reclining under the trees near the shore at
+Fishampton in the esteemed company of an eminent, bald-headed young
+sociologist. By way of note it may be inserted that all sociologists
+are more or less bald, and exactly thirty-two. Look ’em over.
+
+The sociologist was citing the Van Plushvelt case as the most important
+“uplift” symptom of a generation, and as an excuse for his own
+existence.
+
+Immediately before us were the village baseball grounds. And now came
+the sportive youth of Fishampton and distributed themselves, shouting,
+about the diamond.
+
+“There,” said the sociologist, pointing, “there is young Van
+Plushvelt.”
+
+I raised myself (so far a cosycophant with Mary Ann) and gazed.
+
+Young Van Plushvelt sat upon the ground. He was dressed in a ragged red
+sweater, wrecked and weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and
+trousers of the “serviceable” brand. Dust clinging to the moisture
+induced by free exercise, darkened wide areas of his face.
+
+“That is he,” repeated the sociologist. If he had said “him” I could
+have been less vindictive.
+
+On a bench, with an air, sat the young millionaire’s chum.
+
+He was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a neat white straw
+hat, neat low-cut tan shoes, linen of the well-known “immaculate” trade
+mark, a neat, narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried a slender, neat
+bamboo cane.
+
+I laughed loudly and vulgarly.
+
+“What you want to do,” said I to the sociologist, “is to establish a
+reformatory for the Logical Vicious Circle. Or else I’ve got wheels. It
+looks to me as if things are running round and round in circles instead
+of getting anywhere.”
+
+“What do you mean?” asked the man of progress.
+
+“Why, look what he has done to ‘Smoky’,” I replied.
+
+“You will always be a fool,” said my friend, the sociologist, getting
+up and walking away.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF
+
+
+It looked like a good thing: but wait till I tell you. We were down
+South, in Alabama—Bill Driscoll and myself—when this kidnapping idea
+struck us. It was, as Bill afterward expressed it, “during a moment of
+temporary mental apparition”; but we didn’t find that out till later.
+
+There was a town down there, as flat as a flannel-cake, and called
+Summit, of course. It contained inhabitants of as undeleterious and
+self-satisfied a class of peasantry as ever clustered around a Maypole.
+
+Bill and me had a joint capital of about six hundred dollars, and we
+needed just two thousand dollars more to pull off a fraudulent town-lot
+scheme in Western Illinois with. We talked it over on the front steps
+of the hotel. Philoprogenitiveness, says we, is strong in semi-rural
+communities; therefore and for other reasons, a kidnapping project
+ought to do better there than in the radius of newspapers that send
+reporters out in plain clothes to stir up talk about such things. We
+knew that Summit couldn’t get after us with anything stronger than
+constables and maybe some lackadaisical bloodhounds and a diatribe or
+two in the _Weekly Farmers’ Budget_. So, it looked good.
+
+We selected for our victim the only child of a prominent citizen named
+Ebenezer Dorset. The father was respectable and tight, a mortgage
+fancier and a stern, upright collection-plate passer and forecloser.
+The kid was a boy of ten, with bas-relief freckles, and hair the colour
+of the cover of the magazine you buy at the news-stand when you want to
+catch a train. Bill and me figured that Ebenezer would melt down for a
+ransom of two thousand dollars to a cent. But wait till I tell you.
+
+About two miles from Summit was a little mountain, covered with a dense
+cedar brake. On the rear elevation of this mountain was a cave. There
+we stored provisions. One evening after sundown, we drove in a buggy
+past old Dorset’s house. The kid was in the street, throwing rocks at a
+kitten on the opposite fence.
+
+“Hey, little boy!” says Bill, “would you like to have a bag of candy
+and a nice ride?”
+
+The boy catches Bill neatly in the eye with a piece of brick.
+
+“That will cost the old man an extra five hundred dollars,” says Bill,
+climbing over the wheel.
+
+That boy put up a fight like a welter-weight cinnamon bear; but, at
+last, we got him down in the bottom of the buggy and drove away. We
+took him up to the cave and I hitched the horse in the cedar brake.
+After dark I drove the buggy to the little village, three miles away,
+where we had hired it, and walked back to the mountain.
+
+Bill was pasting court-plaster over the scratches and bruises on his
+features. There was a fire burning behind the big rock at the entrance
+of the cave, and the boy was watching a pot of boiling coffee, with two
+buzzard tail-feathers stuck in his red hair. He points a stick at me
+when I come up, and says:
+
+“Ha! cursed paleface, do you dare to enter the camp of Red Chief, the
+terror of the plains?
+
+“He’s all right now,” says Bill, rolling up his trousers and examining
+some bruises on his shins. “We’re playing Indian. We’re making Buffalo
+Bill’s show look like magic-lantern views of Palestine in the town
+hall. I’m Old Hank, the Trapper, Red Chief’s captive, and I’m to be
+scalped at daybreak. By Geronimo! that kid can kick hard.”
+
+Yes, sir, that boy seemed to be having the time of his life. The fun of
+camping out in a cave had made him forget that he was a captive
+himself. He immediately christened me Snake-eye, the Spy, and announced
+that, when his braves returned from the warpath, I was to be broiled at
+the stake at the rising of the sun.
+
+Then we had supper; and he filled his mouth full of bacon and bread and
+gravy, and began to talk. He made a during-dinner speech something like
+this:
+
+“I like this fine. I never camped out before; but I had a pet ’possum
+once, and I was nine last birthday. I hate to go to school. Rats ate up
+sixteen of Jimmy Talbot’s aunt’s speckled hen’s eggs. Are there any
+real Indians in these woods? I want some more gravy. Does the trees
+moving make the wind blow? We had five puppies. What makes your nose so
+red, Hank? My father has lots of money. Are the stars hot? I whipped Ed
+Walker twice, Saturday. I don’t like girls. You dassent catch toads
+unless with a string. Do oxen make any noise? Why are oranges round?
+Have you got beds to sleep on in this cave? Amos Murray has got six
+toes. A parrot can talk, but a monkey or a fish can’t. How many does it
+take to make twelve?”
+
+Every few minutes he would remember that he was a pesky redskin, and
+pick up his stick rifle and tiptoe to the mouth of the cave to rubber
+for the scouts of the hated paleface. Now and then he would let out a
+war-whoop that made Old Hank the Trapper shiver. That boy had Bill
+terrorized from the start.
+
+“Red Chief,” says I to the kid, “would you like to go home?”
+
+“Aw, what for?” says he. “I don’t have any fun at home. I hate to go to
+school. I like to camp out. You won’t take me back home again,
+Snake-eye, will you?”
+
+“Not right away,” says I. “We’ll stay here in the cave a while.”
+
+“All right!” says he. “That’ll be fine. I never had such fun in all my
+life.”
+
+We went to bed about eleven o’clock. We spread down some wide blankets
+and quilts and put Red Chief between us. We weren’t afraid he’d run
+away. He kept us awake for three hours, jumping up and reaching for his
+rifle and screeching: “Hist! pard,” in mine and Bill’s ears, as the
+fancied crackle of a twig or the rustle of a leaf revealed to his young
+imagination the stealthy approach of the outlaw band. At last, I fell
+into a troubled sleep, and dreamed that I had been kidnapped and
+chained to a tree by a ferocious pirate with red hair.
+
+Just at daybreak, I was awakened by a series of awful screams from
+Bill. They weren’t yells, or howls, or shouts, or whoops, or yawps,
+such as you’d expect from a manly set of vocal organs—they were simply
+indecent, terrifying, humiliating screams, such as women emit when they
+see ghosts or caterpillars. It’s an awful thing to hear a strong,
+desperate, fat man scream incontinently in a cave at daybreak.
+
+I jumped up to see what the matter was. Red Chief was sitting on Bill’s
+chest, with one hand twined in Bill’s hair. In the other he had the
+sharp case-knife we used for slicing bacon; and he was industriously
+and realistically trying to take Bill’s scalp, according to the
+sentence that had been pronounced upon him the evening before.
+
+I got the knife away from the kid and made him lie down again. But,
+from that moment, Bill’s spirit was broken. He laid down on his side of
+the bed, but he never closed an eye again in sleep as long as that boy
+was with us. I dozed off for a while, but along toward sun-up I
+remembered that Red Chief had said I was to be burned at the stake at
+the rising of the sun. I wasn’t nervous or afraid; but I sat up and lit
+my pipe and leaned against a rock.
+
+“What you getting up so soon for, Sam?” asked Bill.
+
+“Me?” says I. “Oh, I got a kind of a pain in my shoulder. I thought
+sitting up would rest it.”
+
+“You’re a liar!” says Bill. “You’re afraid. You was to be burned at
+sunrise, and you was afraid he’d do it. And he would, too, if he could
+find a match. Ain’t it awful, Sam? Do you think anybody will pay out
+money to get a little imp like that back home?”
+
+“Sure,” said I. “A rowdy kid like that is just the kind that parents
+dote on. Now, you and the Chief get up and cook breakfast, while I go
+up on the top of this mountain and reconnoitre.”
+
+I went up on the peak of the little mountain and ran my eye over the
+contiguous vicinity. Over toward Summit I expected to see the sturdy
+yeomanry of the village armed with scythes and pitchforks beating the
+countryside for the dastardly kidnappers. But what I saw was a peaceful
+landscape dotted with one man ploughing with a dun mule. Nobody was
+dragging the creek; no couriers dashed hither and yon, bringing tidings
+of no news to the distracted parents. There was a sylvan attitude of
+somnolent sleepiness pervading that section of the external outward
+surface of Alabama that lay exposed to my view. “Perhaps,” says I to
+myself, “it has not yet been discovered that the wolves have borne away
+the tender lambkin from the fold. Heaven help the wolves!” says I, and
+I went down the mountain to breakfast.
+
+When I got to the cave I found Bill backed up against the side of it,
+breathing hard, and the boy threatening to smash him with a rock half
+as big as a cocoanut.
+
+“He put a red-hot boiled potato down my back,” explained Bill, “and
+then mashed it with his foot; and I boxed his ears. Have you got a gun
+about you, Sam?”
+
+I took the rock away from the boy and kind of patched up the argument.
+“I’ll fix you,” says the kid to Bill. “No man ever yet struck the Red
+Chief but what he got paid for it. You better beware!”
+
+After breakfast the kid takes a piece of leather with strings wrapped
+around it out of his pocket and goes outside the cave unwinding it.
+
+“What’s he up to now?” says Bill, anxiously. “You don’t think he’ll run
+away, do you, Sam?”
+
+“No fear of it,” says I. “He don’t seem to be much of a home body. But
+we’ve got to fix up some plan about the ransom. There don’t seem to be
+much excitement around Summit on account of his disappearance; but
+maybe they haven’t realized yet that he’s gone. His folks may think
+he’s spending the night with Aunt Jane or one of the neighbours.
+Anyhow, he’ll be missed to-day. To-night we must get a message to his
+father demanding the two thousand dollars for his return.”
+
+Just then we heard a kind Of war-whoop, such as David might have
+emitted when he knocked out the champion Goliath. It was a sling that
+Red Chief had pulled out of his pocket, and he was whirling it around
+his head.
+
+I dodged, and heard a heavy thud and a kind of a sigh from Bill, like a
+horse gives out when you take his saddle off. A niggerhead rock the
+size of an egg had caught Bill just behind his left ear. He loosened
+himself all over and fell in the fire across the frying pan of hot
+water for washing the dishes. I dragged him out and poured cold water
+on his head for half an hour.
+
+By and by, Bill sits up and feels behind his ear and says: “Sam, do you
+know who my favourite Biblical character is?”
+
+“Take it easy,” says I. “You’ll come to your senses presently.”
+
+“King Herod,” says he. “You won’t go away and leave me here alone, will
+you, Sam?”
+
+I went out and caught that boy and shook him until his freckles
+rattled.
+
+“If you don’t behave,” says I, “I’ll take you straight home. Now, are
+you going to be good, or not?”
+
+“I was only funning,” says he sullenly. “I didn’t mean to hurt Old
+Hank. But what did he hit me for? I’ll behave, Snake-eye, if you won’t
+send me home, and if you’ll let me play the Black Scout to-day.”
+
+“I don’t know the game,” says I. “That’s for you and Mr. Bill to
+decide. He’s your playmate for the day. I’m going away for a while, on
+business. Now, you come in and make friends with him and say you are
+sorry for hurting him, or home you go, at once.”
+
+I made him and Bill shake hands, and then I took Bill aside and told
+him I was going to Poplar Cove, a little village three miles from the
+cave, and find out what I could about how the kidnapping had been
+regarded in Summit. Also, I thought it best to send a peremptory letter
+to old man Dorset that day, demanding the ransom and dictating how it
+should be paid.
+
+“You know, Sam,” says Bill, “I’ve stood by you without batting an eye
+in earthquakes, fire and flood—in poker games, dynamite outrages,
+police raids, train robberies and cyclones. I never lost my nerve yet
+till we kidnapped that two-legged skyrocket of a kid. He’s got me
+going. You won’t leave me long with him, will you, Sam?”
+
+“I’ll be back some time this afternoon,” says I. “You must keep the boy
+amused and quiet till I return. And now we’ll write the letter to old
+Dorset.”
+
+Bill and I got paper and pencil and worked on the letter while Red
+Chief, with a blanket wrapped around him, strutted up and down,
+guarding the mouth of the cave. Bill begged me tearfully to make the
+ransom fifteen hundred dollars instead of two thousand. “I ain’t
+attempting,” says he, “to decry the celebrated moral aspect of parental
+affection, but we’re dealing with humans, and it ain’t human for
+anybody to give up two thousand dollars for that forty-pound chunk of
+freckled wildcat. I’m willing to take a chance at fifteen hundred
+dollars. You can charge the difference up to me.”
+
+So, to relieve Bill, I acceded, and we collaborated a letter that ran
+this way:
+
+_Ebenezer Dorset, Esq.:_
+
+ We have your boy concealed in a place far from Summit. It is
+ useless for you or the most skilful detectives to attempt to find
+ him. Absolutely, the only terms on which you can have him restored
+ to you are these: We demand fifteen hundred dollars in large bills
+ for his return; the money to be left at midnight to-night at the
+ same spot and in the same box as your reply—as hereinafter
+ described. If you agree to these terms, send your answer in writing
+ by a solitary messenger to-night at half-past eight o’clock. After
+ crossing Owl Creek, on the road to Poplar Cove, there are three
+ large trees about a hundred yards apart, close to the fence of the
+ wheat field on the right-hand side. At the bottom of the
+ fence-post, opposite the third tree, will be found a small
+ pasteboard box.
+ The messenger will place the answer in this box and return
+ immediately to Summit.
+ If you attempt any treachery or fail to comply with our demand as
+ stated, you will never see your boy again.
+ If you pay the money as demanded, he will be returned to you safe
+ and well within three hours. These terms are final, and if you do
+ not accede to them no further communication will be attempted.
+
+
+TWO DESPERATE MEN.
+
+
+I addressed this letter to Dorset, and put it in my pocket. As I was
+about to start, the kid comes up to me and says:
+
+“Aw, Snake-eye, you said I could play the Black Scout while you was
+gone.”
+
+“Play it, of course,” says I. “Mr. Bill will play with you. What kind
+of a game is it?”
+
+“I’m the Black Scout,” says Red Chief, “and I have to ride to the
+stockade to warn the settlers that the Indians are coming. I’m tired of
+playing Indian myself. I want to be the Black Scout.”
+
+“All right,” says I. “It sounds harmless to me. I guess Mr. Bill will
+help you foil the pesky savages.”
+
+“What am I to do?” asks Bill, looking at the kid suspiciously.
+
+“You are the hoss,” says Black Scout. “Get down on your hands and
+knees. How can I ride to the stockade without a hoss?”
+
+“You’d better keep him interested,” said I, “till we get the scheme
+going. Loosen up.”
+
+Bill gets down on his all fours, and a look comes in his eye like a
+rabbit’s when you catch it in a trap.
+
+“How far is it to the stockade, kid?” he asks, in a husky manner of
+voice.
+
+“Ninety miles,” says the Black Scout. “And you have to hump yourself to
+get there on time. Whoa, now!”
+
+The Black Scout jumps on Bill’s back and digs his heels in his side.
+
+“For Heaven’s sake,” says Bill, “hurry back, Sam, as soon as you can. I
+wish we hadn’t made the ransom more than a thousand. Say, you quit
+kicking me or I’ll get up and warm you good.”
+
+I walked over to Poplar Cove and sat around the postoffice and store,
+talking with the chawbacons that came in to trade. One whiskerando says
+that he hears Summit is all upset on account of Elder Ebenezer Dorset’s
+boy having been lost or stolen. That was all I wanted to know. I bought
+some smoking tobacco, referred casually to the price of black-eyed
+peas, posted my letter surreptitiously and came away. The postmaster
+said the mail-carrier would come by in an hour to take the mail on to
+Summit.
+
+When I got back to the cave Bill and the boy were not to be found. I
+explored the vicinity of the cave, and risked a yodel or two, but there
+was no response.
+
+So I lighted my pipe and sat down on a mossy bank to await
+developments.
+
+In about half an hour I heard the bushes rustle, and Bill wabbled out
+into the little glade in front of the cave. Behind him was the kid,
+stepping softly like a scout, with a broad grin on his face. Bill
+stopped, took off his hat and wiped his face with a red handkerchief.
+The kid stopped about eight feet behind him.
+
+“Sam,” says Bill, “I suppose you’ll think I’m a renegade, but I
+couldn’t help it. I’m a grown person with masculine proclivities and
+habits of self-defense, but there is a time when all systems of egotism
+and predominance fail. The boy is gone. I have sent him home. All is
+off. There was martyrs in old times,” goes on Bill, “that suffered
+death rather than give up the particular graft they enjoyed. None of
+’em ever was subjugated to such supernatural tortures as I have been. I
+tried to be faithful to our articles of depredation; but there came a
+limit.”
+
+“What’s the trouble, Bill?” I asks him.
+
+“I was rode,” says Bill, “the ninety miles to the stockade, not barring
+an inch. Then, when the settlers was rescued, I was given oats. Sand
+ain’t a palatable substitute. And then, for an hour I had to try to
+explain to him why there was nothin’ in holes, how a road can run both
+ways and what makes the grass green. I tell you, Sam, a human can only
+stand so much. I takes him by the neck of his clothes and drags him
+down the mountain. On the way he kicks my legs black-and-blue from the
+knees down; and I’ve got to have two or three bites on my thumb and
+hand cauterized.
+
+“But he’s gone”—continues Bill—“gone home. I showed him the road to
+Summit and kicked him about eight feet nearer there at one kick. I’m
+sorry we lose the ransom; but it was either that or Bill Driscoll to
+the madhouse.”
+
+Bill is puffing and blowing, but there is a look of ineffable peace and
+growing content on his rose-pink features.
+
+“Bill,” says I, “there isn’t any heart disease in your family, is
+there?
+
+“No,” says Bill, “nothing chronic except malaria and accidents. Why?”
+
+“Then you might turn around,” says I, “and have a took behind you.”
+
+Bill turns and sees the boy, and loses his complexion and sits down
+plump on the round and begins to pluck aimlessly at grass and little
+sticks. For an hour I was afraid for his mind. And then I told him that
+my scheme was to put the whole job through immediately and that we
+would get the ransom and be off with it by midnight if old Dorset fell
+in with our proposition. So Bill braced up enough to give the kid a
+weak sort of a smile and a promise to play the Russian in a Japanese
+war with him is soon as he felt a little better.
+
+I had a scheme for collecting that ransom without danger of being
+caught by counterplots that ought to commend itself to professional
+kidnappers. The tree under which the answer was to be left—and the
+money later on—was close to the road fence with big, bare fields on all
+sides. If a gang of constables should be watching for any one to come
+for the note they could see him a long way off crossing the fields or
+in the road. But no, sirree! At half-past eight I was up in that tree
+as well hidden as a tree toad, waiting for the messenger to arrive.
+
+Exactly on time, a half-grown boy rides up the road on a bicycle,
+locates the pasteboard box at the foot of the fence-post, slips a
+folded piece of paper into it and pedals away again back toward Summit.
+
+I waited an hour and then concluded the thing was square. I slid down
+the tree, got the note, slipped along the fence till I struck the
+woods, and was back at the cave in another half an hour. I opened the
+note, got near the lantern and read it to Bill. It was written with a
+pen in a crabbed hand, and the sum and substance of it was this:
+
+_Two Desperate Men.
+
+ Gentlemen:_ I received your letter to-day by post, in regard to the
+ ransom you ask for the return of my son. I think you are a little
+ high in your demands, and I hereby make you a counter-proposition,
+ which I am inclined to believe you will accept. You bring Johnny
+ home and pay me two hundred and fifty dollars in cash, and I agree
+ to take him off your hands. You had better come at night, for the
+ neighbours believe he is lost, and I couldn’t be responsible for
+ what they would do to anybody they saw bringing him back.
+
+
+Very respectfully,
+EBENEZER DORSET.
+
+
+“Great pirates of Penzance!” says I; “of all the impudent—”
+
+But I glanced at Bill, and hesitated. He had the most appealing look in
+his eyes I ever saw on the face of a dumb or a talking brute.
+
+“Sam,” says he, “what’s two hundred and fifty dollars, after all? We’ve
+got the money. One more night of this kid will send me to a bed in
+Bedlam. Besides being a thorough gentleman, I think Mr. Dorset is a
+spendthrift for making us such a liberal offer. You ain’t going to let
+the chance go, are you?”
+
+“Tell you the truth, Bill,” says I, “this little he ewe lamb has
+somewhat got on my nerves too. We’ll take him home, pay the ransom and
+make our get-away.”
+
+We took him home that night. We got him to go by telling him that his
+father had bought a silver-mounted rifle and a pair of moccasins for
+him, and we were going to hunt bears the next day.
+
+It was just twelve o’clock when we knocked at Ebenezer’s front door.
+Just at the moment when I should have been abstracting the fifteen
+hundred dollars from the box under the tree, according to the original
+proposition, Bill was counting out two hundred and fifty dollars into
+Dorset’s hand.
+
+When the kid found out we were going to leave him at home he started up
+a howl like a calliope and fastened himself as tight as a leech to
+Bill’s leg. His father peeled him away gradually, like a porous
+plaster.
+
+“How long can you hold him?” asks Bill.
+
+“I’m not as strong as I used to be,” says old Dorset, “but I think I
+can promise you ten minutes.”
+
+“Enough,” says Bill. “In ten minutes I shall cross the Central,
+Southern and Middle Western States, and be legging it trippingly for
+the Canadian border.”
+
+And, as dark as it was, and as fat as Bill was, and as good a runner as
+I am, he was a good mile and a half out of Summit before I could catch
+up with him.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+THE MARRY MONTH OF MAY
+
+
+Prithee, smite the poet in the eye when he would sing to you praises of
+the month of May. It is a month presided over by the spirits of
+mischief and madness. Pixies and flibbertigibbets haunt the budding
+woods: Puck and his train of midgets are busy in town and country.
+
+In May nature holds up at us a chiding finger, bidding us remember that
+we are not gods, but overconceited members of her own great family. She
+reminds us that we are brothers to the chowder-doomed clam and the
+donkey; lineal scions of the pansy and the chimpanzee, and but
+cousins-german to the cooing doves, the quacking ducks and the
+housemaids and policemen in the parks.
+
+In May Cupid shoots blindfolded—millionaires marry stenographers; wise
+professors woo white-aproned gum-chewers behind quick-lunch counters;
+schoolma’ams make big bad boys remain after school; lads with ladders
+steal lightly over lawns where Juliet waits in her trellissed window
+with her telescope packed; young couples out for a walk come home
+married; old chaps put on white spats and promenade near the Normal
+School; even married men, grown unwontedly tender and sentimental,
+whack their spouses on the back and growl: “How goes it, old girl:”
+
+This May, who is no goddess, but Circe, masquerading at the dance given
+in honour of the fair débutante, Summer, puts the kibosh on us all.
+
+Old Mr. Coulson groaned a little, and then sat up straight in his
+invalid’s chair. He had the gout very bad in one foot, a house near
+Gramercy Park, half a million dollars and a daughter. And he had a
+housekeeper, Mrs. Widdup. The fact and the name deserve a sentence
+each. They have it.
+
+When May poked Mr. Coulson he became elder brother to the turtle-dove.
+In the window near which he sat were boxes of jonquils, of hyacinths,
+geraniums and pansies. The breeze brought their odour into the room.
+Immediately there was a well-contested round between the breath of the
+flowers and the able and active effluvium from gout liniment. The
+liniment won easily; but not before the flowers got an uppercut to old
+Mr. Coulson’s nose. The deadly work of the implacable, false
+enchantress May was done.
+
+Across the park to the olfactories of Mr. Coulson came other
+unmistakable, characteristic, copyrighted smells of spring that belong
+to the-big-city-above-the-Subway, alone. The smells of hot asphalt,
+underground caverns, gasoline, patchouli, orange peel, sewer gas,
+Albany grabs, Egyptian cigarettes, mortar and the undried ink on
+newspapers. The inblowing air was sweet and mild. Sparrows wrangled
+happily everywhere outdoors. Never trust May.
+
+Mr. Coulson twisted the ends of his white mustache, cursed his foot,
+and pounded a bell on the table by his side.
+
+In came Mrs. Widdup. She was comely to the eye, fair, flustered, forty
+and foxy.
+
+“Higgins is out, sir,” she said, with a smile suggestive of vibratory
+massage. “He went to post a letter. Can I do anything for you, sir?”
+
+“It’s time for my aconite,” said old Mr. Coulson. “Drop it for me. The
+bottle’s there. Three drops. In water. D–––– that is, confound Higgins!
+There’s nobody in this house cares if I die here in this chair for want
+of attention.”
+
+Mrs. Widdup sighed deeply.
+
+“Don’t be saying that, sir,” she said. “There’s them that would care
+more than any one knows. Thirteen drops, you said, sir?”
+
+“Three,” said old man Coulson.
+
+He took his dose and then Mrs. Widdup’s hand. She blushed. Oh, yes, it
+can be done. Just hold your breath and compress the diaphragm.
+
+“Mrs. Widdup,” said Mr. Coulson, “the springtime’s full upon us.”
+
+“Ain’t that right?” said Mrs. Widdup. “The air’s real warm. And there’s
+bock-beer signs on every corner. And the park’s all yaller and pink and
+blue with flowers; and I have such shooting pains up my legs and body.”
+
+“‘In the spring,’” quoted Mr. Coulson, curling his mustache, “‘a y––––
+that is, a man’s—fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.’”
+
+“Lawsy, now!” exclaimed Mrs. Widdup; “ain’t that right? Seems like it’s
+in the air.”
+
+“‘In the spring,’” continued old Mr. Coulson, “‘a livelier iris shines
+upon the burnished dove.’”
+
+“They do be lively, the Irish,” sighed Mrs. Widdup pensively.
+
+“Mrs. Widdup,” said Mr. Coulson, making a face at a twinge of his gouty
+foot, “this would be a lonesome house without you. I’m an—that is, I’m
+an elderly man—but I’m worth a comfortable lot of money. If half a
+million dollars’ worth of Government bonds and the true affection of a
+heart that, though no longer beating with the first ardour of youth,
+can still throb with genuine—”
+
+The loud noise of an overturned chair near the portières of the
+adjoining room interrupted the venerable and scarcely suspecting victim
+of May.
+
+In stalked Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson, bony, durable, tall,
+high-nosed, frigid, well-bred, thirty-five,
+in-the-neighbourhood-of-Gramercy-Parkish. She put up a lorgnette. Mrs.
+Widdup hastily stooped and arranged the bandages on Mr. Coulson’s gouty
+foot.
+
+“I thought Higgins was with you,” said Miss Van Meeker Constantia.
+
+“Higgins went out,” explained her father, “and Mrs. Widdup answered the
+bell. That is better now, Mrs. Widdup, thank you. No; there is nothing
+else I require.”
+
+The housekeeper retired, pink under the cool, inquiring stare of Miss
+Coulson.
+
+“This spring weather is lovely, isn’t it, daughter?” said the old man,
+consciously conscious.
+
+“That’s just it,” replied Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson, somewhat
+obscurely. “When does Mrs. Widdup start on her vacation, papa?”
+
+“I believe she said a week from to-day,” said Mr. Coulson.
+
+Miss Van Meeker Constantia stood for a minute at the window gazing,
+toward the little park, flooded with the mellow afternoon sunlight.
+With the eye of a botanist she viewed the flowers—most potent weapons
+of insidious May. With the cool pulses of a virgin of Cologne she
+withstood the attack of the ethereal mildness. The arrows of the
+pleasant sunshine fell back, frostbitten, from the cold panoply of her
+unthrilled bosom. The odour of the flowers waked no soft sentiments in
+the unexplored recesses of her dormant heart. The chirp of the sparrows
+gave her a pain. She mocked at May.
+
+But although Miss Coulson was proof against the season, she was keen
+enough to estimate its power. She knew that elderly men and
+thick-waisted women jumped as educated fleas in the ridiculous train of
+May, the merry mocker of the months. She had heard of foolish old
+gentlemen marrying their housekeepers before. What a humiliating thing,
+after all, was this feeling called love!
+
+The next morning at 8 o’clock, when the iceman called, the cook told
+him that Miss Coulson wanted to see him in the basement.
+
+“Well, ain’t I the Olcott and Depew; not mentioning the first name at
+all?” said the iceman, admiringly, of himself.
+
+As a concession he rolled his sleeves down, dropped his icehooks on a
+syringa and went back. When Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson
+addressed him he took off his hat.
+
+“There is a rear entrance to this basement,” said Miss Coulson, “which
+can be reached by driving into the vacant lot next door, where they are
+excavating for a building. I want you to bring in that way within two
+hours 1,000 pounds of ice. You may have to bring another man or two to
+help you. I will show you where I want it placed. I also want 1,000
+pounds a day delivered the same way for the next four days. Your
+company may charge the ice on our regular bill. This is for your extra
+trouble.”
+
+Miss Coulson tendered a ten-dollar bill. The iceman bowed, and held his
+hat in his two hands behind him.
+
+“Not if you’ll excuse me, lady. It’ll be a pleasure to fix things up
+for you any way you please.”
+
+Alas for May!
+
+About noon Mr. Coulson knocked two glasses off his table, broke the
+spring of his bell and yelled for Higgins at the same time.
+
+“Bring an axe,” commanded Mr. Coulson, sardonically, “or send out for a
+quart of prussic acid, or have a policeman come in and shoot me. I’d
+rather that than be frozen to death.”
+
+“It does seem to be getting cool, Sir,” said Higgins. “I hadn’t noticed
+it before. I’ll close the window, Sir.”
+
+“Do,” said Mr. Coulson. “They call this spring, do they? If it keeps up
+long I’ll go back to Palm Beach. House feels like a morgue.”
+
+Later Miss Coulson dutifully came in to inquire how the gout was
+progressing.
+
+“’Stantia,” said the old man, “how is the weather outdoors?”
+
+“Bright,” answered Miss Coulson, “but chilly.”
+
+“Feels like the dead of winter to me,” said Mr. Coulson.
+
+“An instance,” said Constantia, gazing abstractedly out the window, “of
+‘winter lingering in the lap of spring,’ though the metaphor is not in
+the most refined taste.”
+
+A little later she walked down by the side of the little park and on
+westward to Broadway to accomplish a little shopping.
+
+A little later than that Mrs. Widdup entered the invalid’s room.
+
+“Did you ring, Sir?” she asked, dimpling in many places. “I asked
+Higgins to go to the drug store, and I thought I heard your bell.”
+
+“I did not,” said Mr. Coulson.
+
+“I’m afraid,” said Mrs. Widdup, “I interrupted you sir, yesterday when
+you were about to say something.”
+
+“How comes it, Mrs. Widdup,” said old man Coulson sternly, “that I find
+it so cold in this house?”
+
+“Cold, Sir?” said the housekeeper, “why, now, since you speak of it it
+do seem cold in this room. But, outdoors it’s as warm and fine as June,
+sir. And how this weather do seem to make one’s heart jump out of one’s
+shirt waist, sir. And the ivy all leaved out on the side of the house,
+and the hand-organs playing, and the children dancing on the
+sidewalk—’tis a great time for speaking out what’s in the heart. You
+were saying yesterday, sir—”
+
+“Woman!” roared Mr. Coulson; “you are a fool. I pay you to take care of
+this house. I am freezing to death in my own room, and you come in and
+drivel to me about ivy and hand-organs. Get me an overcoat at once. See
+that all doors and windows are closed below. An old, fat,
+irresponsible, one-sided object like you prating about springtime and
+flowers in the middle of winter! When Higgins comes back, tell him to
+bring me a hot rum punch. And now get out!”
+
+But who shall shame the bright face of May? Rogue though she be and
+disturber of sane men’s peace, no wise virgins cunning nor cold storage
+shall make her bow her head in the bright galaxy of months.
+
+Oh, yes, the story was not quite finished.
+
+A night passed, and Higgins helped old man Coulson in the morning to
+his chair by the window. The cold of the room was gone. Heavenly odours
+and fragrant mildness entered.
+
+In hurried Mrs. Widdup, and stood by his chair. Mr. Coulson reached his
+bony hand and grasped her plump one.
+
+“Mrs. Widdup,” he said, “this house would be no home without you. I
+have half a million dollars. If that and the true affection of a heart
+no longer in its youthful prime, but still not cold, could—”
+
+“I found out what made it cold,” said Mrs. Widdup, leaning against his
+chair. “’Twas ice—tons of it—in the basement and in the furnace room,
+everywhere. I shut off the registers that it was coming through into
+your room, Mr. Coulson, poor soul! And now it’s Maytime again.”
+
+“A true heart,” went on old man Coulson, a little wanderingly, “that
+the springtime has brought to life again, and—but what will my daughter
+say, Mrs. Widdup?”
+
+“Never fear, sir,” said Mrs. Widdup, cheerfully. “Miss Coulson, she ran
+away with the iceman last night, sir!”
+
+
+
+
+X
+A TECHNICAL ERROR
+
+
+I never cared especially for feuds, believing them to be even more
+overrated products of our country than grapefruit, scrapple, or
+honeymoons. Nevertheless, if I may be allowed, I will tell you of an
+Indian Territory feud of which I was press-agent, camp-follower, and
+inaccessory during the fact.
+
+I was on a visit to Sam Durkee’s ranch, where I had a great time
+falling off unmanicured ponies and waving my bare hand at the lower
+jaws of wolves about two miles away. Sam was a hardened person of about
+twenty-five, with a reputation for going home in the dark with perfect
+equanimity, though often with reluctance.
+
+Over in the Creek Nation was a family bearing the name of Tatum. I was
+told that the Durkees and Tatums had been feuding for years. Several of
+each family had bitten the grass, and it was expected that more
+Nebuchadnezzars would follow. A younger generation of each family was
+growing up, and the grass was keeping pace with them. But I gathered
+that they had fought fairly; that they had not lain in cornfields and
+aimed at the division of their enemies’ suspenders in the back—partly,
+perhaps, because there were no cornfields, and nobody wore more than
+one suspender. Nor had any woman or child of either house ever been
+harmed. In those days—and you will find it so yet—their women were
+safe.
+
+Sam Durkee had a girl. (If it were an all-fiction magazine that I
+expect to sell this story to, I should say, “Mr. Durkee rejoiced in a
+fiancée.”) Her name was Ella Baynes. They appeared to be devoted to
+each other, and to have perfect confidence in each other, as all
+couples do who are and have or aren’t and haven’t. She was tolerably
+pretty, with a heavy mass of brown hair that helped her along. He
+introduced me to her, which seemed not to lessen her preference for
+him; so I reasoned that they were surely soul-mates.
+
+Miss Baynes lived in Kingfisher, twenty miles from the ranch. Sam lived
+on a gallop between the two places.
+
+One day there came to Kingfisher a courageous young man, rather small,
+with smooth face and regular features. He made many inquiries about the
+business of the town, and especially of the inhabitants cognominally.
+He said he was from Muscogee, and he looked it, with his yellow shoes
+and crocheted four-in-hand. I met him once when I rode in for the mail.
+He said his name was Beverly Travers, which seemed rather improbable.
+
+There were active times on the ranch, just then, and Sam was too busy
+to go to town often. As an incompetent and generally worthless guest,
+it devolved upon me to ride in for little things such as post cards,
+barrels of flour, baking-powder, smoking-tobacco, and—letters from
+Ella.
+
+One day, when I was messenger for half a gross of cigarette papers and
+a couple of wagon tires, I saw the alleged Beverly Travers in a
+yellow-wheeled buggy with Ella Baynes, driving about town as
+ostentatiously as the black, waxy mud would permit. I knew that this
+information would bring no balm of Gilead to Sam’s soul, so I refrained
+from including it in the news of the city that I retailed on my return.
+But on the next afternoon an elongated ex-cowboy of the name of
+Simmons, an old-time pal of Sam’s, who kept a feed store in Kingfisher,
+rode out to the ranch and rolled and burned many cigarettes before he
+would talk. When he did make oration, his words were these:
+
+“Say, Sam, there’s been a description of a galoot miscallin’ himself
+Bevel-edged Travels impairing the atmospheric air of Kingfisher for the
+past two weeks. You know who he was? He was not otherwise than Ben
+Tatum, from the Creek Nation, son of old Gopher Tatum that your Uncle
+Newt shot last February. You know what he done this morning? He killed
+your brother Lester—shot him in the co’t-house yard.”
+
+I wondered if Sam had heard. He pulled a twig from a mesquite bush,
+chewed it gravely, and said:
+
+“He did, did he? He killed Lester?”
+
+“The same,” said Simmons. “And he did more. He run away with your girl,
+the same as to say Miss Ella Baynes. I thought you might like to know,
+so I rode out to impart the information.”
+
+“I am much obliged, Jim,” said Sam, taking the chewed twig from his
+mouth. “Yes, I’m glad you rode Out. Yes, I’m right glad.”
+
+“Well, I’ll be ridin’ back, I reckon. That boy I left in the feed store
+don’t know hay from oats. He shot Lester in the back.”
+
+“Shot him in the back?”
+
+“Yes, while he was hitchin’ his hoss.”
+
+“I’m much obliged, Jim.”
+
+“I kind of thought you’d like to know as soon as you could.”
+
+“Come in and have some coffee before you ride back, Jim?”
+
+“Why, no, I reckon not; I must get back to the store.”
+
+“And you say—”
+
+“Yes, Sam. Everybody seen ’em drive away together in a buckboard, with
+a big bundle, like clothes, tied up in the back of it. He was drivin’
+the team he brought over with him from Muscogee. They’ll be hard to
+overtake right away.”
+
+“And which—”
+
+“I was goin’ on to tell you. They left on the Guthrie road; but there’s
+no tellin’ which forks they’ll take—you know that.”
+
+“All right, Jim; much obliged.”
+
+“You’re welcome, Sam.”
+
+Simmons rolled a cigarette and stabbed his pony with both heels. Twenty
+yards away he reined up and called back:
+
+“You don’t want no—assistance, as you might say?”
+
+“Not any, thanks.”
+
+“I didn’t think you would. Well, so long!”
+
+Sam took out and opened a bone-handled pocket-knife and scraped a dried
+piece of mud from his left boot. I thought at first he was going to
+swear a vendetta on the blade of it, or recite “The Gipsy’s Curse.” The
+few feuds I had ever seen or read about usually opened that way. This
+one seemed to be presented with a new treatment. Thus offered on the
+stage, it would have been hissed off, and one of Belasco’s thrilling
+melodramas demanded instead.
+
+“I wonder,” said Sam, with a profoundly thoughtful expression, “if the
+cook has any cold beans left over!”
+
+He called Wash, the Negro cook, and finding that he had some, ordered
+him to heat up the pot and make some strong coffee. Then we went into
+Sam’s private room, where he slept, and kept his armoury, dogs, and the
+saddles of his favourite mounts. He took three or four six-shooters out
+of a bookcase and began to look them over, whistling “The Cowboy’s
+Lament” abstractedly. Afterward he ordered the two best horses on the
+ranch saddled and tied to the hitching-post.
+
+Now, in the feud business, in all sections of the country, I have
+observed that in one particular there is a delicate but strict
+etiquette belonging. You must not mention the word or refer to the
+subject in the presence of a feudist. It would be more reprehensible
+than commenting upon the mole on the chin of your rich aunt. I found,
+later on, that there is another unwritten rule, but I think that
+belongs solely to the West.
+
+It yet lacked two hours to supper-time; but in twenty minutes Sam and I
+were plunging deep into the reheated beans, hot coffee, and cold beef.
+
+“Nothing like a good meal before a long ride,” said Sam. “Eat hearty.”
+
+I had a sudden suspicion.
+
+“Why did you have two horses saddled?” I asked.
+
+“One, two—one, two,” said Sam. “You can count, can’t you?”
+
+His mathematics carried with it a momentary qualm and a lesson. The
+thought had not occurred to him that the thought could possibly occur
+to me not to ride at his side on that red road to revenge and justice.
+It was the higher calculus. I was booked for the trail. I began to eat
+more beans.
+
+In an hour we set forth at a steady gallop eastward. Our horses were
+Kentucky-bred, strengthened by the mesquite grass of the west. Ben
+Tatum’s steeds may have been swifter, and he had a good lead; but if he
+had heard the punctual thuds of the hoofs of those trailers of ours,
+born in the heart of feudland, he might have felt that retribution was
+creeping up on the hoof-prints of his dapper nags.
+
+I knew that Ben Tatum’s card to play was flight—flight until he came
+within the safer territory of his own henchmen and supporters. He knew
+that the man pursuing him would follow the trail to any end where it
+might lead.
+
+During the ride Sam talked of the prospect for rain, of the price of
+beef, and of the musical glasses. You would have thought he had never
+had a brother or a sweetheart or an enemy on earth. There are some
+subjects too big even for the words in the “Unabridged.” Knowing this
+phase of the feud code, but not having practised it sufficiently, I
+overdid the thing by telling some slightly funny anecdotes. Sam laughed
+at exactly the right place—laughed with his mouth. When I caught sight
+of his mouth, I wished I had been blessed with enough sense of humour
+to have suppressed those anecdotes.
+
+Our first sight of them we had in Guthrie. Tired and hungry, we
+stumbled, unwashed, into a little yellow-pine hotel and sat at a table.
+In the opposite corner we saw the fugitives. They were bent upon their
+meal, but looked around at times uneasily.
+
+The girl was dressed in brown—one of these smooth, half-shiny,
+silky-looking affairs with lace collar and cuffs, and what I believe
+they call an accordion-plaited skirt. She wore a thick brown veil down
+to her nose, and a broad-brimmed straw hat with some kind of feathers
+adorning it. The man wore plain, dark clothes, and his hair was trimmed
+very short. He was such a man as you might see anywhere.
+
+There they were—the murderer and the woman he had stolen. There we
+were—the rightful avenger, according to the code, and the supernumerary
+who writes these words.
+
+For one time, at least, in the heart of the supernumerary there rose
+the killing instinct. For one moment he joined the force of
+combatants—orally.
+
+“What are you waiting for, Sam?” I said in a whisper. “Let him have it
+now!”
+
+Sam gave a melancholy sigh.
+
+“You don’t understand; but _he_ does,” he said. “_He_ knows. Mr.
+Tenderfoot, there’s a rule out here among white men in the Nation that
+you can’t shoot a man when he’s with a woman. I never knew it to be
+broke yet. You _can’t_ do it. You’ve got to get him in a gang of men or
+by himself. That’s why. He knows it, too. We all know. So, that’s Mr.
+Ben Tatum! One of the ‘pretty men’! I’ll cut him out of the herd before
+they leave the hotel, and regulate his account!”
+
+After supper the flying pair disappeared quickly. Although Sam haunted
+lobby and stairway and halls half the night, in some mysterious way the
+fugitives eluded him; and in the morning the veiled lady in the brown
+dress with the accordion-plaited skirt and the dapper young man with
+the close-clipped hair, and the buckboard with the prancing nags, were
+gone.
+
+It is a monotonous story, that of the ride; so it shall be curtailed.
+Once again we overtook them on a road. We were about fifty yards
+behind. They turned in the buckboard and looked at us; then drove on
+without whipping up their horses. Their safety no longer lay in speed.
+Ben Tatum knew. He knew that the only rock of safety left to him was
+the code. There is no doubt that, had he been alone, the matter would
+have been settled quickly with Sam Durkee in the usual way; but he had
+something at his side that kept still the trigger-finger of both. It
+seemed likely that he was no coward.
+
+So, you may perceive that woman, on occasions, may postpone instead of
+precipitating conflict between man and man. But not willingly or
+consciously. She is oblivious of codes.
+
+Five miles farther, we came upon the future great Western city of
+Chandler. The horses of pursuers and pursued were starved and weary.
+There was one hotel that offered danger to man and entertainment to
+beast; so the four of us met again in the dining room at the ringing of
+a bell so resonant and large that it had cracked the welkin long ago.
+The dining room was not as large as the one at Guthrie.
+
+Just as we were eating apple pie—how Ben Davises and tragedy impinge
+upon each other!—I noticed Sam looking with keen intentness at our
+quarry where they were seated at a table across the room. The girl
+still wore the brown dress with lace collar and cuffs, and the veil
+drawn down to her nose. The man bent over his plate, with his close
+cropped head held low.
+
+“There’s a code,” I heard Sam say, either to me or to himself, “that
+won’t let you shoot a man in the company of a woman; but, by thunder,
+there ain’t one to keep you from killing a woman in the company of a
+man!”
+
+And, quicker than my mind could follow his argument, he whipped a
+Colt’s automatic from under his left arm and pumped six bullets into
+the body that the brown dress covered—the brown dress with the lace
+collar and cuffs and the accordion-plaited skirt.
+
+The young person in the dark sack suit, from whose head and from whose
+life a woman’s glory had been clipped, laid her head on her arms
+stretched upon the table; while people came running to raise Ben Tatum
+from the floor in his feminine masquerade that had given Sam the
+opportunity to set aside, technically, the obligations of the code.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE
+
+
+Few young couples in the Big-City-of-Bluff began their married
+existence with greater promise of happiness than did Mr. and Mrs.
+Claude Turpin. They felt no especial animosity toward each other; they
+were comfortably established in a handsome apartment house that had a
+name and accommodations like those of a sleeping-car; they were living
+as expensively as the couple on the next floor above who had twice
+their income; and their marriage had occurred on a wager, a ferry-boat
+and first acquaintance, thus securing a sensational newspaper notice
+with their names attached to pictures of the Queen of Roumania and M.
+Santos-Dumont.
+
+Turpin’s income was $200 per month. On pay day, after calculating the
+amounts due for rent, instalments on furniture and piano, gas, and
+bills owed to the florist, confectioner, milliner, tailor, wine
+merchant and cab company, the Turpins would find that they still had
+$200 left to spend. How to do this is one of the secrets of
+metropolitan life.
+
+The domestic life of the Turpins was a beautiful picture to see. But
+you couldn’t gaze upon it as you could at an oleograph of “Don’t Wake
+Grandma,” or “Brooklyn by Moonlight.”
+
+You had to blink when looked at it; and you heard a fizzing sound just
+like the machine with a “scope” at the end of it. Yes; there wasn’t
+much repose about the picture of the Turpins’ domestic life. It was
+something like “Spearing Salmon in the Columbia River,” or “Japanese
+Artillery in Action.”
+
+Every day was just like another; as the days are in New York. In the
+morning Turpin would take bromo-seltzer, his pocket change from under
+the clock, his hat, no breakfast and his departure for the office. At
+noon Mrs. Turpin would get out of bed and humour, put on a kimono,
+airs, and the water to boil for coffee.
+
+Turpin lunched downtown. He came home at 6 to dress for dinner. They
+always dined out. They strayed from the chop-house to chop-sueydom,
+from terrace to table d’hôte, from rathskeller to roadhouse, from café
+to casino, from Maria’s to the Martha Washington. Such is domestic life
+in the great city. Your vine is the mistletoe; your fig tree bears
+dates. Your household gods are Mercury and John Howard Payne. For the
+wedding march you now hear only “Come with the Gypsy Bride.” You rarely
+dine at the same place twice in succession. You tire of the food; and,
+besides, you want to give them time for the question of that souvenir
+silver sugar bowl to blow over.
+
+The Turpins were therefore happy. They made many warm and delightful
+friends, some of whom they remembered the next day. Their home life was
+an ideal one, according to the rules and regulations of the Book of
+Bluff.
+
+There came a time when it dawned upon Turpin that his wife was getting
+away with too much money. If you belong to the near-swell class in the
+Big City, and your income is $200 per month, and you find at the end of
+the month, after looking over the bills for current expenses, that you,
+yourself, have spent $150, you very naturally wonder what has become of
+the other $50. So you suspect your wife. And perhaps you give her a
+hint that something needs explanation.
+
+“I say, Vivien,” said Turpin, one afternoon when they were enjoying in
+rapt silence the peace and quiet of their cozy apartment, “you’ve been
+creating a hiatus big enough for a dog to crawl through in this month’s
+honorarium. You haven’t been paying your dressmaker anything on
+account, have you?”
+
+There was a moment’s silence. No sounds could be heard except the
+breathing of the fox terrier, and the subdued, monotonous sizzling of
+Vivien’s fulvous locks against the insensate curling irons. Claude
+Turpin, sitting upon a pillow that he had thoughtfully placed upon the
+convolutions of the apartment sofa, narrowly watched the riante, lovely
+face of his wife.
+
+“Claudie, dear,” said she, touching her finger to her ruby tongue and
+testing the unresponsive curling irons, “you do me an injustice. Mme.
+Toinette has not seen a cent of mine since the day you paid your tailor
+ten dollars on account.”
+
+Turpin’s suspicions were allayed for the time. But one day soon there
+came an anonymous letter to him that read:
+
+Watch your wife. She is blowing in your money secretly. I was a
+sufferer just as you are. The place is No. 345 Blank Street. A word to
+the wise, etc.
+
+
+A MAN WHO KNOWS.
+
+
+Turpin took this letter to the captain of police of the precinct that
+he lived in.
+
+“My precinct is as clean as a hound’s tooth,” said the captain. “The
+lid’s shut down as close there as it is over the eye of a Williamsburg
+girl when she’s kissed at a party. But if you think there’s anything
+queer at the address, I’ll go there with ye.”
+
+On the next afternoon at 3, Turpin and the captain crept softly up the
+stairs of No. 345 Blank Street. A dozen plain-clothes men, dressed in
+full police uniforms, so as to allay suspicion, waited in the hall
+below.
+
+At the top of the stairs was a door, which was found to be locked. The
+captain took a key from his pocket and unlocked it. The two men
+entered.
+
+They found themselves in a large room, occupied by twenty or
+twenty-five elegantly clothed ladies. Racing charts hung against the
+walls, a ticker clicked in one corner; with a telephone receiver to his
+ear a man was calling out the various positions of the horses in a very
+exciting race. The occupants of the room looked up at the intruders;
+but, as if reassured by the sight of the captain’s uniform, they
+reverted their attention to the man at the telephone.
+
+“You see,” said the captain to Turpin, “the value of an anonymous
+letter! No high-minded and self-respecting gentleman should consider
+one worthy of notice. Is your wife among this assembly, Mr. Turpin?”
+
+“She is not,” said Turpin.
+
+“And if she was,” continued the captain, “would she be within the reach
+of the tongue of slander? These ladies constitute a Browning Society.
+They meet to discuss the meaning of the great poet. The telephone is
+connected with Boston, whence the parent society transmits frequently
+its interpretations of the poems. Be ashamed of yer suspicions, Mr.
+Turpin.”
+
+“Go soak your shield,” said Turpin. “Vivien knows how to take care of
+herself in a pool-room. She’s not dropping anything on the ponies.
+There must be something queer going on here.”
+
+“Nothing but Browning,” said the captain. “Hear that?”
+
+“Thanatopsis by a nose,” drawled the man at the telephone.
+
+“That’s not Browning; that’s Longfellow,” said Turpin, who sometimes
+read books.
+
+“Back to the pasture!” exclaimed the captain. “Longfellow made the
+pacing-to-wagon record of 7.53 ’way back in 1868.”
+
+“I believe there’s something queer about this joint,” repeated Turpin.
+
+“I don’t see it,” said the captain.
+
+“I know it looks like a pool-room, all right,” persisted Turpin, “but
+that’s all a blind. Vivien has been dropping a lot of coin somewhere. I
+believe there’s some under-handed work going on here.”
+
+A number of racing sheets were tacked close together, covering a large
+space on one of the walls. Turpin, suspicious, tore several of them
+down. A door, previously hidden, was revealed. Turpin placed an ear to
+the crack and listened intently. He heard the soft hum of many voices,
+low and guarded laughter, and a sharp, metallic clicking and scraping
+as if from a multitude of tiny but busy objects.
+
+“My God! It is as I feared!” whispered Turpin to himself. “Summon your
+men at once!” he called to the captain. “She is in there, I know.”
+
+At the blowing of the captain’s whistle the uniformed plain-clothes men
+rushed up the stairs into the pool-room. When they saw the betting
+paraphernalia distributed around they halted, surprised and puzzled to
+know why they had been summoned.
+
+But the captain pointed to the locked door and bade them break it down.
+In a few moments they demolished it with the axes they carried. Into
+the other room sprang Claude Turpin, with the captain at his heels.
+
+The scene was one that lingered long in Turpin’s mind. Nearly a score
+of women—women expensively and fashionably clothed, many beautiful and
+of refined appearance—had been seated at little marble-topped tables.
+When the police burst open the door they shrieked and ran here and
+there like gayly plumed birds that had been disturbed in a tropical
+grove. Some became hysterical; one or two fainted; several knelt at the
+feet of the officers and besought them for mercy on account of their
+families and social position.
+
+A man who had been seated behind a desk had seized a roll of currency
+as large as the ankle of a Paradise Roof Gardens chorus girl and jumped
+out of the window. Half a dozen attendants huddled at one end of the
+room, breathless from fear.
+
+Upon the tables remained the damning and incontrovertible evidences of
+the guilt of the habituées of that sinister room—dish after dish heaped
+high with ice cream, and surrounded by stacks of empty ones, scraped to
+the last spoonful.
+
+“Ladies,” said the captain to his weeping circle of prisoners, “I’ll
+not hold any of yez. Some of yez I recognize as having fine houses and
+good standing in the community, with hard-working husbands and childer
+at home. But I’ll read ye a bit of a lecture before ye go. In the next
+room there’s a 20-to-1 shot just dropped in under the wire three
+lengths ahead of the field. Is this the way ye waste your husbands’
+money instead of helping earn it? Home wid yez! The lid’s on the
+ice-cream freezer in this precinct.”
+
+Claude Turpin’s wife was among the patrons of the raided room. He led
+her to their apartment in stern silence. There she wept so remorsefully
+and besought his forgiveness so pleadingly that he forgot his just
+anger, and soon he gathered his penitent golden-haired Vivien in his
+arms and forgave her.
+
+“Darling,” she murmured, half sobbingly, as the moonlight drifted
+through the open window, glorifying her sweet, upturned face, “I know I
+done wrong. I will never touch ice cream again. I forgot you were not a
+millionaire. I used to go there every day. But to-day I felt some
+strange, sad presentiment of evil, and I was not myself. I ate only
+eleven saucers.”
+
+“Say no more,” said Claude, gently as he fondly caressed her waving
+curls.
+
+“And you are sure that you fully forgive me?” asked Vivien, gazing at
+him entreatingly with dewy eyes of heavenly blue.
+
+“Almost sure, little one,” answered Claude, stooping and lightly
+touching her snowy forehead with his lips. “I’ll let you know later on.
+I’ve got a month’s salary down on Vanilla to win the three-year-old
+steeplechase to-morrow; and if the ice-cream hunch is to the good you
+are It again—see?”
+
+
+
+
+XII
+THE WHIRLIGIG OF LIFE
+
+
+Justice-of-the-Peace Benaja Widdup sat in the door of his office
+smoking his elder-stem pipe. Half-way to the zenith the Cumberland
+range rose blue-gray in the afternoon haze. A speckled hen swaggered
+down the main street of the “settlement,” cackling foolishly.
+
+Up the road came a sound of creaking axles, and then a slow cloud of
+dust, and then a bull-cart bearing Ransie Bilbro and his wife. The cart
+stopped at the Justice’s door, and the two climbed down. Ransie was a
+narrow six feet of sallow brown skin and yellow hair. The
+imperturbability of the mountains hung upon him like a suit of armour.
+The woman was calicoed, angled, snuff-brushed, and weary with unknown
+desires. Through it all gleamed a faint protest of cheated youth
+unconscious of its loss.
+
+The Justice of the Peace slipped his feet into his shoes, for the sake
+of dignity, and moved to let them enter.
+
+“We-all,” said the woman, in a voice like the wind blowing through pine
+boughs, “wants a divo’ce.” She looked at Ransie to see if he noted any
+flaw or ambiguity or evasion or partiality or self-partisanship in her
+statement of their business.
+
+“A divo’ce,” repeated Ransie, with a solemn nod. “We-all can’t git
+along together nohow. It’s lonesome enough fur to live in the mount’ins
+when a man and a woman keers fur one another. But when she’s a-spittin’
+like a wildcat or a-sullenin’ like a hoot-owl in the cabin, a man ain’t
+got no call to live with her.”
+
+“When he’s a no-’count varmint,” said the woman, “without any especial
+warmth, a-traipsin’ along of scalawags and moonshiners and a-layin’ on
+his back pizen ’ith co’n whiskey, and a-pesterin’ folks with a pack o’
+hungry, triflin’ houn’s to feed!”
+
+“When she keeps a-throwin’ skillet lids,” came Ransie’s antiphony, “and
+slings b’ilin’ water on the best coon-dog in the Cumberlands, and sets
+herself agin’ cookin’ a man’s victuals, and keeps him awake o’ nights
+accusin’ him of a sight of doin’s!”
+
+“When he’s al’ays a-fightin’ the revenues, and gits a hard name in the
+mount’ins fur a mean man, who’s gwine to be able fur to sleep o’
+nights?”
+
+The Justice of the Peace stirred deliberately to his duties. He placed
+his one chair and a wooden stool for his petitioners. He opened his
+book of statutes on the table and scanned the index. Presently he wiped
+his spectacles and shifted his inkstand.
+
+“The law and the statutes,” said he, “air silent on the subjeck of
+divo’ce as fur as the jurisdiction of this co’t air concerned. But,
+accordin’ to equity and the Constitution and the golden rule, it’s a
+bad barg’in that can’t run both ways. If a justice of the peace can
+marry a couple, it’s plain that he is bound to be able to divo’ce ’em.
+This here office will issue a decree of divo’ce and abide by the
+decision of the Supreme Co’t to hold it good.”
+
+Ransie Bilbro drew a small tobacco-bag from his trousers pocket. Out of
+this he shook upon the table a five-dollar note. “Sold a b’arskin and
+two foxes fur that,” he remarked. “It’s all the money we got.”
+
+“The regular price of a divo’ce in this co’t,” said the Justice, “air
+five dollars.” He stuffed the bill into the pocket of his homespun vest
+with a deceptive air of indifference. With much bodily toil and mental
+travail he wrote the decree upon half a sheet of foolscap, and then
+copied it upon the other. Ransie Bilbro and his wife listened to his
+reading of the document that was to give them freedom:
+
+“Know all men by these presents that Ransie Bilbro and his wife, Ariela
+Bilbro, this day personally appeared before me and promises that
+hereinafter they will neither love, honour, nor obey each other,
+neither for better nor worse, being of sound mind and body, and accept
+summons for divorce according to the peace and dignity of the State.
+Herein fail not, so help you God. Benaja Widdup, justice of the peace
+in and for the county of Piedmont, State of Tennessee.”
+
+The Justice was about to hand one of the documents to Ransie. The voice
+of Ariela delayed the transfer. Both men looked at her. Their dull
+masculinity was confronted by something sudden and unexpected in the
+woman.
+
+“Judge, don’t you give him that air paper yit. ’Tain’t all settled,
+nohow. I got to have my rights first. I got to have my ali-money.
+’Tain’t no kind of a way to do fur a man to divo’ce his wife ’thout her
+havin’ a cent fur to do with. I’m a-layin’ off to be a-goin’ up to
+brother Ed’s up on Hogback Mount’in. I’m bound fur to hev a pa’r of
+shoes and some snuff and things besides. Ef Rance kin affo’d a divo’ce,
+let him pay me ali-money.”
+
+Ransie Bilbro was stricken to dumb perplexity. There had been no
+previous hint of alimony. Women were always bringing up startling and
+unlooked-for issues.
+
+Justice Benaja Widdup felt that the point demanded judicial decision.
+The authorities were also silent on the subject of alimony. But the
+woman’s feet were bare. The trail to Hogback Mountain was steep and
+flinty.
+
+“Ariela Bilbro,” he asked, in official tones, “how much did you ’low
+would be good and sufficient ali-money in the case befo’ the co’t.”
+
+“I ’lowed,” she answered, “fur the shoes and all, to say five dollars.
+That ain’t much fur ali-money, but I reckon that’ll git me to up
+brother Ed’s.”
+
+“The amount,” said the Justice, “air not onreasonable. Ransie Bilbro,
+you air ordered by the co’t to pay the plaintiff the sum of five
+dollars befo’ the decree of divo’ce air issued.”
+
+“I hain’t no mo’ money,” breathed Ransie, heavily. “I done paid you all
+I had.”
+
+“Otherwise,” said the Justice, looking severely over his spectacles,
+“you air in contempt of co’t.”
+
+“I reckon if you gimme till to-morrow,” pleaded the husband, “I mout be
+able to rake or scrape it up somewhars. I never looked for to be
+a-payin’ no ali-money.”
+
+“The case air adjourned,” said Benaja Widdup, “till to-morrow, when
+you-all will present yo’selves and obey the order of the co’t.
+Followin’ of which the decrees of divo’ce will be delivered.” He sat
+down in the door and began to loosen a shoestring.
+
+“We mout as well go down to Uncle Ziah’s,” decided Ransie, “and spend
+the night.” He climbed into the cart on one side, and Ariela climbed in
+on the other. Obeying the flap of his rope, the little red bull slowly
+came around on a tack, and the cart crawled away in the nimbus arising
+from its wheels.
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup smoked his elder-stem pipe. Late in
+the afternoon he got his weekly paper, and read it until the twilight
+dimmed its lines. Then he lit the tallow candle on his table, and read
+until the moon rose, marking the time for supper. He lived in the
+double log cabin on the slope near the girdled poplar. Going home to
+supper he crossed a little branch darkened by a laurel thicket. The
+dark figure of a man stepped from the laurels and pointed a rifle at
+his breast. His hat was pulled down low, and something covered most of
+his face.
+
+“I want yo’ money,” said the figure, “’thout any talk. I’m gettin’
+nervous, and my finger’s a-wabblin’ on this here trigger.”
+
+“I’ve only got f-f-five dollars,” said the Justice, producing it from
+his vest pocket.
+
+“Roll it up,” came the order, “and stick it in the end of this here
+gun-bar’l.”
+
+The bill was crisp and new. Even fingers that were clumsy and trembling
+found little difficulty in making a spill of it and inserting it (this
+with less ease) into the muzzle of the rifle.
+
+“Now I reckon you kin be goin’ along,” said the robber.
+
+The Justice lingered not on his way.
+
+The next day came the little red bull, drawing the cart to the office
+door. Justice Benaja Widdup had his shoes on, for he was expecting the
+visit. In his presence Ransie Bilbro handed to his wife a five-dollar
+bill. The official’s eye sharply viewed it. It seemed to curl up as
+though it had been rolled and inserted into the end of a gun-barrel.
+But the Justice refrained from comment. It is true that other bills
+might be inclined to curl. He handed each one a decree of divorce. Each
+stood awkwardly silent, slowly folding the guarantee of freedom. The
+woman cast a shy glance full of constraint at Ransie.
+
+“I reckon you’ll be goin’ back up to the cabin,” she said, along ’ith
+the bull-cart. There’s bread in the tin box settin’ on the shelf. I put
+the bacon in the b’ilin’-pot to keep the hounds from gittin’ it. Don’t
+forget to wind the clock to-night.”
+
+“You air a-goin’ to your brother Ed’s?” asked Ransie, with fine
+unconcern.
+
+“I was ’lowin’ to get along up thar afore night. I ain’t sayin’ as
+they’ll pester theyselves any to make me welcome, but I hain’t nowhar
+else fur to go. It’s a right smart ways, and I reckon I better be
+goin’. I’ll be a-sayin’ good-bye, Ranse—that is, if you keer fur to say
+so.”
+
+“I don’t know as anybody’s a hound dog,” said Ransie, in a martyr’s
+voice, “fur to not want to say good-bye—’less you air so anxious to git
+away that you don’t want me to say it.”
+
+Ariela was silent. She folded the five-dollar bill and her decree
+carefully, and placed them in the bosom of her dress. Benaja Widdup
+watched the money disappear with mournful eyes behind his spectacles.
+
+And then with his next words he achieved rank (as his thoughts ran)
+with either the great crowd of the world’s sympathizers or the little
+crowd of its great financiers.
+
+“Be kind o’ lonesome in the old cabin to-night, Ranse,” he said.
+
+Ransie Bilbro stared out at the Cumberlands, clear blue now in the
+sunlight. He did not look at Ariela.
+
+“I ’low it might be lonesome,” he said; “but when folks gits mad and
+wants a divo’ce, you can’t make folks stay.”
+
+“There’s others wanted a divo’ce,” said Ariela, speaking to the wooden
+stool. “Besides, nobody don’t want nobody to stay.”
+
+“Nobody never said they didn’t.”
+
+“Nobody never said they did. I reckon I better start on now to brother
+Ed’s.”
+
+“Nobody can’t wind that old clock.”
+
+“Want me to go back along ’ith you in the cart and wind it fur you,
+Ranse?”
+
+The mountaineer’s countenance was proof against emotion. But he reached
+out a big hand and enclosed Ariela’s thin brown one. Her soul peeped
+out once through her impassive face, hallowing it.
+
+“Them hounds shan’t pester you no more,” said Ransie. “I reckon I been
+mean and low down. You wind that clock, Ariela.”
+
+“My heart hit’s in that cabin, Ranse,” she whispered, “along ’ith you.
+I ai’nt a-goin’ to git mad no more. Le’s be startin’, Ranse, so’s we
+kin git home by sundown.”
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup interposed as they started for the
+door, forgetting his presence.
+
+“In the name of the State of Tennessee,” he said, “I forbid you-all to
+be a-defyin’ of its laws and statutes. This co’t is mo’ than willin’
+and full of joy to see the clouds of discord and misunderstandin’
+rollin’ away from two lovin’ hearts, but it air the duty of the co’t to
+p’eserve the morals and integrity of the State. The co’t reminds you
+that you air no longer man and wife, but air divo’ced by regular
+decree, and as such air not entitled to the benefits and ’purtenances
+of the mattermonal estate.”
+
+Ariela caught Ransie’s arm. Did those words mean that she must lose him
+now when they had just learned the lesson of life?
+
+“But the co’t air prepared,” went on the Justice, “fur to remove the
+disabilities set up by the decree of divo’ce. The co’t air on hand to
+perform the solemn ceremony of marri’ge, thus fixin’ things up and
+enablin’ the parties in the case to resume the honour’ble and elevatin’
+state of mattermony which they desires. The fee fur performin’ said
+ceremony will be, in this case, to wit, five dollars.”
+
+Ariela caught the gleam of promise in his words. Swiftly her hand went
+to her bosom. Freely as an alighting dove the bill fluttered to the
+Justice’s table. Her sallow cheek coloured as she stood hand in hand
+with Ransie and listened to the reuniting words.
+
+Ransie helped her into the cart, and climbed in beside her. The little
+red bull turned once more, and they set out, hand-clasped, for the
+mountains.
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup sat in his door and took off his
+shoes. Once again he fingered the bill tucked down in his vest pocket.
+Once again he smoked his elder-stem pipe. Once again the speckled hen
+swaggered down the main street of the “settlement,” cackling foolishly.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+A SACRIFICE HIT
+
+
+The editor of the _Hearthstone Magazine_ has his own ideas about the
+selection of manuscript for his publication. His theory is no secret;
+in fact, he will expound it to you willingly sitting at his mahogany
+desk, smiling benignantly and tapping his knee gently with his
+gold-rimmed eye-glasses.
+
+“The _Hearthstone_,” he will say, “does not employ a staff of readers.
+We obtain opinions of the manuscripts submitted to us directly from
+types of the various classes of our readers.”
+
+That is the editor’s theory; and this is the way he carries it out:
+
+When a batch of MSS. is received the editor stuffs every one of his
+pockets full of them and distributes them as he goes about during the
+day. The office employees, the hall porter, the janitor, the elevator
+man, messenger boys, the waiters at the café where the editor has
+luncheon, the man at the news-stand where he buys his evening paper,
+the grocer and milkman, the guard on the 5.30 uptown elevated train,
+the ticket-chopper at Sixty ––––th street, the cook and maid at his
+home—these are the readers who pass upon MSS. sent in to the
+_Hearthstone Magazine_. If his pockets are not entirely emptied by the
+time he reaches the bosom of his family the remaining ones are handed
+over to his wife to read after the baby goes to sleep. A few days later
+the editor gathers in the MSS. during his regular rounds and considers
+the verdict of his assorted readers.
+
+This system of making up a magazine has been very successful; and the
+circulation, paced by the advertising rates, is making a wonderful
+record of speed.
+
+The _Hearthstone_ Company also publishes books, and its imprint is to
+be found on several successful works—all recommended, says the editor,
+by the _Hearthstone’s_ army of volunteer readers. Now and then
+(according to talkative members of the editorial staff) the
+_Hearthstone_ has allowed manuscripts to slip through its fingers on
+the advice of its heterogeneous readers, that afterward proved to be
+famous sellers when brought out by other houses.
+
+For instance (the gossips say), “The Rise and Fall of Silas Latham” was
+unfavourably passed upon by the elevator-man; the office-boy
+unanimously rejected “The Boss”; “In the Bishop’s Carriage” was
+contemptuously looked upon by the street-car conductor; “The
+Deliverance” was turned down by a clerk in the subscription department
+whose wife’s mother had just begun a two-months’ visit at his home;
+“The Queen’s Quair” came back from the janitor with the comment: “So is
+the book.”
+
+But nevertheless the _Hearthstone_ adheres to its theory and system,
+and it will never lack volunteer readers; for each one of the widely
+scattered staff, from the young lady stenographer in the editorial
+office to the man who shovels in coal (whose adverse decision lost to
+the _Hearthstone_ Company the manuscript of “The Under World”), has
+expectations of becoming editor of the magazine some day.
+
+This method of the _Hearthstone_ was well known to Allen Slayton when
+he wrote his novelette entitled “Love Is All.” Slayton had hung about
+the editorial offices of all the magazines so persistently that he was
+acquainted with the inner workings of every one in Gotham.
+
+He knew not only that the editor of the Hearthstone handed his MSS.
+around among different types of people for reading, but that the
+stories of sentimental love-interest went to Miss Puffkin, the editor’s
+stenographer. Another of the editor’s peculiar customs was to conceal
+invariably the name of the writer from his readers of MSS. so that a
+glittering name might not influence the sincerity of their reports.
+
+Slayton made “Love Is All” the effort of his life. He gave it six
+months of the best work of his heart and brain. It was a pure
+love-story, fine, elevated, romantic, passionate—a prose poem that set
+the divine blessing of love (I am transposing from the manuscript) high
+above all earthly gifts and honours, and listed it in the catalogue of
+heaven’s choicest rewards. Slayton’s literary ambition was intense. He
+would have sacrificed all other worldly possessions to have gained fame
+in his chosen art. He would almost have cut off his right hand, or have
+offered himself to the knife of the appendicitis fancier to have
+realized his dream of seeing one of his efforts published in the
+_Hearthstone_.
+
+Slayton finished “Love Is All,” and took it to the _Hearthstone_ in
+person. The office of the magazine was in a large, conglomerate
+building, presided under by a janitor.
+
+As the writer stepped inside the door on his way to the elevator a
+potato masher flew through the hall, wrecking Slayton’s hat, and
+smashing the glass of the door. Closely following in the wake of the
+utensil flew the janitor, a bulky, unwholesome man, suspenderless and
+sordid, panic-stricken and breathless. A frowsy, fat woman with flying
+hair followed the missile. The janitor’s foot slipped on the tiled
+floor, he fell in a heap with an exclamation of despair. The woman
+pounced upon him and seized his hair. The man bellowed lustily.
+
+Her vengeance wreaked, the virago rose and stalked triumphant as
+Minerva, back to some cryptic domestic retreat at the rear. The janitor
+got to his feet, blown and humiliated.
+
+“This is married life,” he said to Slayton, with a certain bruised
+humour. “That’s the girl I used to lay awake of nights thinking about.
+Sorry about your hat, mister. Say, don’t snitch to the tenants about
+this, will yer? I don’t want to lose me job.”
+
+Slayton took the elevator at the end of the hall and went up to the
+offices of the _Hearthstone_. He left the MS. of “Love Is All” with the
+editor, who agreed to give him an answer as to its availability at the
+end of a week.
+
+Slayton formulated his great winning scheme on his way down. It struck
+him with one brilliant flash, and he could not refrain from admiring
+his own genius in conceiving the idea. That very night he set about
+carrying it into execution.
+
+Miss Puffkin, the _Hearthstone_ stenographer, boarded in the same house
+with the author. She was an oldish, thin, exclusive, languishing,
+sentimental maid; and Slayton had been introduced to her some time
+before.
+
+The writer’s daring and self-sacrificing project was this: He knew that
+the editor of the _Hearthstone_ relied strongly upon Miss Puffkin’s
+judgment in the manuscript of romantic and sentimental fiction. Her
+taste represented the immense average of mediocre women who devour
+novels and stories of that type. The central idea and keynote of “Love
+Is All” was love at first sight—the enrapturing, irresistible,
+soul-thrilling feeling that compels a man or a woman to recognize his
+or her spirit-mate as soon as heart speaks to heart. Suppose he should
+impress this divine truth upon Miss Puffkin personally!—would she not
+surely indorse her new and rapturous sensations by recommending highly
+to the editor of the _Hearthstone_ the novelette “Love Is All”?
+
+Slayton thought so. And that night he took Miss Puffkin to the theatre.
+The next night he made vehement love to her in the dim parlour of the
+boarding-house. He quoted freely from “Love Is All”; and he wound up
+with Miss Puffkin’s head on his shoulder, and visions of literary fame
+dancing in his head.
+
+But Slayton did not stop at love-making. This, he said to himself, was
+the turning point of his life; and, like a true sportsman, he “went the
+limit.” On Thursday night he and Miss Puffkin walked over to the Big
+Church in the Middle of the Block and were married.
+
+Brave Slayton! Châteaubriand died in a garret, Byron courted a widow,
+Keats starved to death, Poe mixed his drinks, De Quincey hit the pipe,
+Ade lived in Chicago, James kept on doing it, Dickens wore white socks,
+De Maupassant wore a strait-jacket, Tom Watson became a Populist,
+Jeremiah wept, all these authors did these things for the sake of
+literature, but thou didst cap them all; thou marriedst a wife for to
+carve for thyself a niche in the temple of fame!
+
+On Friday morning Mrs. Slayton said she would go over to the
+_Hearthstone_ office, hand in one or two manuscripts that the editor
+had given to her to read, and resign her position as stenographer.
+
+“Was there anything—er—that—er—you particularly fancied in the stories
+you are going to turn in?” asked Slayton with a thumping heart.
+
+“There was one—a novelette, that I liked so much,” said his wife. “I
+haven’t read anything in years that I thought was half as nice and true
+to life.”
+
+That afternoon Slayton hurried down to the _Hearthstone_ office. He
+felt that his reward was close at hand. With a novelette in the
+_Hearthstone_, literary reputation would soon be his.
+
+The office boy met him at the railing in the outer office. It was not
+for unsuccessful authors to hold personal colloquy with the editor
+except at rare intervals.
+
+Slayton, hugging himself internally, was nursing in his heart the
+exquisite hope of being able to crush the office boy with his
+forthcoming success.
+
+He inquired concerning his novelette. The office boy went into the
+sacred precincts and brought forth a large envelope, thick with more
+than the bulk of a thousand checks.
+
+“The boss told me to tell you he’s sorry,” said the boy, “but your
+manuscript ain’t available for the magazine.”
+
+Slayton stood, dazed. “Can you tell me,” he stammered, “whether or no
+Miss Puff—that is my—I mean Miss Puffkin—handed in a novelette this
+morning that she had been asked to read?”
+
+“Sure she did,” answered the office boy wisely. “I heard the old man
+say that Miss Puffkin said it was a daisy. The name of it was, ‘Married
+for the Mazuma, or a Working Girl’s Triumph.’”
+
+“Say, you!” said the office boy confidentially, “your name’s Slayton,
+ain’t it? I guess I mixed cases on you without meanin’ to do it. The
+boss give me some manuscript to hand around the other day and I got the
+ones for Miss Puffkin and the janitor mixed. I guess it’s all right,
+though.”
+
+And then Slayton looked closer and saw on the cover of his manuscript,
+under the title “Love Is All,” the janitor’s comment scribbled with a
+piece of charcoal:
+
+“The –––– you say!”
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+THE ROADS WE TAKE
+
+
+Twenty miles west of Tucson, the “Sunset Express” stopped at a tank to
+take on water. Besides the aqueous addition the engine of that famous
+flyer acquired some other things that were not good for it.
+
+While the fireman was lowering the feeding hose, Bob Tidball, “Shark”
+Dodson and a quarter-bred Creek Indian called John Big Dog climbed on
+the engine and showed the engineer three round orifices in pieces of
+ordnance that they carried. These orifices so impressed the engineer
+with their possibilities that he raised both hands in a gesture such as
+accompanies the ejaculation “Do tell!”
+
+At the crisp command of Shark Dodson, who was leader of the attacking
+force the engineer descended to the ground and uncoupled the engine and
+tender. Then John Big Dog, perched upon the coal, sportively held two
+guns upon the engine driver and the fireman, and suggested that they
+run the engine fifty yards away and there await further orders.
+
+Shark Dodson and Bob Tidball, scorning to put such low-grade ore as the
+passengers through the mill, struck out for the rich pocket of the
+express car. They found the messenger serene in the belief that the
+“Sunset Express” was taking on nothing more stimulating and dangerous
+than aqua pura. While Bob was knocking this idea out of his head with
+the butt-end of his six-shooter Shark Dodson was already dosing the
+express-car safe with dynamite.
+
+The safe exploded to the tune of $30,000, all gold and currency. The
+passengers thrust their heads casually out of the windows to look for
+the thunder-cloud. The conductor jerked at the bell-rope, which sagged
+down loose and unresisting, at his tug. Shark Dodson and Bob Tidball,
+with their booty in a stout canvas bag, tumbled out of the express car
+and ran awkwardly in their high-heeled boots to the engine.
+
+The engineer, sullenly angry but wise, ran the engine, according to
+orders, rapidly away from the inert train. But before this was
+accomplished the express messenger, recovered from Bob Tidball’s
+persuader to neutrality, jumped out of his car with a Winchester rifle
+and took a trick in the game. Mr. John Big Dog, sitting on the coal
+tender, unwittingly made a wrong lead by giving an imitation of a
+target, and the messenger trumped him. With a ball exactly between his
+shoulder blades the Creek chevalier of industry rolled off to the
+ground, thus increasing the share of his comrades in the loot by
+one-sixth each.
+
+Two miles from the tank the engineer was ordered to stop.
+
+The robbers waved a defiant adieu and plunged down the steep slope into
+the thick woods that lined the track. Five minutes of crashing through
+a thicket of chaparral brought them to open woods, where three horses
+were tied to low-hanging branches. One was waiting for John Big Dog,
+who would never ride by night or day again. This animal the robbers
+divested of saddle and bridle and set free. They mounted the other two
+with the bag across one pommel, and rode fast and with discretion
+through the forest and up a primeval, lonely gorge. Here the animal
+that bore Bob Tidball slipped on a mossy boulder and broke a foreleg.
+They shot him through the head at once and sat down to hold a council
+of flight. Made secure for the present by the tortuous trail they had
+travelled, the question of time was no longer so big. Many miles and
+hours lay between them and the spryest posse that could follow. Shark
+Dodson’s horse, with trailing rope and dropped bridle, panted and
+cropped thankfully of the grass along the stream in the gorge. Bob
+Tidball opened the sack, drew out double handfuls of the neat packages
+of currency and the one sack of gold and chuckled with the glee of a
+child.
+
+“Say, you old double-decked pirate,” he called joyfully to Dodson, “you
+said we could do it—you got a head for financing that knocks the horns
+off of anything in Arizona.”
+
+“What are we going to do about a hoss for you, Bob? We ain’t got long
+to wait here. They’ll be on our trail before daylight in the mornin’.”
+
+“Oh, I guess that cayuse of yourn’ll carry double for a while,”
+answered the sanguine Bob. “We’ll annex the first animal we come
+across. By jingoes, we made a haul, didn’t we? Accordin’ to the marks
+on this money there’s $30,000—$15,000 apiece!”
+
+“It’s short of what I expected,” said Shark Dodson, kicking softly at
+the packages with the toe of his boot. And then he looked pensively at
+the wet sides of his tired horse.
+
+“Old Bolivar’s mighty nigh played out,” he said, slowly. “I wish that
+sorrel of yours hadn’t got hurt.”
+
+“So do I,” said Bob, heartily, “but it can’t be helped. Bolivar’s got
+plenty of bottom—he’ll get us both far enough to get fresh mounts. Dang
+it, Shark, I can’t help thinkin’ how funny it is that an Easterner like
+you can come out here and give us Western fellows cards and spades in
+the desperado business. What part of the East was you from, anyway?”
+
+“New York State,” said Shark Dodson, sitting down on a boulder and
+chewing a twig. “I was born on a farm in Ulster County. I ran away from
+home when I was seventeen. It was an accident my coming West. I was
+walkin’ along the road with my clothes in a bundle, makin’ for New York
+City. I had an idea of goin’ there and makin’ lots of money. I always
+felt like I could do it. I came to a place one evenin’ where the road
+forked and I didn’t know which fork to take. I studied about it for
+half an hour, and then I took the left-hand. That night I run into the
+camp of a Wild West show that was travellin’ among the little towns,
+and I went West with it. I’ve often wondered if I wouldn’t have turned
+out different if I’d took the other road.”
+
+“Oh, I reckon you’d have ended up about the same,” said Bob Tidball,
+cheerfully philosophical. “It ain’t the roads we take; it’s what’s
+inside of us that makes us turn out the way we do.”
+
+Shark Dodson got up and leaned against a tree.
+
+“I’d a good deal rather that sorrel of yourn hadn’t hurt himself, Bob,”
+he said again, almost pathetically.
+
+“Same here,” agreed Bob; “he was sure a first-rate kind of a crowbait.
+But Bolivar, he’ll pull us through all right. Reckon we’d better be
+movin’ on, hadn’t we, Shark? I’ll bag this boodle ag’in and we’ll hit
+the trail for higher timber.”
+
+Bob Tidball replaced the spoil in the bag and tied the mouth of it
+tightly with a cord. When he looked up the most prominent object that
+he saw was the muzzle of Shark Dodson’s .45 held upon him without a
+waver.
+
+“Stop your funnin’,” said Bob, with a grin. “We got to be hittin’ the
+breeze.”
+
+“Set still,” said Shark. “You ain’t goin’ to hit no breeze, Bob. I hate
+to tell you, but there ain’t any chance for but one of us. Bolivar,
+he’s plenty tired, and he can’t carry double.”
+
+“We been pards, me and you, Shark Dodson, for three year,” Bob said
+quietly. “We’ve risked our lives together time and again. I’ve always
+give you a square deal, and I thought you was a man. I’ve heard some
+queer stories about you shootin’ one or two men in a peculiar way, but
+I never believed ’em. Now if you’re just havin’ a little fun with me,
+Shark, put your gun up, and we’ll get on Bolivar and vamose. If you
+mean to shoot—shoot, you blackhearted son of a tarantula!”
+
+Shark Dodson’s face bore a deeply sorrowful look. “You don’t know how
+bad I feel,” he sighed, “about that sorrel of yourn breakin’ his leg,
+Bob.”
+
+The expression on Dodson’s face changed in an instant to one of cold
+ferocity mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed
+itself for a moment like an evil face in the window of a reputable
+house.
+
+Truly Bob Tidball was never to “hit the breeze” again. The deadly .45
+of the false friend cracked and filled the gorge with a roar that the
+walls hurled back with indignant echoes. And Bolivar, unconscious
+accomplice, swiftly bore away the last of the holders-up of the “Sunset
+Express,” not put to the stress of “carrying double.”
+
+But as “Shark” Dodson galloped away the woods seemed to fade from his
+view; the revolver in his right hand turned to the curved arm of a
+mahogany chair; his saddle was strangely upholstered, and he opened his
+eyes and saw his feet, not in stirrups, but resting quietly on the edge
+of a quartered-oak desk.
+
+I am telling you that Dodson, of the firm of Dodson & Decker, Wall
+Street brokers, opened his eyes. Peabody, the confidential clerk, was
+standing by his chair, hesitating to speak. There was a confused hum of
+wheels below, and the sedative buzz of an electric fan.
+
+“Ahem! Peabody,” said Dodson, blinking. “I must have fallen asleep. I
+had a most remarkable dream. What is it, Peabody?”
+
+“Mr. Williams, sir, of Tracy & Williams, is outside. He has come to
+settle his deal in X. Y. Z. The market caught him short, sir, if you
+remember.”
+
+“Yes, I remember. What is X. Y. Z. quoted at to-day, Peabody?”
+
+“One eighty-five, sir.”
+
+“Then that’s his price.”
+
+“Excuse me,” said Peabody, rather nervously “for speaking of it, but
+I’ve been talking to Williams. He’s an old friend of yours, Mr. Dodson,
+and you practically have a corner in X. Y. Z. I thought you might—that
+is, I thought you might not remember that he sold you the stock at 98.
+If he settles at the market price it will take every cent he has in the
+world and his home too to deliver the shares.”
+
+The expression on Dodson’s face changed in an instant to one of cold
+ferocity mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed
+itself for a moment like an evil face in the window of a reputable
+house.
+
+“He will settle at one eighty-five,” said Dodson. “Bolivar cannot carry
+double.”
+
+
+
+
+ XV
+A BLACKJACK BARGAINER
+
+
+The most disreputable thing in Yancey Goree’s law office was Goree
+himself, sprawled in his creaky old arm-chair. The rickety little
+office, built of red brick, was set flush with the street—the main
+street of the town of Bethel.
+
+Bethel rested upon the foot-hills of the Blue Ridge. Above it the
+mountains were piled to the sky. Far below it the turbid Catawba
+gleamed yellow along its disconsolate valley.
+
+The June day was at its sultriest hour. Bethel dozed in the tepid
+shade. Trade was not. It was so still that Goree, reclining in his
+chair, distinctly heard the clicking of the chips in the grand-jury
+room, where the “court-house gang” was playing poker. From the open
+back door of the office a well-worn path meandered across the grassy
+lot to the court-house. The treading out of that path had cost Goree
+all he ever had—first inheritance of a few thousand dollars, next the
+old family home, and, latterly the last shreds of his self-respect and
+manhood. The “gang” had cleaned him out. The broken gambler had turned
+drunkard and parasite; he had lived to see this day come when the men
+who had stripped him denied him a seat at the game. His word was no
+longer to be taken. The daily bouts at cards had arranged itself
+accordingly, and to him was assigned the ignoble part of the onlooker.
+The sheriff, the county clerk, a sportive deputy, a gay attorney, and a
+chalk-faced man hailing “from the valley,” sat at table, and the
+sheared one was thus tacitly advised to go and grow more wool.
+
+Soon wearying of his ostracism, Goree had departed for his office,
+muttering to himself as he unsteadily traversed the unlucky pathway.
+After a drink of corn whiskey from a demijohn under the table, he had
+flung himself into the chair, staring, in a sort of maudlin apathy, out
+at the mountains immersed in the summer haze. The little white patch he
+saw away up on the side of Blackjack was Laurel, the village near which
+he had been born and bred. There, also, was the birthplace of the feud
+between the Gorees and the Coltranes. Now no direct heir of the Gorees
+survived except this plucked and singed bird of misfortune. To the
+Coltranes, also, but one male supporter was left—Colonel Abner
+Coltrane, a man of substance and standing, a member of the State
+Legislature, and a contemporary with Goree’s father. The feud had been
+a typical one of the region; it had left a red record of hate, wrong
+and slaughter.
+
+But Yancey Goree was not thinking of feuds. His befuddled brain was
+hopelessly attacking the problem of the future maintenance of himself
+and his favourite follies. Of late, old friends of the family had seen
+to it that he had whereof to eat and a place to sleep—but whiskey they
+would not buy for him, and he must have whiskey. His law business was
+extinct; no case had been intrusted to him in two years. He had been a
+borrower and a sponge, and it seemed that if he fell no lower it would
+be from lack of opportunity. One more chance—he was saying to
+himself—if he had one more stake at the game, he thought he could win;
+but he had nothing left to sell, and his credit was more than
+exhausted.
+
+He could not help smiling, even in his misery, as he thought of the man
+to whom, six months before, he had sold the old Goree homestead. There
+had come from “back yan’” in the mountains two of the strangest
+creatures, a man named Pike Garvey and his wife. “Back yan’,” with a
+wave of the hand toward the hills, was understood among the
+mountaineers to designate the remotest fastnesses, the unplumbed
+gorges, the haunts of lawbreakers, the wolf’s den, and the boudoir of
+the bear. In the cabin far up on Blackjack’s shoulder, in the wildest
+part of these retreats, this odd couple had lived for twenty years.
+They had neither dog nor children to mitigate the heavy silence of the
+hills. Pike Garvey was little known in the settlements, but all who had
+dealt with him pronounced him “crazy as a loon.” He acknowledged no
+occupation save that of a squirrel hunter, but he “moonshined”
+occasionally by way of diversion. Once the “revenues” had dragged him
+from his lair, fighting silently and desperately like a terrier, and he
+had been sent to state’s prison for two years. Released, he popped back
+into his hole like an angry weasel.
+
+Fortune, passing over many anxious wooers, made a freakish flight into
+Blackjack’s bosky pockets to smile upon Pike and his faithful partner.
+
+One day a party of spectacled, knickerbockered, and altogether absurd
+prospectors invaded the vicinity of the Garvey’s cabin. Pike lifted his
+squirrel rifle off the hooks and took a shot at them at long range on
+the chance of their being revenues. Happily he missed, and the
+unconscious agents of good luck drew nearer, disclosing their innocence
+of anything resembling law or justice. Later on, they offered the
+Garveys an enormous quantity of ready, green, crisp money for their
+thirty-acre patch of cleared land, mentioning, as an excuse for such a
+mad action, some irrelevant and inadequate nonsense about a bed of mica
+underlying the said property.
+
+When the Garveys became possessed of so many dollars that they faltered
+in computing them, the deficiencies of life on Blackjack began to grow
+prominent. Pike began to talk of new shoes, a hogshead of tobacco to
+set in the corner, a new lock to his rifle; and, leading Martella to a
+certain spot on the mountain-side, he pointed out to her how a small
+cannon—doubtless a thing not beyond the scope of their fortune in
+price—might be planted so as to command and defend the sole accessible
+trail to the cabin, to the confusion of revenues and meddling strangers
+forever.
+
+But Adam reckoned without his Eve. These things represented to him the
+applied power of wealth, but there slumbered in his dingy cabin an
+ambition that soared far above his primitive wants. Somewhere in Mrs.
+Garvey’s bosom still survived a spot of femininity unstarved by twenty
+years of Blackjack. For so long a time the sounds in her ears had been
+the scaly-barks dropping in the woods at noon, and the wolves singing
+among the rocks at night, and it was enough to have purged her of
+vanities. She had grown fat and sad and yellow and dull. But when the
+means came, she felt a rekindled desire to assume the perquisites of
+her sex—to sit at tea tables; to buy futile things; to whitewash the
+hideous veracity of life with a little form and ceremony. So she coldly
+vetoed Pike’s proposed system of fortifications, and announced that
+they would descend upon the world, and gyrate socially.
+
+And thus, at length, it was decided, and the thing done. The village of
+Laurel was their compromise between Mrs. Garvey’s preference for one of
+the large valley towns and Pike’s hankering for primeval solitudes.
+Laurel yielded a halting round of feeble social distractions
+comportable with Martella’s ambitions, and was not entirely without
+recommendation to Pike, its contiguity to the mountains presenting
+advantages for sudden retreat in case fashionable society should make
+it advisable.
+
+Their descent upon Laurel had been coincident with Yancey Goree’s
+feverish desire to convert property into cash, and they bought the old
+Goree homestead, paying four thousand dollars ready money into the
+spendthrift’s shaking hands.
+
+Thus it happened that while the disreputable last of the Gorees
+sprawled in his disreputable office, at the end of his row, spurned by
+the cronies whom he had gorged, strangers dwelt in the halls of his
+fathers.
+
+A cloud of dust was rolling, slowly up the parched street, with
+something travelling in the midst of it. A little breeze wafted the
+cloud to one side, and a new, brightly painted carryall, drawn by a
+slothful gray horse, became visible. The vehicle deflected from the
+middle of the street as it neared Goree’s office, and stopped in the
+gutter directly in front of his door.
+
+On the front seat sat a gaunt, tall man, dressed in black broadcloth,
+his rigid hands incarcerated in yellow kid gloves. On the back seat was
+a lady who triumphed over the June heat. Her stout form was armoured in
+a skin-tight silk dress of the description known as “changeable,” being
+a gorgeous combination of shifting hues. She sat erect, waving a
+much-ornamented fan, with her eyes fixed stonily far down the street.
+However Martella Garvey’s heart might be rejoicing at the pleasures of
+her new life, Blackjack had done his work with her exterior. He had
+carved her countenance to the image of emptiness and inanity; had
+imbued her with the stolidity of his crags, and the reserve of his
+hushed interiors. She always seemed to hear, whatever her surroundings
+were, the scaly-barks falling and pattering down the mountain-side. She
+could always hear the awful silence of Blackjack sounding through the
+stillest of nights.
+
+Goree watched this solemn equipage, as it drove to his door, with only
+faint interest; but when the lank driver wrapped the reins about his
+whip, awkwardly descended, and stepped into the office, he rose
+unsteadily to receive him, recognizing Pike Garvey, the new, the
+transformed, the recently civilized.
+
+The mountaineer took the chair Goree offered him. They who cast doubts
+upon Garvey’s soundness of mind had a strong witness in the man’s
+countenance. His face was too long, a dull saffron in hue, and immobile
+as a statue’s. Pale-blue, unwinking round eyes without lashes added to
+the singularity of his gruesome visage. Goree was at a loss to account
+for the visit.
+
+“Everything all right at Laurel, Mr. Garvey?” he inquired.
+
+“Everything all right, sir, and mighty pleased is Missis Garvey and me
+with the property. Missis Garvey likes yo’ old place, and she likes the
+neighbourhood. Society is what she ’lows she wants, and she is gettin’
+of it. The Rogerses, the Hapgoods, the Pratts and the Troys hev been to
+see Missis Garvey, and she hev et meals to most of thar houses. The
+best folks hev axed her to differ’nt kinds of doin’s. I cyan’t say, Mr.
+Goree, that sech things suits me—fur me, give me them thar.” Garvey’s
+huge, yellow-gloved hand flourished in the direction of the mountains.
+“That’s whar I b’long, ’mongst the wild honey bees and the b’ars. But
+that ain’t what I come fur to say, Mr. Goree. Thar’s somethin’ you got
+what me and Missis Garvey wants to buy.”
+
+“Buy!” echoed Goree. “From me?” Then he laughed harshly. “I reckon you
+are mistaken about that. I reckon you are mistaken about that. I sold
+out to you, as you yourself expressed it, ‘lock, stock and barrel.’
+There isn’t even a ramrod left to sell.”
+
+“You’ve got it; and we ’uns want it. ‘Take the money,’ says Missis
+Garvey, ‘and buy it fa’r and squar’.’”
+
+Goree shook his head. “The cupboard’s bare,” he said.
+
+“We’ve riz,” pursued the mountaineer, undeflected from his object, “a
+heap. We was pore as possums, and now we could hev folks to dinner
+every day. We been recognized, Missis Garvey says, by the best society.
+But there’s somethin’ we need we ain’t got. She says it ought to been
+put in the ’ventory ov the sale, but it tain’t thar. ‘Take the money,
+then,’ says she, ‘and buy it fa’r and squar’.’”
+
+“Out with it,” said Goree, his racked nerves growing impatient.
+
+Garvey threw his slouch hat upon the table, and leaned forward, fixing
+his unblinking eyes upon Goree’s.
+
+“There’s a old feud,” he said distinctly and slowly, “’tween you ’uns
+and the Coltranes.”
+
+Goree frowned ominously. To speak of his feud to a feudist is a serious
+breach of the mountain etiquette. The man from “back yan’” knew it as
+well as the lawyer did.
+
+“Na offense,” he went on “but purely in the way of business. Missis
+Garvey hev studied all about feuds. Most of the quality folks in the
+mountains hev ’em. The Settles and the Goforths, the Rankins and the
+Boyds, the Silers and the Galloways, hev all been cyarin’ on feuds f’om
+twenty to a hundred year. The last man to drap was when yo’ uncle,
+Jedge Paisley Goree, ’journed co’t and shot Len Coltrane f’om the
+bench. Missis Garvey and me, we come f’om the po’ white trash. Nobody
+wouldn’t pick a feud with we ’uns, no mo’n with a fam’ly of tree-toads.
+Quality people everywhar, says Missis Garvey, has feuds. We ’uns ain’t
+quality, but we’re buyin’ into it as fur as we can. ‘Take the money,
+then,’ says Missis Garvey, ‘and buy Mr. Goree’s feud, fa’r and
+squar’.’”
+
+The squirrel hunter straightened a leg half across the room, drew a
+roll of bills from his pocket, and threw them on the table.
+
+“Thar’s two hundred dollars, Mr. Goree; what you would call a fa’r
+price for a feud that’s been ’lowed to run down like yourn hev. Thar’s
+only you left to cyar’ on yo’ side of it, and you’d make mighty po’
+killin’. I’ll take it off yo’ hands, and it’ll set me and Missis Garvey
+up among the quality. Thar’s the money.”
+
+The little roll of currency on the table slowly untwisted itself,
+writhing and jumping as its folds relaxed. In the silence that followed
+Garvey’s last speech the rattling of the poker chips in the court-house
+could be plainly heard. Goree knew that the sheriff had just won a pot,
+for the subdued whoop with which he always greeted a victory floated
+across the square upon the crinkly heat waves. Beads of moisture stood
+on Goree’s brow. Stooping, he drew the wicker-covered demijohn from
+under the table, and filled a tumbler from it.
+
+“A little corn liquor, Mr. Garvey? Of course you are joking about—what
+you spoke of? Opens quite a new market, doesn’t it? Feuds. Prime,
+two-fifty to three. Feuds, slightly damaged—two hundred, I believe you
+said, Mr. Garvey?”
+
+Goree laughed self-consciously.
+
+The mountaineer took the glass Goree handed him, and drank the whisky
+without a tremor of the lids of his staring eyes. The lawyer applauded
+the feat by a look of envious admiration. He poured his own drink, and
+took it like a drunkard, by gulps, and with shudders at the smell and
+taste.
+
+“Two hundred,” repeated Garvey. “Thar’s the money.”
+
+A sudden passion flared up in Goree’s brain. He struck the table with
+his fist. One of the bills flipped over and touched his hand. He
+flinched as if something had stung him.
+
+“Do you come to me,” he shouted, “seriously with such a ridiculous,
+insulting, darned-fool proposition?”
+
+“It’s fa’r and squar’,” said the squirrel hunter, but he reached out
+his hand as if to take back the money; and then Goree knew that his own
+flurry of rage had not been from pride or resentment, but from anger at
+himself, knowing that he would set foot in the deeper depths that were
+being opened to him. He turned in an instant from an outraged gentleman
+to an anxious chafferer recommending his goods.
+
+“Don’t be in a hurry, Garvey,” he said, his face crimson and his speech
+thick. “I accept your p-p-proposition, though it’s dirt cheap at two
+hundred. A t-trade’s all right when both p-purchaser and b-buyer are
+s-satisfied. Shall I w-wrap it up for you, Mr. Garvey?”
+
+Garvey rose, and shook out his broadcloth. “Missis Garvey will be
+pleased. You air out of it, and it stands Coltrane and Garvey. Just a
+scrap ov writin’, Mr. Goree, you bein’ a lawyer, to show we traded.”
+
+Goree seized a sheet of paper and a pen. The money was clutched in his
+moist hand. Everything else suddenly seemed to grow trivial and light.
+
+“Bill of sale, by all means. ‘Right, title, and interest in and to’ . .
+. ‘forever warrant and—’ No, Garvey, we’ll have to leave out that
+‘defend,’” said Goree with a loud laugh. “You’ll have to defend this
+title yourself.”
+
+The mountaineer received the amazing screed that the lawyer handed him,
+folded it with immense labour, and laced it carefully in his pocket.
+
+Goree was standing near the window. “Step here,” he said, raising his
+finger, “and I’ll show you your recently purchased enemy. There he
+goes, down the other side of the street.”
+
+The mountaineer crooked his long frame to look through the window in
+the direction indicated by the other. Colonel Abner Coltrane, an erect,
+portly gentleman of about fifty, wearing the inevitable long,
+double-breasted frock coat of the Southern lawmaker, and an old high
+silk hat, was passing on the opposite sidewalk. As Garvey looked, Goree
+glanced at his face. If there be such a thing as a yellow wolf, here
+was its counterpart. Garvey snarled as his unhuman eyes followed the
+moving figure, disclosing long, amber-coloured fangs.
+
+“Is that him? Why, that’s the man who sent me to the pen’tentiary
+once!”
+
+“He used to be district attorney,” said Goree carelessly. “And, by the
+way, he’s a first-class shot.”
+
+“I kin hit a squirrel’s eye at a hundred yard,” said Garvey. “So that
+thar’s Coltrane! I made a better trade than I was thinkin’. I’ll take
+keer ov this feud, Mr. Goree, better’n you ever did!”
+
+He moved toward the door, but lingered there, betraying a slight
+perplexity.
+
+“Anything else to-day?” inquired Goree with frothy sarcasm. “Any family
+traditions, ancestral ghosts, or skeletons in the closet? Prices as low
+as the lowest.”
+
+“Thar was another thing,” replied the unmoved squirrel hunter, “that
+Missis Garvey was thinkin’ of. ’Tain’t so much in my line as t’other,
+but she wanted partic’lar that I should inquire, and ef you was
+willin’, ‘pay fur it,’ she says, ‘fa’r and squar’.’ Thar’s a buryin’
+groun’, as you know, Mr. Goree, in the yard of yo’ old place, under the
+cedars. Them that lies thar is yo’ folks what was killed by the
+Coltranes. The monyments has the names on ’em. Missis Garvey says a
+fam’ly buryin’ groun’ is a sho’ sign of quality. She says ef we git the
+feud, thar’s somethin’ else ought to go with it. The names on them
+monyments is ‘Goree,’ but they can be changed to ourn by—”
+
+“Go! Go!” screamed Goree, his face turning purple. He stretched out
+both hands toward the mountaineer, his fingers hooked and shaking. “Go,
+you ghoul! Even a Ch-Chinaman protects the g-graves of his
+ancestors—go!”
+
+The squirrel hunter slouched out of the door to his carryall. While he
+was climbing over the wheel Goree was collecting, with feverish
+celerity, the money that had fallen from his hand to the floor. As the
+vehicle slowly turned about, the sheep, with a coat of newly grown
+wool, was hurrying, in indecent haste, along the path to the
+court-house.
+
+At three o’clock in the morning they brought him back to his office,
+shorn and unconscious. The sheriff, the sportive deputy, the county
+clerk, and the gay attorney carried him, the chalk-faced man “from the
+valley” acting as escort.
+
+“On the table,” said one of them, and they deposited him there among
+the litter of his unprofitable books and papers.
+
+“Yance thinks a lot of a pair of deuces when he’s liquored up,” sighed
+the sheriff reflectively.
+
+“Too much,” said the gay attorney. “A man has no business to play poker
+who drinks as much as he does. I wonder how much he dropped to-night.”
+
+“Close to two hundred. What I wonder is whar he got it. Yance ain’t had
+a cent fur over a month, I know.”
+
+“Struck a client, maybe. Well, let’s get home before daylight. He’ll be
+all right when he wakes up, except for a sort of beehive about the
+cranium.”
+
+The gang slipped away through the early morning twilight. The next eye
+to gaze upon the miserable Goree was the orb of day. He peered through
+the uncurtained window, first deluging the sleeper in a flood of faint
+gold, but soon pouring upon the mottled red of his flesh a searching,
+white, summer heat. Goree stirred, half unconsciously, among the
+table’s débris, and turned his face from the window. His movement
+dislodged a heavy law book, which crashed upon the floor. Opening his
+eyes, he saw, bending over him, a man in a black frock coat. Looking
+higher, he discovered a well-worn silk hat, and beneath it the kindly,
+smooth face of Colonel Abner Coltrane.
+
+A little uncertain of the outcome, the colonel waited for the other to
+make some sign of recognition. Not in twenty years had male members of
+these two families faced each other in peace. Goree’s eyelids puckered
+as he strained his blurred sight toward this visitor, and then he
+smiled serenely.
+
+“Have you brought Stella and Lucy over to play?” he said calmly.
+
+“Do you know me, Yancey?” asked Coltrane.
+
+“Of course I do. You brought me a whip with a whistle in the end.”
+
+So he had—twenty-four years ago; when Yancey’s father was his best
+friend.
+
+Goree’s eyes wandered about the room. The colonel understood. “Lie
+still, and I’ll bring you some,” said he. There was a pump in the yard
+at the rear, and Goree closed his eyes, listening with rapture to the
+click of its handle, and the bubbling of the falling stream. Coltrane
+brought a pitcher of the cool water, and held it for him to drink.
+Presently Goree sat up—a most forlorn object, his summer suit of flax
+soiled and crumpled, his discreditable head tousled and unsteady. He
+tried to wave one of his hands toward the colonel.
+
+“Ex-excuse—everything, will you?” he said. “I must have drunk too much
+whiskey last night, and gone to bed on the table.” His brows knitted
+into a puzzled frown.
+
+“Out with the boys awhile?” asked Coltrane kindly.
+
+“No, I went nowhere. I haven’t had a dollar to spend in the last two
+months. Struck the demijohn too often, I reckon, as usual.”
+
+Colonel Coltrane touched him on the shoulder.
+
+“A little while ago, Yancey,” he began, “you asked me if I had brought
+Stella and Lucy over to play. You weren’t quite awake then, and must
+have been dreaming you were a boy again. You are awake now, and I want
+you to listen to me. I have come from Stella and Lucy to their old
+playmate, and to my old friend’s son. They know that I am going to
+bring you home with me, and you will find them as ready with a welcome
+as they were in the old days. I want you to come to my house and stay
+until you are yourself again, and as much longer as you will. We heard
+of your being down in the world, and in the midst of temptation, and we
+agreed that you should come over and play at our house once more. Will
+you come, my boy? Will you drop our old family trouble and come with
+me?”
+
+“Trouble!” said Goree, opening his eyes wide. “There was never any
+trouble between us that I know of. I’m sure we’ve always been the best
+friends. But, good Lord, Colonel, how could I go to your home as I am—a
+drunken wretch, a miserable, degraded spendthrift and gambler—”
+
+He lurched from the table into his armchair, and began to weep maudlin
+tears, mingled with genuine drops of remorse and shame. Coltrane talked
+to him persistently and reasonably, reminding him of the simple
+mountain pleasures of which he had once been so fond, and insisting
+upon the genuineness of the invitation.
+
+Finally he landed Goree by telling him he was counting upon his help in
+the engineering and transportation of a large amount of felled timber
+from a high mountain-side to a waterway. He knew that Goree had once
+invented a device for this purpose—a series of slides and chutes upon
+which he had justly prided himself. In an instant the poor fellow,
+delighted at the idea of his being of use to any one, had paper spread
+upon the table, and was drawing rapid but pitifully shaky lines in
+demonstration of what he could and would do.
+
+The man was sickened of the husks; his prodigal heart was turning again
+toward the mountains. His mind was yet strangely clogged, and his
+thoughts and memories were returning to his brain one by one, like
+carrier pigeons over a stormy sea. But Coltrane was satisfied with the
+progress he had made.
+
+Bethel received the surprise of its existence that afternoon when a
+Coltrane and a Goree rode amicably together through the town. Side by
+side they rode, out from the dusty streets and gaping townspeople, down
+across the creek bridge, and up toward the mountain. The prodigal had
+brushed and washed and combed himself to a more decent figure, but he
+was unsteady in the saddle, and he seemed to be deep in the
+contemplation of some vexing problem. Coltrane left him in his mood,
+relying upon the influence of changed surroundings to restore his
+equilibrium.
+
+Once Goree was seized with a shaking fit, and almost came to a
+collapse. He had to dismount and rest at the side of the road. The
+colonel, foreseeing such a condition, had provided a small flask of
+whisky for the journey but when it was offered to him Goree refused it
+almost with violence, declaring he would never touch it again. By and
+by he was recovered, and went quietly enough for a mile or two. Then he
+pulled up his horse suddenly, and said:
+
+“I lost two hundred dollars last night, playing poker. Now, where did I
+get that money?”
+
+“Take it easy, Yancey. The mountain air will soon clear it up. We’ll go
+fishing, first thing, at the Pinnacle Falls. The trout are jumping
+there like bullfrogs. We’ll take Stella and Lucy along, and have a
+picnic on Eagle Rock. Have you forgotten how a hickory-cured-ham
+sandwich tastes, Yancey, to a hungry fisherman?”
+
+Evidently the colonel did not believe the story of his lost wealth; so
+Goree retired again into brooding silence.
+
+By late Afternoon they had travelled ten of the twelve miles between
+Bethel and Laurel. Half a mile this side of Laurel lay the old Goree
+place; a mile or two beyond the village lived the Coltranes. The road
+was now steep and laborious, but the compensations were many. The
+tilted aisles of the forest were opulent with leaf and bird and bloom.
+The tonic air put to shame the pharmacopæia. The glades were dark with
+mossy shade, and bright with shy rivulets winking from the ferns and
+laurels. On the lower side they viewed, framed in the near foliage,
+exquisite sketches of the far valley swooning in its opal haze.
+
+Coltrane was pleased to see that his companion was yielding to the
+spell of the hills and woods. For now they had but to skirt the base of
+Painter’s Cliff; to cross Elder Branch and mount the hill beyond, and
+Goree would have to face the squandered home of his fathers. Every rock
+he passed, every tree, every foot of the rocky way, was familiar to
+him. Though he had forgotten the woods, they thrilled him like the
+music of “Home, Sweet Home.”
+
+They rounded the cliff, descended into Elder Branch, and paused there
+to let the horses drink and splash in the swift water. On the right was
+a rail fence that cornered there, and followed the road and stream.
+Inclosed by it was the old apple orchard of the home place; the house
+was yet concealed by the brow of the steep hill. Inside and along the
+fence, pokeberries, elders, sassafras, and sumac grew high and dense.
+At a rustle of their branches, both Goree and Coltrane glanced up, and
+saw a long, yellow, wolfish face above the fence, staring at them with
+pale, unwinking eyes. The head quickly disappeared; there was a violent
+swaying of the bushes, and an ungainly figure ran up through the apple
+orchard in the direction of the house, zig-zagging among the trees.
+
+“That’s Garvey,” said Coltrane; “the man you sold out to. There’s no
+doubt but he’s considerably cracked. I had to send him up for
+moonshining once, several years ago, in spite of the fact that I
+believed him irresponsible. Why, what’s the matter, Yancey?”
+
+Goree was wiping his forehead, and his face had lost its colour. “Do I
+look queer, too?” he asked, trying to smile. “I’m just remembering a
+few more things.” Some of the alcohol had evaporated from his brain. “I
+recollect now where I got that two hundred dollars.”
+
+“Don’t think of it,” said Coltrane cheerfully. “Later on we’ll figure
+it all out together.”
+
+They rode out of the branch, and when they reached the foot of the hill
+Goree stopped again.
+
+“Did you ever suspect I was a very vain kind of fellow, Colonel?” he
+asked. “Sort of foolish proud about appearances?”
+
+The colonel’s eyes refused to wander to the soiled, sagging suit of
+flax and the faded slouch hat.
+
+“It seems to me,” he replied, mystified, but humouring him, “I remember
+a young buck about twenty, with the tightest coat, the sleekest hair,
+and the prancingest saddle horse in the Blue Ridge.”
+
+“Right you are,” said Goree eagerly. “And it’s in me yet, though it
+don’t show. Oh, I’m as vain as a turkey gobbler, and as proud as
+Lucifer. I’m going to ask you to indulge this weakness of mine in a
+little matter.”
+
+“Speak out, Yancey. We’ll create you Duke of Laurel and Baron of Blue
+Ridge, if you choose; and you shall have a feather out of Stella’s
+peacock’s tail to wear in your hat.”
+
+“I’m in earnest. In a few minutes we’ll pass the house up there on the
+hill where I was born, and where my people have lived for nearly a
+century. Strangers live there now—and look at me! I am about to show
+myself to them ragged and poverty-stricken, a wastrel and a beggar.
+Colonel Coltrane, I’m ashamed to do it. I want you to let me wear your
+coat and hat until we are out of sight beyond. I know you think it a
+foolish pride, but I want to make as good a showing as I can when I
+pass the old place.”
+
+“Now, what does this mean?” said Coltrane to himself, as he compared
+his companion’s sane looks and quiet demeanour with his strange
+request. But he was already unbuttoning the coat, assenting readily, as
+if the fancy were in no wise to be considered strange.
+
+The coat and hat fitted Goree well. He buttoned the former about him
+with a look of satisfaction and dignity. He and Coltrane were nearly
+the same size—rather tall, portly, and erect. Twenty-five years were
+between them, but in appearance they might have been brothers. Goree
+looked older than his age; his face was puffy and lined; the colonel
+had the smooth, fresh complexion of a temperate liver. He put on
+Goree’s disreputable old flax coat and faded slouch hat.
+
+“Now,” said Goree, taking up the reins, “I’m all right. I want you to
+ride about ten feet in the rear as we go by, Colonel, so that they can
+get a good look at me. They’ll see I’m no back number yet, by any
+means. I guess I’ll show up pretty well to them once more, anyhow.
+Let’s ride on.”
+
+He set out up the hill at a smart trot, the colonel following, as he
+had been requested.
+
+Goree sat straight in the saddle, with head erect, but his eyes were
+turned to the right, sharply scanning every shrub and fence and
+hiding-place in the old homestead yard. Once he muttered to himself,
+“Will the crazy fool try it, or did I dream half of it?”
+
+It was when he came opposite the little family burying ground that he
+saw what he had been looking for—a puff of white smoke, coming from the
+thick cedars in one corner. He toppled so slowly to the left that
+Coltrane had time to urge his horse to that side, and catch him with
+one arm.
+
+The squirrel hunter had not overpraised his aim. He had sent the bullet
+where he intended, and where Goree had expected that it would
+pass—through the breast of Colonel Abner Coltrane’s black frock coat.
+
+Goree leaned heavily against Coltrane, but he did not fall. The horses
+kept pace, side by side, and the Colonel’s arm kept him steady. The
+little white houses of Laurel shone through the trees, half a mile
+away. Goree reached out one hand and groped until it rested upon
+Coltrane’s fingers, which held his bridle.
+
+“Good friend,” he said, and that was all.
+
+Thus did Yancey Goree, as he rode past his old home, make, considering
+all things, the best showing that was in his power.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+THE SONG AND THE SERGEANT
+
+
+Half a dozen people supping at a table in one of the upper-Broadway
+all-night restaurants were making too much noise. Three times the
+manager walked past them with a politely warning glance; but their
+argument had waxed too warm to be quelled by a manager’s gaze. It was
+midnight, and the restaurant was filled with patrons from the theatres
+of that district. Some among the dispersed audiences must have
+recognized among the quarrelsome sextet the faces of the players
+belonging to the Carroll Comedy Company.
+
+Four of the six made up the company. Another was the author of the
+comedietta, “A Gay Coquette,” which the quartette of players had been
+presenting with fair success at several vaudeville houses in the city.
+The sixth at the table was a person inconsequent in the realm of art,
+but one at whose bidding many lobsters had perished.
+
+Loudly the six maintained their clamorous debate. No one of the Party
+was silent except when answers were stormed from him by the excited
+ones. That was the comedian of “A Gay Coquette.” He was a young man
+with a face even too melancholy for his profession.
+
+The oral warfare of four immoderate tongues was directed at Miss
+Clarice Carroll, the twinkling star of the small aggregation. Excepting
+the downcast comedian, all members of the party united in casting upon
+her with vehemence the blame of some momentous misfortune. Fifty times
+they told her: “It is your fault, Clarice—it is you alone who spoilt
+the scene. It is only of late that you have acted this way. At this
+rate the sketch will have to be taken off.”
+
+Miss Carroll was a match for any four. Gallic ancestry gave her a
+vivacity that could easily mount to fury. Her large eyes flashed a
+scorching denial at her accusers. Her slender, eloquent arms constantly
+menaced the tableware. Her high, clear soprano voice rose to what would
+have been a scream had it not possessed so pure a musical quality. She
+hurled back at the attacking four their denunciations in tones sweet,
+but of too great carrying power for a Broadway restaurant.
+
+Finally they exhausted her patience both as a woman and an artist. She
+sprang up like a panther, managed to smash half a dozen plates and
+glasses with one royal sweep of her arm, and defied her critics. They
+rose and wrangled more loudly. The comedian sighed and looked a trifle
+sadder and disinterested. The manager came tripping and suggested
+peace. He was told to go to the popular synonym for war so promptly
+that the affair might have happened at The Hague.
+
+Thus was the manager angered. He made a sign with his hand and a waiter
+slipped out of the door. In twenty minutes the party of six was in a
+police station facing a grizzled and philosophical desk sergeant.
+
+“Disorderly conduct in a restaurant,” said the policeman who had
+brought the party in.
+
+The author of “A Gay Coquette” stepped to the front. He wore
+nose-glasses and evening clothes, even if his shoes had been tans
+before they met the patent-leather-polish bottle.
+
+“Mr. Sergeant,” said he, out of his throat, like Actor Irving, “I would
+like to protest against this arrest. The company of actors who are
+performing in a little play that I have written, in company with a
+friend and myself were having a little supper. We became deeply
+interested in the discussion as to which one of the cast is responsible
+for a scene in the sketch that lately has fallen so flat that the piece
+is about to become a failure. We may have been rather noisy and
+intolerant of interruption by the restaurant people; but the matter was
+of considerable importance to all of us. You see that we are sober and
+are not the kind of people who desire to raise disturbances. I hope
+that the case will not be pressed and that we may be allowed to go.”
+
+“Who makes the charge?” asked the sergeant.
+
+“Me,” said a white-aproned voice in the rear. “De restaurant sent me
+to. De gang was raisin’ a rough-house and breakin’ dishes.”
+
+“The dishes were paid for,” said the playwright. “They were not broken
+purposely. In her anger, because we remonstrated with her for spoiling
+the scene, Miss—”
+
+“It’s not true, sergeant,” cried the clear voice of Miss Clarice
+Carroll. In a long coat of tan silk and a red-plumed hat, she bounded
+before the desk.
+
+“It’s not my fault,” she cried indignantly. “How dare they say such a
+thing! I’ve played the title rôle ever since it was staged, and if you
+want to know who made it a success, ask the public—that’s all.”
+
+“What Miss Carroll says is true in part,” said the author. “For five
+months the comedietta was a drawing-card in the best houses. But during
+the last two weeks it has lost favour. There is one scene in it in
+which Miss Carroll made a big hit. Now she hardly gets a hand out of
+it. She spoils it by acting it entirely different from her old way.”
+
+“It is not my fault,” reiterated the actress.
+
+“There are only two of you on in the scene,” argued the playwright
+hotly, “you and Delmars, here—”
+
+“Then it’s his fault,” declared Miss Carroll, with a lightning glance
+of scorn from her dark eyes. The comedian caught it, and gazed with
+increased melancholy at the panels of the sergeant’s desk.
+
+The night was a dull one in that particular police station.
+
+The sergeant’s long-blunted curiosity awoke a little.
+
+“I’ve heard you,” he said to the author. And then he addressed the
+thin-faced and ascetic-looking lady of the company who played “Aunt
+Turnip-top” in the little comedy.
+
+“Who do you think spoils the scene you are fussing about?” he asked.
+
+“I’m no knocker,” said that lady, “and everybody knows it. So, when I
+say that Clarice falls down every time in that scene I’m judging her
+art and not herself. She was great in it once. She does it something
+fierce now. It’ll dope the show if she keeps it up.”
+
+The sergeant looked at the comedian.
+
+“You and the lady have this scene together, I understand. I suppose
+there’s no use asking you which one of you queers it?”
+
+The comedian avoided the direct rays from the two fixed stars of Miss
+Carroll’s eyes.
+
+“I don’t know,” he said, looking down at his patent-leather toes.
+
+“Are you one of the actors?” asked the sergeant of a dwarfish youth
+with a middle-aged face.
+
+“Why, say!” replied the last Thespian witness, “you don’t notice any
+tin spear in my hands, do you? You haven’t heard me shout: ‘See, the
+Emperor comes!’ since I’ve been in here, have you? I guess I’m on the
+stage long enough for ’em not to start a panic by mistaking me for a
+thin curl of smoke rising above the footlights.”
+
+“In your opinion, if you’ve got one,” said the sergeant, “is the frost
+that gathers on the scene in question the work of the lady or the
+gentleman who takes part in it?”
+
+The middle-aged youth looked pained.
+
+“I regret to say,” he answered, “that Miss Carroll seems to have lost
+her grip on that scene. She’s all right in the rest of the play,
+but—but I tell you, sergeant, she can do it—she has done it equal to
+any of ’em—and she can do it again.”
+
+Miss Carroll ran forward, glowing and palpitating.
+
+“Thank you, Jimmy, for the first good word I’ve had in many a day,” she
+cried. And then she turned her eager face toward the desk.
+
+“I’ll show you, sergeant, whether I am to blame. I’ll show them whether
+I can do that scene. Come, Mr. Delmars; let us begin. You will let us,
+won’t you, sergeant?”
+
+“How long will it take?” asked the sergeant, dubiously.
+
+“Eight minutes,” said the playwright. “The entire play consumes but
+thirty.”
+
+“You may go ahead,” said the sergeant. “Most of you seem to side
+against the little lady. Maybe she had a right to crack up a saucer or
+two in that restaurant. We’ll see how she does the turn before we take
+that up.”
+
+The matron of the police station had been standing near, listening to
+the singular argument. She came nigher and stood near the sergeant’s
+chair. Two or three of the reserves strolled in, big and yawning.
+
+“Before beginning the scene,” said the playwright, “and assuming that
+you have not seen a production of ‘A Gay Coquette,’ I will make a brief
+but necessary explanation. It is a
+musical-farce-comedy—burlesque-comedietta. As the title implies, Miss
+Carroll’s rôle is that of a gay, rollicking, mischievous, heartless
+coquette. She sustains that character throughout the entire comedy part
+of the production. And I have designed the extravaganza features so
+that she may preserve and present the same coquettish idea.
+
+“Now, the scene in which we take exception to Miss Carroll’s acting is
+called the ‘gorilla dance.’ She is costumed to represent a wood nymph,
+and there is a great song-and-dance scene with a gorilla—played by Mr.
+Delmars, the comedian. A tropical-forest stage is set.
+
+“That used to get four and five recalls. The main thing was the acting
+and the dance—it was the funniest thing in New York for five months.
+Delmars’s song, ‘I’ll Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home,’ while he and Miss
+Carroll were cutting hide-and-seek capers among the tropical plants,
+was a winner.”
+
+“What’s the trouble with the scene now?” asked the sergeant.
+
+“Miss Carroll spoils it right in the middle of it,” said the playwright
+wrathfully.
+
+With a wide gesture of her ever-moving arms the actress waved back the
+little group of spectators, leaving a space in front of the desk for
+the scene of her vindication or fall. Then she whipped off her long tan
+cloak and tossed it across the arm of the policeman who still stood
+officially among them.
+
+Miss Carroll had gone to supper well cloaked, but in the costume of the
+tropic wood nymph. A skirt of fern leaves touched her knee; she was
+like a humming-bird—green and golden and purple.
+
+And then she danced a fluttering, fantastic dance, so agile and light
+and mazy in her steps that the other three members of the Carroll
+Comedy Company broke into applause at the art of it.
+
+And at the proper time Delmars leaped out at her side, mimicking the
+uncouth, hideous bounds of the gorilla so funnily that the grizzled
+sergeant himself gave a short laugh like the closing of a padlock. They
+danced together the gorilla dance, and won a hand from all.
+
+Then began the most fantastic part of the scene—the wooing of the nymph
+by the gorilla. It was a kind of dance itself—eccentric and prankish,
+with the nymph in coquettish and seductive retreat, followed by the
+gorilla as he sang “I’ll Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home.”
+
+The song was a lyric of merit. The words were nonsense, as befitted the
+play, but the music was worthy of something better. Delmars struck into
+it in a rich tenor that owned a quality that shamed the flippant words.
+
+During one verse of the song the wood nymph performed the grotesque
+evolutions designed for the scene. At the middle of the second verse
+she stood still, with a strange look on her face, seeming to gaze
+dreamily into the depths of the scenic forest. The gorilla’s last leap
+had brought him to her feet, and there he knelt, holding her hand,
+until he had finished the haunting-lyric that was set in the absurd
+comedy like a diamond in a piece of putty.
+
+When Delmars ceased Miss Carroll started, and covered a sudden flow of
+tears with both hands.
+
+“There!” cried the playwright, gesticulating with violence; “there you
+have it, sergeant. For two weeks she has spoiled that scene in just
+that manner at every performance. I have begged her to consider that it
+is not Ophelia or Juliet that she is playing. Do you wonder now at our
+impatience? Tears for the gorilla song! The play is lost!”
+
+Out of her bewitchment, whatever it was, the wood nymph flared
+suddenly, and pointed a desperate finger at Delmars.
+
+“It is you—you who have done this,” she cried wildly. “You never sang
+that song that way until lately. It is your doing.”
+
+“I give it up,” said the sergeant.
+
+And then the gray-haired matron of the police station came forward from
+behind the sergeant’s chair.
+
+“Must an old woman teach you all?” she said. She went up to Miss
+Carroll and took her hand.
+
+“The man’s wearing his heart out for you, my dear. Couldn’t you tell it
+the first note you heard him sing? All of his monkey flip-flops
+wouldn’t have kept it from me. Must you be deaf as well as blind?
+That’s why you couldn’t act your part, child. Do you love him or must
+he be a gorilla for the rest of his days?”
+
+Miss Carroll whirled around and caught Delmars with a lightning glance
+of her eye. He came toward her, melancholy.
+
+“Did you hear, Mr. Delmars?” she asked, with a catching breath.
+
+“I did,” said the comedian. “It is true. I didn’t think there was any
+use. I tried to let you know with the song.”
+
+“Silly!” said the matron; “why didn’t you speak?”
+
+“No, no,” cried the wood nymph, “his way was the best. I didn’t know,
+but—it was just what I wanted, Bobby.”
+
+She sprang like a green grasshopper; and the comedian opened his arms,
+and—smiled.
+
+“Get out of this,” roared the desk sergeant to the waiting waiter from
+the restaurant. “There’s nothing doing here for you.”
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+ONE DOLLAR’S WORTH
+
+
+The judge of the United States court of the district lying along the
+Rio Grande border found the following letter one morning in his mail:
+
+JUDGE:
+
+When you sent me up for four years you made a talk. Among other hard
+things, you called me a rattlesnake. Maybe I am one—anyhow, you hear me
+rattling now. One year after I got to the pen, my daughter died
+of—well, they said it was poverty and the disgrace together. You’ve got
+a daughter, Judge, and I’m going to make you know how it feels to lose
+one. And I’m going to bite that district attorney that spoke against
+me. I’m free now, and I guess I’ve turned to rattlesnake all right. I
+feel like one. I don’t say much, but this is my rattle. Look out when I
+strike.
+
+
+Yours respectfully,
+RATTLESNAKE.
+
+
+Judge Derwent threw the letter carelessly aside. It was nothing new to
+receive such epistles from desperate men whom he had been called upon
+to judge. He felt no alarm. Later on he showed the letter to
+Littlefield, the young district attorney, for Littlefield’s name was
+included in the threat, and the judge was punctilious in matters
+between himself and his fellow men.
+
+Littlefield honoured the rattle of the writer, as far as it concerned
+himself, with a smile of contempt; but he frowned a little over the
+reference to the Judge’s daughter, for he and Nancy Derwent were to be
+married in the fall.
+
+Littlefield went to the clerk of the court and looked over the records
+with him. They decided that the letter might have been sent by Mexico
+Sam, a half-breed border desperado who had been imprisoned for
+manslaughter four years before. Then official duties crowded the matter
+from his mind, and the rattle of the revengeful serpent was forgotten.
+
+Court was in session at Brownsville. Most of the cases to be tried were
+charges of smuggling, counterfeiting, post-office robberies, and
+violations of Federal laws along the border. One case was that of a
+young Mexican, Rafael Ortiz, who had been rounded up by a clever deputy
+marshal in the act of passing a counterfeit silver dollar. He had been
+suspected of many such deviations from rectitude, but this was the
+first time that anything provable had been fixed upon him. Ortiz
+languished cozily in jail, smoking brown cigarettes and waiting for
+trial. Kilpatrick, the deputy, brought the counterfeit dollar and
+handed it to the district attorney in his office in the court-house.
+The deputy and a reputable druggist were prepared to swear that Ortiz
+paid for a bottle of medicine with it. The coin was a poor counterfeit,
+soft, dull-looking, and made principally of lead. It was the day before
+the morning on which the docket would reach the case of Ortiz, and the
+district attorney was preparing himself for trial.
+
+“Not much need of having in high-priced experts to prove the coin’s
+queer, is there, Kil?” smiled Littlefield, as he thumped the dollar
+down upon the table, where it fell with no more ring than would have
+come from a lump of putty.
+
+“I guess the Greaser’s as good as behind the bars,” said the deputy,
+easing up his holsters. “You’ve got him dead. If it had been just one
+time, these Mexicans can’t tell good money from bad; but this little
+yaller rascal belongs to a gang of counterfeiters, I know. This is the
+first time I’ve been able to catch him doing the trick. He’s got a girl
+down there in them Mexican jacals on the river bank. I seen her one day
+when I was watching him. She’s as pretty as a red heifer in a flower
+bed.”
+
+Littlefield shoved the counterfeit dollar into his pocket, and slipped
+his memoranda of the case into an envelope. Just then a bright, winsome
+face, as frank and jolly as a boy’s, appeared in the doorway, and in
+walked Nancy Derwent.
+
+“Oh, Bob, didn’t court adjourn at twelve to-day until to-morrow?” she
+asked of Littlefield.
+
+“It did,” said the district attorney, “and I’m very glad of it. I’ve
+got a lot of rulings to look up, and—”
+
+“Now, that’s just like you. I wonder you and father don’t turn to law
+books or rulings or something! I want you to take me out
+plover-shooting this afternoon. Long Prairie is just alive with them.
+Don’t say no, please! I want to try my new twelve-bore hammerless. I’ve
+sent to the livery stable to engage Fly and Bess for the buckboard;
+they stand fire so nicely. I was sure you would go.”
+
+They were to be married in the fall. The glamour was at its height. The
+plovers won the day—or, rather, the afternoon—over the calf-bound
+authorities. Littlefield began to put his papers away.
+
+There was a knock at the door. Kilpatrick answered it. A beautiful,
+dark-eyed girl with a skin tinged with the faintest lemon colour walked
+into the room. A black shawl was thrown over her head and wound once
+around her neck.
+
+She began to talk in Spanish, a voluble, mournful stream of melancholy
+music. Littlefield did not understand Spanish. The deputy did, and he
+translated her talk by portions, at intervals holding up his hand to
+check the flow of her words.
+
+“She came to see you, Mr. Littlefield. Her name’s Joya Treviñas. She
+wants to see you about—well, she’s mixed up with that Rafael Ortiz.
+She’s his—she’s his girl. She says he’s innocent. She says she made the
+money and got him to pass it. Don’t you believe her, Mr. Littlefield.
+That’s the way with these Mexican girls; they’ll lie, steal, or kill
+for a fellow when they get stuck on him. Never trust a woman that’s in
+love!”
+
+“Mr. Kilpatrick!”
+
+Nancy Derwent’s indignant exclamation caused the deputy to flounder for
+a moment in attempting to explain that he had misquoted his own
+sentiments, and then he went on with the translation:
+
+“She says she’s willing to take his place in the jail if you’ll let him
+out. She says she was down sick with the fever, and the doctor said
+she’d die if she didn’t have medicine. That’s why he passed the lead
+dollar on the drug store. She says it saved her life. This Rafael seems
+to be her honey, all right; there’s a lot of stuff in her talk about
+love and such things that you don’t want to hear.”
+
+It was an old story to the district attorney.
+
+“Tell her,” said he, “that I can do nothing. The case comes up in the
+morning, and he will have to make his fight before the court.”
+
+Nancy Derwent was not so hardened. She was looking with sympathetic
+interest at Joya Treviñas and at Littlefield alternately. The deputy
+repeated the district attorney’s words to the girl. She spoke a
+sentence or two in a low voice, pulled her shawl closely about her
+face, and left the room.
+
+“What did she say then?” asked the district attorney.
+
+“Nothing special,” said the deputy. “She said: ‘If the life of the
+one’—let’s see how it went—‘_Si la vida de ella á quien tu amas_—if the
+life of the girl you love is ever in danger, remember Rafael Ortiz.’”
+
+Kilpatrick strolled out through the corridor in the direction of the
+marshal’s office.
+
+“Can’t you do anything for them, Bob?” asked Nancy. “It’s such a little
+thing—just one counterfeit dollar—to ruin the happiness of two lives!
+She was in danger of death, and he did it to save her. Doesn’t the law
+know the feeling of pity?”
+
+“It hasn’t a place in jurisprudence, Nan,” said Littlefield,
+“especially _in re_ the district attorney’s duty. I’ll promise you that
+the prosecution will not be vindictive; but the man is as good as
+convicted when the case is called. Witnesses will swear to his passing
+the bad dollar which I have in my pocket at this moment as ‘Exhibit A.’
+There are no Mexicans on the jury, and it will vote Mr. Greaser guilty
+without leaving the box.”
+
+The plover-shooting was fine that afternoon, and in the excitement of
+the sport the case of Rafael and the grief of Joya Treviñas was
+forgotten. The district attorney and Nancy Derwent drove out from the
+town three miles along a smooth, grassy road, and then struck across a
+rolling prairie toward a heavy line of timber on Piedra Creek. Beyond
+this creek lay Long Prairie, the favourite haunt of the plover. As they
+were nearing the creek they heard the galloping of a horse to their
+right, and saw a man with black hair and a swarthy face riding toward
+the woods at a tangent, as if he had come up behind them.
+
+“I’ve seen that fellow somewhere,” said Littlefield, who had a memory
+for faces, “but I can’t exactly place him. Some ranchman, I suppose,
+taking a short cut home.”
+
+They spent an hour on Long Prairie, shooting from the buckboard. Nancy
+Derwent, an active, outdoor Western girl, was pleased with her
+twelve-bore. She had bagged within two brace of her companion’s score.
+
+They started homeward at a gentle trot. When within a hundred yards of
+Piedra Creek a man rode out of the timber directly toward them.
+
+“It looks like the man we saw coming over,” remarked Miss Derwent.
+
+As the distance between them lessened, the district attorney suddenly
+pulled up his team sharply, with his eyes fixed upon the advancing
+horseman. That individual had drawn a Winchester from its scabbard on
+his saddle and thrown it over his arm.
+
+“Now I know you, Mexico Sam!” muttered Littlefield to himself. “It was
+you who shook your rattles in that gentle epistle.”
+
+Mexico Sam did not leave things long in doubt. He had a nice eye in all
+matters relating to firearms, so when he was within good rifle range,
+but outside of danger from No. 8 shot, he threw up his Winchester and
+opened fire upon the occupants of the buckboard.
+
+The first shot cracked the back of the seat within the two-inch space
+between the shoulders of Littlefield and Miss Derwent. The next went
+through the dashboard and Littlefield’s trouser leg.
+
+The district attorney hustled Nancy out of the buck-board to the
+ground. She was a little pale, but asked no questions. She had the
+frontier instinct that accepts conditions in an emergency without
+superfluous argument. They kept their guns in hand, and Littlefield
+hastily gathered some handfuls of cartridges from the pasteboard box on
+the seat and crowded them into his pockets.
+
+“Keep behind the horses, Nan,” he commanded. “That fellow is a ruffian
+I sent to prison once. He’s trying to get even. He knows our shot won’t
+hurt him at that distance.”
+
+“All right, Bob,” said Nancy steadily. “I’m not afraid. But you come
+close, too. Whoa, Bess; stand still, now!”
+
+She stroked Bess’s mane. Littlefield stood with his gun ready, praying
+that the desperado would come within range.
+
+But Mexico Sam was playing his vendetta along safe lines. He was a bird
+of different feather from the plover. His accurate eye drew an
+imaginary line of circumference around the area of danger from
+bird-shot, and upon this line he rode. His horse wheeled to the right,
+and as his victims rounded to the safe side of their equine breast-work
+he sent a ball through the district attorney’s hat. Once he
+miscalculated in making a détour, and over-stepped his margin.
+Littlefield’s gun flashed, and Mexico Sam ducked his head to the
+harmless patter of the shot. A few of them stung his horse, which
+pranced promptly back to the safety line.
+
+The desperado fired again. A little cry came from Nancy Derwent.
+Littlefield whirled, with blazing eyes, and saw the blood trickling
+down her cheek.
+
+“I’m not hurt, Bob—only a splinter struck me. I think he hit one of the
+wheel-spokes.”
+
+“Lord!” groaned Littlefield. “If I only had a charge of buckshot!”
+
+The ruffian got his horse still, and took careful aim. Fly gave a snort
+and fell in the harness, struck in the neck. Bess, now disabused of the
+idea that plover were being fired at, broke her traces and galloped
+wildly away. Mexican Sam sent a ball neatly through the fulness of
+Nancy Derwent’s shooting jacket.
+
+“Lie down—lie down!” snapped Littlefield. “Close to the horse—flat on
+the ground—so.” He almost threw her upon the grass against the back of
+the recumbent Fly. Oddly enough, at that moment the words of the
+Mexican girl returned to his mind:
+
+“If the life of the girl you love is ever in danger, remember Rafael
+Ortiz.”
+
+Littlefield uttered an exclamation.
+
+“Open fire on him, Nan, across the horse’s back. Fire as fast as you
+can! You can’t hurt him, but keep him dodging shot for one minute while
+I try to work a little scheme.”
+
+Nancy gave a quick glance at Littlefield, and saw him take out his
+pocket-knife and open it. Then she turned her face to obey orders,
+keeping up a rapid fire at the enemy.
+
+Mexico Sam waited patiently until this innocuous fusillade ceased. He
+had plenty of time, and he did not care to risk the chance of a
+bird-shot in his eye when it could be avoided by a little caution. He
+pulled his heavy Stetson low down over his face until the shots ceased.
+Then he drew a little nearer, and fired with careful aim at what he
+could see of his victims above the fallen horse.
+
+Neither of them moved. He urged his horse a few steps nearer. He saw
+the district attorney rise to one knee and deliberately level his
+shotgun. He pulled his hat down and awaited the harmless rattle of the
+tiny pellets.
+
+The shotgun blazed with a heavy report. Mexico Sam sighed, turned limp
+all over, and slowly fell from his horse—a dead rattlesnake.
+
+At ten o’clock the next morning court opened, and the case of the
+United States versus Rafael Ortiz was called. The district attorney,
+with his arm in a sling, rose and addressed the court.
+
+“May it please your honour,” he said, “I desire to enter a _nolle
+pros._ in this case. Even though the defendant should be guilty, there
+is not sufficient evidence in the hands of the government to secure a
+conviction. The piece of counterfeit coin upon the identity of which
+the case was built is not now available as evidence. I ask, therefore,
+that the case be stricken off.”
+
+At the noon recess Kilpatrick strolled into the district attorney’s
+office.
+
+“I’ve just been down to take a squint at old Mexico Sam,” said the
+deputy. “They’ve got him laid out. Old Mexico was a tough outfit, I
+reckon. The boys was wonderin’ down there what you shot him with. Some
+said it must have been nails. I never see a gun carry anything to make
+holes like he had.”
+
+“I shot him,” said the district attorney, “with Exhibit A of your
+counterfeiting case. Lucky thing for me—and somebody else—that it was
+as bad money as it was! It sliced up into slugs very nicely. Say, Kil,
+can’t you go down to the jacals and find where that Mexican girl lives?
+Miss Derwent wants to know.”
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+A NEWSPAPER STORY
+
+
+At 8 A. M. it lay on Giuseppi’s news-stand, still damp from the
+presses. Giuseppi, with the cunning of his ilk, philandered on the
+opposite corner, leaving his patrons to help themselves, no doubt on a
+theory related to the hypothesis of the watched pot.
+
+This particular newspaper was, according to its custom and design, an
+educator, a guide, a monitor, a champion and a household counsellor and
+_vade mecum_.
+
+From its many excellencies might be selected three editorials. One was
+in simple and chaste but illuminating language directed to parents and
+teachers, deprecating corporal punishment for children.
+
+Another was an accusive and significant warning addressed to a
+notorious labour leader who was on the point of instigating his clients
+to a troublesome strike.
+
+The third was an eloquent demand that the police force be sustained and
+aided in everything that tended to increase its efficiency as public
+guardians and servants.
+
+Besides these more important chidings and requisitions upon the store
+of good citizenship was a wise prescription or form of procedure laid
+out by the editor of the heart-to-heart column in the specific case of
+a young man who had complained of the obduracy of his lady love,
+teaching him how he might win her.
+
+Again, there was, on the beauty page, a complete answer to a young lady
+inquirer who desired admonition toward the securing of bright eyes,
+rosy cheeks and a beautiful countenance.
+
+One other item requiring special cognizance was a brief “personal,”
+running thus:
+
+DEAR JACK:—Forgive me. You were right. Meet me corner Madison and —th
+at 8.30 this morning. We leave at noon.
+
+
+PENITENT.
+
+
+At 8 o’clock a young man with a haggard look and the feverish gleam of
+unrest in his eye dropped a penny and picked up the top paper as he
+passed Giuseppi’s stand. A sleepless night had left him a late riser.
+There was an office to be reached by nine, and a shave and a hasty cup
+of coffee to be crowded into the interval.
+
+He visited his barber shop and then hurried on his way. He pocketed his
+paper, meditating a belated perusal of it at the luncheon hour. At the
+next corner it fell from his pocket, carrying with it his pair of new
+gloves. Three blocks he walked, missed the gloves and turned back
+fuming.
+
+Just on the half-hour he reached the corner where lay the gloves and
+the paper. But he strangely ignored that which he had come to seek. He
+was holding two little hands as tightly as ever he could and looking
+into two penitent brown eyes, while joy rioted in his heart.
+
+“Dear Jack,” she said, “I knew you would be here on time.”
+
+“I wonder what she means by that,” he was saying to himself; “but it’s
+all right, it’s all right.”
+
+A big wind puffed out of the west, picked up the paper from the
+sidewalk, opened it out and sent it flying and whirling down a side
+street. Up that street was driving a skittish bay to a spider-wheel
+buggy, the young man who had written to the heart-to-heart editor for a
+recipe that he might win her for whom he sighed.
+
+The wind, with a prankish flurry, flapped the flying newspaper against
+the face of the skittish bay. There was a lengthened streak of bay
+mingled with the red of running gear that stretched itself out for four
+blocks. Then a water-hydrant played its part in the cosmogony, the
+buggy became matchwood as foreordained, and the driver rested very
+quietly where he had been flung on the asphalt in front of a certain
+brownstone mansion.
+
+They came out and had him inside very promptly. And there was one who
+made herself a pillow for his head, and cared for no curious eyes,
+bending over and saying, “Oh, it was you; it was you all the time,
+Bobby! Couldn’t you see it? And if you die, why, so must I, and—”
+
+But in all this wind we must hurry to keep in touch with our paper.
+
+Policeman O’Brine arrested it as a character dangerous to traffic.
+Straightening its dishevelled leaves with his big, slow fingers, he
+stood a few feet from the family entrance of the Shandon Bells Café.
+One headline he spelled out ponderously: “The Papers to the Front in a
+Move to Help the Police.”
+
+But, whisht! The voice of Danny, the head bartender, through the crack
+of the door: “Here’s a nip for ye, Mike, ould man.”
+
+Behind the widespread, amicable columns of the press Policeman O’Brine
+receives swiftly his nip of the real stuff. He moves away, stalwart,
+refreshed, fortified, to his duties. Might not the editor man view with
+pride the early, the spiritual, the literal fruit that had blessed his
+labours.
+
+Policeman O’Brine folded the paper and poked it playfully under the arm
+of a small boy that was passing. That boy was named Johnny, and he took
+the paper home with him. His sister was named Gladys, and she had
+written to the beauty editor of the paper asking for the practicable
+touchstone of beauty. That was weeks ago, and she had ceased to look
+for an answer. Gladys was a pale girl, with dull eyes and a
+discontented expression. She was dressing to go up to the avenue to get
+some braid. Beneath her skirt she pinned two leaves of the paper Johnny
+had brought. When she walked the rustling sound was an exact imitation
+of the real thing.
+
+On the street she met the Brown girl from the flat below and stopped to
+talk. The Brown girl turned green. Only silk at $5 a yard could make
+the sound that she heard when Gladys moved. The Brown girl, consumed by
+jealousy, said something spiteful and went her way, with pinched lips.
+
+Gladys proceeded toward the avenue. Her eyes now sparkled like
+jagerfonteins. A rosy bloom visited her cheeks; a triumphant, subtle,
+vivifying, smile transfigured her face. She was beautiful. Could the
+beauty editor have seen her then! There was something in her answer in
+the paper, I believe, about cultivating kind feelings toward others in
+order to make plain features attractive.
+
+The labour leader against whom the paper’s solemn and weighty editorial
+injunction was laid was the father of Gladys and Johnny. He picked up
+the remains of the journal from which Gladys had ravished a cosmetic of
+silken sounds. The editorial did not come under his eye, but instead it
+was greeted by one of those ingenious and specious puzzle problems that
+enthrall alike the simpleton and the sage.
+
+The labour leader tore off half of the page, provided himself with
+table, pencil and paper and glued himself to his puzzle.
+
+Three hours later, after waiting vainly for him at the appointed place,
+other more conservative leaders declared and ruled in favour of
+arbitration, and the strike with its attendant dangers was averted.
+Subsequent editions of the paper referred, in coloured inks, to the
+clarion tone of its successful denunciation of the labour leader’s
+intended designs.
+
+The remaining leaves of the active journal also went loyally to the
+proving of its potency.
+
+When Johnny returned from school he sought a secluded spot and removed
+the missing columns from the inside of his clothing, where they had
+been artfully distributed so as to successfully defend such areas as
+are generally attacked during scholastic castigations. Johnny attended
+a private school and had had trouble with his teacher. As has been
+said, there was an excellent editorial against corporal punishment in
+that morning’s issue, and no doubt it had its effect.
+
+After this can any one doubt the power of the press?
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+TOMMY’S BURGLAR
+
+
+At ten o’clock P. M. Felicia, the maid, left by the basement door with
+the policeman to get a raspberry phosphate around the corner. She
+detested the policeman and objected earnestly to the arrangement. She
+pointed out, not unreasonably, that she might have been allowed to fall
+asleep over one of St. George Rathbone’s novels on the third floor, but
+she was overruled. Raspberries and cops were not created for nothing.
+
+The burglar got into the house without much difficulty; because we must
+have action and not too much description in a 2,000-word story.
+
+In the dining room he opened the slide of his dark lantern. With a
+brace and centrebit he began to bore into the lock of the
+silver-closet.
+
+Suddenly a click was heard. The room was flooded with electric light.
+The dark velvet portières parted to admit a fair-haired boy of eight in
+pink pajamas, bearing a bottle of olive oil in his hand.
+
+“Are you a burglar?” he asked, in a sweet, childish voice.
+
+“Listen to that,” exclaimed the man, in a hoarse voice. “Am I a
+burglar? Wot do you suppose I have a three-days’ growth of bristly
+beard on my face for, and a cap with flaps? Give me the oil, quick, and
+let me grease the bit, so I won’t wake up your mamma, who is lying down
+with a headache, and left you in charge of Felicia who has been
+faithless to her trust.”
+
+“Oh, dear,” said Tommy, with a sigh. “I thought you would be more
+up-to-date. This oil is for the salad when I bring lunch from the
+pantry for you. And mamma and papa have gone to the Metropolitan to
+hear De Reszke. But that isn’t my fault. It only shows how long the
+story has been knocking around among the editors. If the author had
+been wise he’d have changed it to Caruso in the proofs.”
+
+“Be quiet,” hissed the burglar, under his breath. “If you raise an
+alarm I’ll wring your neck like a rabbit’s.”
+
+“Like a chicken’s,” corrected Tommy. “You had that wrong. You don’t
+wring rabbits’ necks.”
+
+“Aren’t you afraid of me?” asked the burglar.
+
+“You know I’m not,” answered Tommy. “Don’t you suppose I know fact from
+fiction. If this wasn’t a story I’d yell like an Indian when I saw you;
+and you’d probably tumble downstairs and get pinched on the sidewalk.”
+
+“I see,” said the burglar, “that you’re on to your job. Go on with the
+performance.”
+
+Tommy seated himself in an armchair and drew his toes up under him.
+
+“Why do you go around robbing strangers, Mr. Burglar? Have you no
+friends?”
+
+“I see what you’re driving at,” said the burglar, with a dark frown.
+“It’s the same old story. Your innocence and childish insouciance is
+going to lead me back into an honest life. Every time I crack a crib
+where there’s a kid around, it happens.”
+
+“Would you mind gazing with wolfish eyes at the plate of cold beef that
+the butler has left on the dining table?” said Tommy. “I’m afraid it’s
+growing late.”
+
+The burglar accommodated.
+
+“Poor man,” said Tommy. “You must be hungry. If you will please stand
+in a listless attitude I will get you something to eat.”
+
+The boy brought a roast chicken, a jar of marmalade and a bottle of
+wine from the pantry. The burglar seized a knife and fork sullenly.
+
+“It’s only been an hour,” he grumbled, “since I had a lobster and a
+pint of musty ale up on Broadway. I wish these story writers would let
+a fellow have a pepsin tablet, anyhow, between feeds.”
+
+“My papa writes books,” remarked Tommy.
+
+The burglar jumped to his feet quickly.
+
+“You said he had gone to the opera,” he hissed, hoarsely and with
+immediate suspicion.
+
+“I ought to have explained,” said Tommy. “He didn’t buy the tickets.”
+The burglar sat again and toyed with the wishbone.
+
+“Why do you burgle houses?” asked the boy, wonderingly.
+
+“Because,” replied the burglar, with a sudden flow of tears. “God bless
+my little brown-haired boy Bessie at home.”
+
+“Ah,” said Tommy, wrinkling his nose, “you got that answer in the wrong
+place. You want to tell your hard-luck story before you pull out the
+child stop.”
+
+“Oh, yes,” said the burglar, “I forgot. Well, once I lived in
+Milwaukee, and—”
+
+“Take the silver,” said Tommy, rising from his chair.
+
+“Hold on,” said the burglar. “But I moved away.” I could find no other
+employment. For a while I managed to support my wife and child by
+passing confederate money; but, alas! I was forced to give that up
+because it did not belong to the union. I became desperate and a
+burglar.”
+
+“Have you ever fallen into the hands of the police?” asked Tommy.
+
+“I said ‘burglar,’ not ‘beggar,’” answered the cracksman.
+
+“After you finish your lunch,” said Tommy, “and experience the usual
+change of heart, how shall we wind up the story?”
+
+“Suppose,” said the burglar, thoughtfully, “that Tony Pastor turns out
+earlier than usual to-night, and your father gets in from ‘Parsifal’ at
+10.30. I am thoroughly repentant because you have made me think of my
+own little boy Bessie, and—”
+
+“Say,” said Tommy, “haven’t you got that wrong?”
+
+“Not on your coloured crayon drawings by B. Cory Kilvert,” said the
+burglar. “It’s always a Bessie that I have at home, artlessly prattling
+to the pale-cheeked burglar’s bride. As I was saying, your father opens
+the front door just as I am departing with admonitions and sandwiches
+that you have wrapped up for me. Upon recognizing me as an old Harvard
+classmate he starts back in—”
+
+“Not in surprise?” interrupted Tommy, with wide, open eyes.
+
+“He starts back in the doorway,” continued the burglar. And then he
+rose to his feet and began to shout “Rah, rah, rah! rah, rah, rah! rah,
+rah, rah!”
+
+“Well,” said Tommy, wonderingly, “that’s, the first time I ever knew a
+burglar to give a college yell when he was burglarizing a house, even
+in a story.”
+
+“That’s one on you,” said the burglar, with a laugh. “I was practising
+the dramatization. If this is put on the stage that college touch is
+about the only thing that will make it go.”
+
+Tommy looked his admiration.
+
+“You’re on, all right,” he said.
+
+“And there’s another mistake you’ve made,” said the burglar. “You
+should have gone some time ago and brought me the $9 gold piece your
+mother gave you on your birthday to take to Bessie.”
+
+“But she didn’t give it to me to take to Bessie,” said Tommy, pouting.
+
+“Come, come!” said the burglar, sternly. “It’s not nice of you to take
+advantage because the story contains an ambiguous sentence. You know
+what I mean. It’s mighty little I get out of these fictional jobs,
+anyhow. I lose all the loot, and I have to reform every time; and all
+the swag I’m allowed is the blamed little fol-de-rols and luck-pieces
+that you kids hand over. Why, in one story, all I got was a kiss from a
+little girl who came in on me when I was opening a safe. And it tasted
+of molasses candy, too. I’ve a good notion to tie this table cover over
+your head and keep on into the silver-closet.”
+
+“Oh, no, you haven’t,” said Tommy, wrapping his arms around his knees.
+“Because if you did no editor would buy the story. You know you’ve got
+to preserve the unities.”
+
+“So’ve you,” said the burglar, rather glumly. “Instead of sitting here
+talking impudence and taking the bread out of a poor man’s mouth, what
+you’d like to be doing is hiding under the bed and screeching at the
+top of your voice.”
+
+“You’re right, old man,” said Tommy, heartily. “I wonder what they make
+us do it for? I think the S. P. C. C. ought to interfere. I’m sure it’s
+neither agreeable nor usual for a kid of my age to butt in when a
+full-grown burglar is at work and offer him a red sled and a pair of
+skates not to awaken his sick mother. And look how they make the
+burglars act! You’d think editors would know—but what’s the use?”
+
+The burglar wiped his hands on the tablecloth and arose with a yawn.
+
+“Well, let’s get through with it,” he said. “God bless you, my little
+boy! you have saved a man from committing a crime this night. Bessie
+shall pray for you as soon as I get home and give her her orders. I
+shall never burglarize another house—at least not until the June
+magazines are out. It’ll be your little sister’s turn then to run in on
+me while I am abstracting the U. S. 4 per cent. from the tea urn and
+buy me off with her coral necklace and a falsetto kiss.”
+
+“You haven’t got all the kicks coming to you,” sighed Tommy, crawling
+out of his chair. “Think of the sleep I’m losing. But it’s tough on
+both of us, old man. I wish you could get out of the story and really
+rob somebody. Maybe you’ll have the chance if they dramatize us.”
+
+“Never!” said the burglar, gloomily. “Between the box office and my
+better impulses that your leading juveniles are supposed to awaken and
+the magazines that pay on publication, I guess I’ll always be broke.”
+
+“I’m sorry,” said Tommy, sympathetically. “But I can’t help myself any
+more than you can. It’s one of the canons of household fiction that no
+burglar shall be successful. The burglar must be foiled by a kid like
+me, or by a young lady heroine, or at the last moment by his old pal,
+Red Mike, who recognizes the house as one in which he used to be the
+coachman. You have got the worst end of it in any kind of a story.”
+
+“Well, I suppose I must be clearing out now,” said the burglar, taking
+up his lantern and bracebit.
+
+“You have to take the rest of this chicken and the bottle of wine with
+you for Bessie and her mother,” said Tommy, calmly.
+
+“But confound it,” exclaimed the burglar, in an annoyed tone, “they
+don’t want it. I’ve got five cases of Château de Beychsvelle at home
+that was bottled in 1853. That claret of yours is corked. And you
+couldn’t get either of them to look at a chicken unless it was stewed
+in champagne. You know, after I get out of the story I don’t have so
+many limitations. I make a turn now and then.”
+
+“Yes, but you must take them,” said Tommy, loading his arms with the
+bundles.
+
+“Bless you, young master!” recited the burglar, obedient. “Second-Story
+Saul will never forget you. And now hurry and let me out, kid. Our
+2,000 words must be nearly up.”
+
+Tommy led the way through the hall toward the front door. Suddenly the
+burglar stopped and called to him softly: “Ain’t there a cop out there
+in front somewhere sparking the girl?”
+
+“Yes,” said Tommy, “but what—”
+
+“I’m afraid he’ll catch me,” said the burglar. “You mustn’t forget that
+this is fiction.”
+
+“Great head!” said Tommy, turning. “Come out by the back door.”
+
+
+
+
+XX
+A CHAPARRAL CHRISTMAS GIFT
+
+
+The original cause of the trouble was about twenty years in growing.
+
+At the end of that time it was worth it.
+
+Had you lived anywhere within fifty miles of Sundown Ranch you would
+have heard of it. It possessed a quantity of jet-black hair, a pair of
+extremely frank, deep-brown eyes and a laugh that rippled across the
+prairie like the sound of a hidden brook. The name of it was Rosita
+McMullen; and she was the daughter of old man McMullen of the Sundown
+Sheep Ranch.
+
+There came riding on red roan steeds—or, to be more explicit, on a
+paint and a flea-bitten sorrel—two wooers. One was Madison Lane, and
+the other was the Frio Kid. But at that time they did not call him the
+Frio Kid, for he had not earned the honours of special nomenclature.
+His name was simply Johnny McRoy.
+
+It must not be supposed that these two were the sum of the agreeable
+Rosita’s admirers. The bronchos of a dozen others champed their bits at
+the long hitching rack of the Sundown Ranch. Many were the sheeps’-eyes
+that were cast in those savannas that did not belong to the flocks of
+Dan McMullen. But of all the cavaliers, Madison Lane and Johnny McRoy
+galloped far ahead, wherefore they are to be chronicled.
+
+Madison Lane, a young cattleman from the Nueces country, won the race.
+He and Rosita were married one Christmas day. Armed, hilarious,
+vociferous, magnanimous, the cowmen and the sheepmen, laying aside
+their hereditary hatred, joined forces to celebrate the occasion.
+
+Sundown Ranch was sonorous with the cracking of jokes and sixshooters,
+the shine of buckles and bright eyes, the outspoken congratulations of
+the herders of kine.
+
+But while the wedding feast was at its liveliest there descended upon
+it Johnny McRoy, bitten by jealousy, like one possessed.
+
+“I’ll give you a Christmas present,” he yelled, shrilly, at the door,
+with his .45 in his hand. Even then he had some reputation as an
+offhand shot.
+
+His first bullet cut a neat underbit in Madison Lane’s right ear. The
+barrel of his gun moved an inch. The next shot would have been the
+bride’s had not Carson, a sheepman, possessed a mind with triggers
+somewhat well oiled and in repair. The guns of the wedding party had
+been hung, in their belts, upon nails in the wall when they sat at
+table, as a concession to good taste. But Carson, with great
+promptness, hurled his plate of roast venison and frijoles at McRoy,
+spoiling his aim. The second bullet, then, only shattered the white
+petals of a Spanish dagger flower suspended two feet above Rosita’s
+head.
+
+The guests spurned their chairs and jumped for their weapons. It was
+considered an improper act to shoot the bride and groom at a wedding.
+In about six seconds there were twenty or so bullets due to be whizzing
+in the direction of Mr. McRoy.
+
+“I’ll shoot better next time,” yelled Johnny; “and there’ll be a next
+time.” He backed rapidly out the door.
+
+Carson, the sheepman, spurred on to attempt further exploits by the
+success of his plate-throwing, was first to reach the door. McRoy’s
+bullet from the darkness laid him low.
+
+The cattlemen then swept out upon him, calling for vengeance, for,
+while the slaughter of a sheepman has not always lacked condonement, it
+was a decided misdemeanour in this instance. Carson was innocent; he
+was no accomplice at the matrimonial proceedings; nor had any one heard
+him quote the line “Christmas comes but once a year” to the guests.
+
+But the sortie failed in its vengeance. McRoy was on his horse and
+away, shouting back curses and threats as he galloped into the
+concealing chaparral.
+
+That night was the birthnight of the Frio Kid. He became the “bad man”
+of that portion of the State. The rejection of his suit by Miss
+McMullen turned him to a dangerous man. When officers went after him
+for the shooting of Carson, he killed two of them, and entered upon the
+life of an outlaw. He became a marvellous shot with either hand. He
+would turn up in towns and settlements, raise a quarrel at the
+slightest opportunity, pick off his man and laugh at the officers of
+the law. He was so cool, so deadly, so rapid, so inhumanly
+blood-thirsty that none but faint attempts were ever made to capture
+him. When he was at last shot and killed by a little one-armed Mexican
+who was nearly dead himself from fright, the Frio Kid had the deaths of
+eighteen men on his head. About half of these were killed in fair duels
+depending upon the quickness of the draw. The other half were men whom
+he assassinated from absolute wantonness and cruelty.
+
+Many tales are told along the border of his impudent courage and
+daring. But he was not one of the breed of desperadoes who have seasons
+of generosity and even of softness. They say he never had mercy on the
+object of his anger. Yet at this and every Christmastide it is well to
+give each one credit, if it can be done, for whatever speck of good he
+may have possessed. If the Frio Kid ever did a kindly act or felt a
+throb of generosity in his heart it was once at such a time and season,
+and this is the way it happened.
+
+One who has been crossed in love should never breathe the odour from
+the blossoms of the ratama tree. It stirs the memory to a dangerous
+degree.
+
+One December in the Frio country there was a ratama tree in full bloom,
+for the winter had been as warm as springtime. That way rode the Frio
+Kid and his satellite and co-murderer, Mexican Frank. The kid reined in
+his mustang, and sat in his saddle, thoughtful and grim, with
+dangerously narrowing eyes. The rich, sweet scent touched him somewhere
+beneath his ice and iron.
+
+“I don’t know what I’ve been thinking about, Mex,” he remarked in his
+usual mild drawl, “to have forgot all about a Christmas present I got
+to give. I’m going to ride over to-morrow night and shoot Madison Lane
+in his own house. He got my girl—Rosita would have had me if he hadn’t
+cut into the game. I wonder why I happened to overlook it up to now?”
+
+“Ah, shucks, Kid,” said Mexican, “don’t talk foolishness. You know you
+can’t get within a mile of Mad Lane’s house to-morrow night. I see old
+man Allen day before yesterday, and he says Mad is going to have
+Christmas doings at his house. You remember how you shot up the
+festivities when Mad was married, and about the threats you made? Don’t
+you suppose Mad Lane’ll kind of keep his eye open for a certain Mr.
+Kid? You plumb make me tired, Kid, with such remarks.”
+
+“I’m going,” repeated the Frio Kid, without heat, “to go to Madison
+Lane’s Christmas doings, and kill him. I ought to have done it a long
+time ago. Why, Mex, just two weeks ago I dreamed me and Rosita was
+married instead of her and him; and we was living in a house, and I
+could see her smiling at me, and—oh! h––––l, Mex, he got her; and I’ll
+get him—yes, sir, on Christmas Eve he got her, and then’s when I’ll get
+him.”
+
+“There’s other ways of committing suicide,” advised Mexican. “Why don’t
+you go and surrender to the sheriff?”
+
+“I’ll get him,” said the Kid.
+
+Christmas Eve fell as balmy as April. Perhaps there was a hint of
+far-away frostiness in the air, but it tingles like seltzer, perfumed
+faintly with late prairie blossoms and the mesquite grass.
+
+When night came the five or six rooms of the ranch-house were brightly
+lit. In one room was a Christmas tree, for the Lanes had a boy of
+three, and a dozen or more guests were expected from the nearer
+ranches.
+
+At nightfall Madison Lane called aside Jim Belcher and three other
+cowboys employed on his ranch.
+
+“Now, boys,” said Lane, “keep your eyes open. Walk around the house and
+watch the road well. All of you know the ‘Frio Kid,’ as they call him
+now, and if you see him, open fire on him without asking any questions.
+I’m not afraid of his coming around, but Rosita is. She’s been afraid
+he’d come in on us every Christmas since we were married.”
+
+The guests had arrived in buckboards and on horseback, and were making
+themselves comfortable inside.
+
+The evening went along pleasantly. The guests enjoyed and praised
+Rosita’s excellent supper, and afterward the men scattered in groups
+about the rooms or on the broad “gallery,” smoking and chatting.
+
+The Christmas tree, of course, delighted the youngsters, and above all
+were they pleased when Santa Claus himself in magnificent white beard
+and furs appeared and began to distribute the toys.
+
+“It’s my papa,” announced Billy Sampson, aged six. “I’ve seen him wear
+’em before.”
+
+Berkly, a sheepman, an old friend of Lane, stopped Rosita as she was
+passing by him on the gallery, where he was sitting smoking.
+
+“Well, Mrs. Lane,” said he, “I suppose by this Christmas you’ve gotten
+over being afraid of that fellow McRoy, haven’t you? Madison and I have
+talked about it, you know.”
+
+“Very nearly,” said Rosita, smiling, “but I am still nervous sometimes.
+I shall never forget that awful time when he came so near to killing
+us.”
+
+“He’s the most cold-hearted villain in the world,” said Berkly. “The
+citizens all along the border ought to turn out and hunt him down like
+a wolf.”
+
+“He has committed awful crimes,” said Rosita, “but—I—don’t—know. I
+think there is a spot of good somewhere in everybody. He was not always
+bad—that I know.”
+
+Rosita turned into the hallway between the rooms. Santa Claus, in
+muffling whiskers and furs, was just coming through.
+
+“I heard what you said through the window, Mrs. Lane,” he said. “I was
+just going down in my pocket for a Christmas present for your husband.
+But I’ve left one for you, instead. It’s in the room to your right.”
+
+“Oh, thank you, kind Santa Claus,” said Rosita, brightly.
+
+Rosita went into the room, while Santa Claus stepped into the cooler
+air of the yard.
+
+She found no one in the room but Madison.
+
+“Where is my present that Santa said he left for me in here?” she
+asked.
+
+“Haven’t seen anything in the way of a present,” said her husband,
+laughing, “unless he could have meant me.”
+
+The next day Gabriel Radd, the foreman of the X O Ranch, dropped into
+the post-office at Loma Alta.
+
+“Well, the Frio Kid’s got his dose of lead at last,” he remarked to the
+postmaster.
+
+“That so? How’d it happen?”
+
+“One of old Sanchez’s Mexican sheep herders did it!—think of it! the
+Frio Kid killed by a sheep herder! The Greaser saw him riding along
+past his camp about twelve o’clock last night, and was so skeered that
+he up with a Winchester and let him have it. Funniest part of it was
+that the Kid was dressed all up with white Angora-skin whiskers and a
+regular Santy Claus rig-out from head to foot. Think of the Frio Kid
+playing Santy!”
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+A LITTLE LOCAL COLOUR
+
+
+I mentioned to Rivington that I was in search of characteristic New
+York scenes and incidents—something typical, I told him, without
+necessarily having to spell the first syllable with an “i.”
+
+“Oh, for your writing business,” said Rivington; “you couldn’t have
+applied to a better shop. What I don’t know about little old New York
+wouldn’t make a sonnet to a sunbonnet. I’ll put you right in the middle
+of so much local colour that you won’t know whether you are a magazine
+cover or in the erysipelas ward. When do you want to begin?”
+
+Rivington is a young-man-about-town and a New Yorker by birth,
+preference and incommutability.
+
+I told him that I would be glad to accept his escort and guardianship
+so that I might take notes of Manhattan’s grand, gloomy and peculiar
+idiosyncrasies, and that the time of so doing would be at his own
+convenience.
+
+“We’ll begin this very evening,” said Rivington, himself interested,
+like a good fellow. “Dine with me at seven, and then I’ll steer you up
+against metropolitan phases so thick you’ll have to have a kinetoscope
+to record ’em.”
+
+So I dined with Rivington pleasantly at his club, in Forty-eleventh
+street, and then we set forth in pursuit of the elusive tincture of
+affairs.
+
+As we came out of the club there stood two men on the sidewalk near the
+steps in earnest conversation.
+
+“And by what process of ratiocination,” said one of them, “do you
+arrive at the conclusion that the division of society into producing
+and non-possessing classes predicates failure when compared with
+competitive systems that are monopolizing in tendency and result
+inimically to industrial evolution?”
+
+“Oh, come off your perch!” said the other man, who wore glasses. “Your
+premises won’t come out in the wash. You wind-jammers who apply
+bandy-legged theories to concrete categorical syllogisms send logical
+conclusions skallybootin’ into the infinitesimal ragbag. You can’t pull
+my leg with an old sophism with whiskers on it. You quote Marx and
+Hyndman and Kautsky—what are they?—shines! Tolstoi?—his garret is full
+of rats. I put it to you over the home-plate that the idea of a
+cooperative commonwealth and an abolishment of competitive systems
+simply takes the rag off the bush and gives me hyperesthesia of the
+roopteetoop! The skookum house for yours!”
+
+I stopped a few yards away and took out my little notebook.
+
+“Oh, come ahead,” said Rivington, somewhat nervously; “you don’t want
+to listen to that.”
+
+“Why, man,” I whispered, “this is just what I do want to hear. These
+slang types are among your city’s most distinguishing features. Is this
+the Bowery variety? I really must hear more of it.”
+
+“If I follow you,” said the man who had spoken first, “you do not
+believe it possible to reorganize society on the basis of common
+interest?”
+
+“Shinny on your own side!” said the man with glasses. “You never heard
+any such music from my foghorn. What I said was that I did not believe
+it practicable just now. The guys with wads are not in the frame of
+mind to slack up on the mazuma, and the man with the portable tin
+banqueting canister isn’t exactly ready to join the Bible class. You
+can bet your variegated socks that the situation is all spifflicated up
+from the Battery to breakfast! What the country needs is for some bully
+old bloke like Cobden or some wise guy like old Ben Franklin to sashay
+up to the front and biff the nigger’s head with the baseball. Do you
+catch my smoke? What?”
+
+Rivington pulled me by the arm impatiently.
+
+“Please come on,” he said. “Let’s go see something. This isn’t what you
+want.”
+
+“Indeed, it is,” I said resisting. “This tough talk is the very stuff
+that counts. There is a picturesqueness about the speech of the lower
+order of people that is quite unique. Did you say that this is the
+Bowery variety of slang?”
+
+“Oh, well,” said Rivington, giving it up, “I’ll tell you straight.
+That’s one of our college professors talking. He ran down for a day or
+two at the club. It’s a sort of fad with him lately to use slang in his
+conversation. He thinks it improves language. The man he is talking to
+is one of New York’s famous social economists. Now will you come on.
+You can’t use that, you know.”
+
+“No,” I agreed; “I can’t use that. Would you call that typical of New
+York?”
+
+“Of course not,” said Rivington, with a sigh of relief. “I’m glad you
+see the difference. But if you want to hear the real old tough Bowery
+slang I’ll take you down where you’ll get your fill of it.”
+
+“I would like it,” I said; “that is, if it’s the real thing. I’ve often
+read it in books, but I never heard it. Do you think it will be
+dangerous to go unprotected among those characters?”
+
+“Oh, no,” said Rivington; “not at this time of night. To tell the
+truth, I haven’t been along the Bowery in a long time, but I know it as
+well as I do Broadway. We’ll look up some of the typical Bowery boys
+and get them to talk. It’ll be worth your while. They talk a peculiar
+dialect that you won’t hear anywhere else on earth.”
+
+Rivington and I went east in a Forty-second street car and then south
+on the Third avenue line.
+
+At Houston street we got off and walked.
+
+“We are now on the famous Bowery,” said Rivington; “the Bowery
+celebrated in song and story.”
+
+We passed block after block of “gents’” furnishing stores—the windows
+full of shirts with prices attached and cuffs inside. In other windows
+were neckties and no shirts. People walked up and down the sidewalks.
+
+“In some ways,” said I, “this reminds me of Kokomono, Ind., during the
+peach-crating season.”
+
+Rivington was nettled.
+
+“Step into one of these saloons or vaudeville shows,” said he, “with a
+large roll of money, and see how quickly the Bowery will sustain its
+reputation.”
+
+“You make impossible conditions,” said I, coldly.
+
+By and by Rivington stopped and said we were in the heart of the
+Bowery. There was a policeman on the corner whom Rivington knew.
+
+“Hallo, Donahue!” said my guide. “How goes it? My friend and I are down
+this way looking up a bit of local colour. He’s anxious to meet one of
+the Bowery types. Can’t you put us on to something genuine in that
+line—something that’s got the colour, you know?”
+
+Policeman Donahue turned himself about ponderously, his florid face
+full of good-nature. He pointed with his club down the street.
+
+“Sure!” he said huskily. “Here comes a lad now that was born on the
+Bowery and knows every inch of it. If he’s ever been above Bleecker
+street he’s kept it to himself.”
+
+A man about twenty-eight or twenty-nine, with a smooth face, was
+sauntering toward us with his hands in his coat pockets. Policeman
+Donahue stopped him with a courteous wave of his club.
+
+“Evening, Kerry,” he said. “Here’s a couple of gents, friends of mine,
+that want to hear you spiel something about the Bowery. Can you reel
+’em off a few yards?”
+
+“Certainly, Donahue,” said the young man, pleasantly. “Good evening,
+gentlemen,” he said to us, with a pleasant smile. Donahue walked off on
+his beat.
+
+“This is the goods,” whispered Rivington, nudging me with his elbow.
+“Look at his jaw!”
+
+“Say, cull,” said Rivington, pushing back his hat, “wot’s doin’? Me and
+my friend’s taking a look down de old line—see? De copper tipped us off
+dat you was wise to de bowery. Is dat right?”
+
+I could not help admiring Rivington’s power of adapting himself to his
+surroundings.
+
+“Donahue was right,” said the young man, frankly; “I was brought up on
+the Bowery. I have been news-boy, teamster, pugilist, member of an
+organized band of ‘toughs,’ bartender, and a ‘sport’ in various
+meanings of the word. The experience certainly warrants the supposition
+that I have at least a passing acquaintance with a few phases of Bowery
+life. I will be pleased to place whatever knowledge and experience I
+have at the service of my friend Donahue’s friends.”
+
+Rivington seemed ill at ease.
+
+“I say,” he said—somewhat entreatingly, “I thought—you’re not stringing
+us, are you? It isn’t just the kind of talk we expected. You haven’t
+even said ‘Hully gee!’ once. Do you really belong on the Bowery?”
+
+“I am afraid,” said the Bowery boy, smilingly, “that at some time you
+have been enticed into one of the dives of literature and had the
+counterfeit coin of the Bowery passed upon you. The ‘argot’ to which
+you doubtless refer was the invention of certain of your literary
+‘discoverers’ who invaded the unknown wilds below Third avenue and put
+strange sounds into the mouths of the inhabitants. Safe in their homes
+far to the north and west, the credulous readers who were beguiled by
+this new ‘dialect’ perused and believed. Like Marco Polo and Mungo
+Park—pioneers indeed, but ambitious souls who could not draw the line
+of demarcation between discovery and invention—the literary bones of
+these explorers are dotting the trackless wastes of the subway. While
+it is true that after the publication of the mythical language
+attributed to the dwellers along the Bowery certain of its pat phrases
+and apt metaphors were adopted and, to a limited extent, used in this
+locality, it was because our people are prompt in assimilating whatever
+is to their commercial advantage. To the tourists who visited our newly
+discovered clime, and who expected a realization of their literary
+guide books, they supplied the demands of the market.
+
+“But perhaps I am wandering from the question. In what way can I assist
+you, gentlemen? I beg you will believe that the hospitality of the
+street is extended to all. There are, I regret to say, many catchpenny
+places of entertainment, but I cannot conceive that they would entice
+you.”
+
+I felt Rivington lean somewhat heavily against me.
+
+“Say!” he remarked, with uncertain utterance; “come and have a drink
+with us.”
+
+“Thank you, but I never drink. I find that alcohol, even in the
+smallest quantities, alters the perspective. And I must preserve my
+perspective, for I am studying the Bowery. I have lived in it nearly
+thirty years, and I am just beginning to understand its heartbeats. It
+is like a great river fed by a hundred alien streams. Each influx
+brings strange seeds on its flood, strange silt and weeds, and now and
+then a flower of rare promise. To construe this river requires a man
+who can build dykes against the overflow, who is a naturalist, a
+geologist, a humanitarian, a diver and a strong swimmer. I love my
+Bowery. It was my cradle and is my inspiration. I have published one
+book. The critics have been kind. I put my heart in it. I am writing
+another, into which I hope to put both heart and brain. Consider me
+your guide, gentlemen. Is there anything I can take you to see, any
+place to which I can conduct you?”
+
+I was afraid to look at Rivington except with one eye.
+
+“Thanks,” said Rivington. “We were looking up . . . that is . . . my
+friend . . . confound it; it’s against all precedent, you know . . .
+awfully obliged . . . just the same.”
+
+“In case,” said our friend, “you would like to meet some of our Bowery
+young men I would be pleased to have you visit the quarters of our East
+Side Kappa Delta Phi Society, only two blocks east of here.”
+
+“Awfully sorry,” said Rivington, “but my friend’s got me on the jump
+to-night. He’s a terror when he’s out after local colour. Now, there’s
+nothing I would like better than to drop in at the Kappa Delta Phi,
+but—some other time!”
+
+We said our farewells and boarded a home-bound car. We had a rabbit on
+upper Broadway, and then I parted with Rivington on a street corner.
+
+“Well, anyhow,” said he, braced and recovered, “it couldn’t have
+happened anywhere but in little old New York.”
+
+Which to say the least, was typical of Rivington.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+GEORGIA’S RULING
+
+
+If you should chance to visit the General Land Office, step into the
+draughtsmen’s room and ask to be shown the map of Salado County. A
+leisurely German—possibly old Kampfer himself—will bring it to you. It
+will be four feet square, on heavy drawing-cloth. The lettering and the
+figures will be beautifully clear and distinct. The title will be in
+splendid, undecipherable German text, ornamented with classic Teutonic
+designs—very likely Ceres or Pomona leaning against the initial letters
+with cornucopias venting grapes and wieners. You must tell him that
+this is not the map you wish to see; that he will kindly bring you its
+official predecessor. He will then say, “Ach, so!” and bring out a map
+half the size of the first, dim, old, tattered, and faded.
+
+By looking carefully near its northwest corner you will presently come
+upon the worn contours of Chiquito River, and, maybe, if your eyes are
+good, discern the silent witness to this story.
+
+The Commissioner of the Land Office was of the old style; his antique
+courtesy was too formal for his day. He dressed in fine black, and
+there was a suggestion of Roman drapery in his long coat-skirts. His
+collars were “undetached” (blame haberdashery for the word); his tie
+was a narrow, funereal strip, tied in the same knot as were his
+shoe-strings. His gray hair was a trifle too long behind, but he kept
+it smooth and orderly. His face was clean-shaven, like the old
+statesmen’s. Most people thought it a stern face, but when its official
+expression was off, a few had seen altogether a different countenance.
+Especially tender and gentle it had appeared to those who were about
+him during the last illness of his only child.
+
+The Commissioner had been a widower for years, and his life, outside
+his official duties, had been so devoted to little Georgia that people
+spoke of it as a touching and admirable thing. He was a reserved man,
+and dignified almost to austerity, but the child had come below it all
+and rested upon his very heart, so that she scarcely missed the
+mother’s love that had been taken away. There was a wonderful
+companionship between them, for she had many of his own ways, being
+thoughtful and serious beyond her years.
+
+One day, while she was lying with the fever burning brightly in her
+checks, she said suddenly:
+
+“Papa, I wish I could do something good for a whole lot of children!”
+
+“What would you like to do, dear?” asked the Commissioner. “Give them a
+party?”
+
+“Oh, I don’t mean those kind. I mean poor children who haven’t homes,
+and aren’t loved and cared for as I am. I tell you what, papa!”
+
+“What, my own child?”
+
+“If I shouldn’t get well, I’ll leave them you—not _give_ you, but just
+lend you, for you must come to mamma and me when you die too. If you
+can find time, wouldn’t you do something to help them, if I ask you,
+papa?”
+
+“Hush, hush dear, dear child,” said the Commissioner, holding her hot
+little hand against his cheek; “you’ll get well real soon, and you and
+I will see what we can do for them together.”
+
+But in whatsoever paths of benevolence, thus vaguely premeditated, the
+Commissioner might tread, he was not to have the company of his
+beloved. That night the little frail body grew suddenly too tired to
+struggle further, and Georgia’s exit was made from the great stage when
+she had scarcely begun to speak her little piece before the footlights.
+But there must be a stage manager who understands. She had given the
+cue to the one who was to speak after her.
+
+A week after she was laid away, the Commissioner reappeared at the
+office, a little more courteous, a little paler and sterner, with the
+black frock-coat hanging a little more loosely from his tall figure.
+
+His desk was piled with work that had accumulated during the four
+heartbreaking weeks of his absence. His chief clerk had done what he
+could, but there were questions of law, of fine judicial decisions to
+be made concerning the issue of patents, the marketing and leasing of
+school lands, the classification into grazing, agricultural, watered,
+and timbered, of new tracts to be opened to settlers.
+
+The Commissioner went to work silently and obstinately, putting back
+his grief as far as possible, forcing his mind to attack the
+complicated and important business of his office. On the second day
+after his return he called the porter, pointed to a leather-covered
+chair that stood near his own, and ordered it removed to a lumber-room
+at the top of the building. In that chair Georgia would always sit when
+she came to the office for him of afternoons.
+
+As time passed, the Commissioner seemed to grow more silent, solitary,
+and reserved. A new phase of mind developed in him. He could not endure
+the presence of a child. Often when a clattering youngster belonging to
+one of the clerks would come chattering into the big business-room
+adjoining his little apartment, the Commissioner would steal softly and
+close the door. He would always cross the street to avoid meeting the
+school-children when they came dancing along in happy groups upon the
+sidewalk, and his firm mouth would close into a mere line.
+
+It was nearly three months after the rains had washed the last dead
+flower-petals from the mound above little Georgia when the “land-shark”
+firm of Hamlin and Avery filed papers upon what they considered the
+“fattest” vacancy of the year.
+
+It should not be supposed that all who were termed “land-sharks”
+deserved the name. Many of them were reputable men of good business
+character. Some of them could walk into the most august councils of the
+State and say: “Gentlemen, we would like to have this, and that, and
+matters go thus.” But, next to a three years’ drought and the
+boll-worm, the Actual Settler hated the Land-shark. The land-shark
+haunted the Land Office, where all the land records were kept, and
+hunted “vacancies”—that is, tracts of unappropriated public domain,
+generally invisible upon the official maps, but actually existing “upon
+the ground.” The law entitled any one possessing certain State scrip to
+file by virtue of same upon any land not previously legally
+appropriated. Most of the scrip was now in the hands of the
+land-sharks. Thus, at the cost of a few hundred dollars, they often
+secured lands worth as many thousands. Naturally, the search for
+“vacancies” was lively.
+
+But often—very often—the land they thus secured, though legally
+“unappropriated,” would be occupied by happy and contented settlers,
+who had laboured for years to build up their homes, only to discover
+that their titles were worthless, and to receive peremptory notice to
+quit. Thus came about the bitter and not unjustifiable hatred felt by
+the toiling settlers toward the shrewd and seldom merciful speculators
+who so often turned them forth destitute and homeless from their
+fruitless labours. The history of the state teems with their
+antagonism. Mr. Land-shark seldom showed his face on “locations” from
+which he should have to eject the unfortunate victims of a monstrously
+tangled land system, but let his emissaries do the work. There was lead
+in every cabin, moulded into balls for him; many of his brothers had
+enriched the grass with their blood. The fault of it all lay far back.
+
+When the state was young, she felt the need of attracting newcomers,
+and of rewarding those pioneers already within her borders. Year after
+year she issued land scrip—Headrights, Bounties, Veteran Donations,
+Confederates; and to railroads, irrigation companies, colonies, and
+tillers of the soil galore. All required of the grantee was that he or
+it should have the scrip properly surveyed upon the public domain by
+the county or district surveyor, and the land thus appropriated became
+the property of him or it, or his or its heirs and assigns, forever.
+
+In those days—and here is where the trouble began—the state’s domain
+was practically inexhaustible, and the old surveyors, with
+princely—yea, even Western American—liberality, gave good measure and
+over-flowing. Often the jovial man of metes and bounds would dispense
+altogether with the tripod and chain. Mounted on a pony that could
+cover something near a “vara” at a step, with a pocket compass to
+direct his course, he would trot out a survey by counting the beat of
+his pony’s hoofs, mark his corners, and write out his field notes with
+the complacency produced by an act of duty well performed.
+Sometimes—and who could blame the surveyor?—when the pony was “feeling
+his oats,” he might step a little higher and farther, and in that case
+the beneficiary of the scrip might get a thousand or two more acres in
+his survey than the scrip called for. But look at the boundless leagues
+the state had to spare! However, no one ever had to complain of the
+pony under-stepping. Nearly every old survey in the state contained an
+excess of land.
+
+In later years, when the state became more populous, and land values
+increased, this careless work entailed incalculable trouble, endless
+litigation, a period of riotous land-grabbing, and no little bloodshed.
+The land-sharks voraciously attacked these excesses in the old surveys,
+and filed upon such portions with new scrip as unappropriated public
+domain. Wherever the identifications of the old tracts were vague, and
+the corners were not to be clearly established, the Land Office would
+recognize the newer locations as valid, and issue title to the
+locators. Here was the greatest hardship to be found. These old
+surveys, taken from the pick of the land, were already nearly all
+occupied by unsuspecting and peaceful settlers, and thus their titles
+were demolished, and the choice was placed before them either to buy
+their land over at a double price or to vacate it, with their families
+and personal belongings, immediately. Land locators sprang up by
+hundreds. The country was held up and searched for “vacancies” at the
+point of a compass. Hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of splendid
+acres were wrested from their innocent purchasers and holders. There
+began a vast hegira of evicted settlers in tattered wagons; going
+nowhere, cursing injustice, stunned, purposeless, homeless, hopeless.
+Their children began to look up to them for bread, and cry.
+
+It was in consequence of these conditions that Hamlin and Avery had
+filed upon a strip of land about a mile wide and three miles long,
+comprising about two thousand acres, it being the excess over
+complement of the Elias Denny three-league survey on Chiquito River, in
+one of the middle-western counties. This two-thousand-acre body of land
+was asserted by them to be vacant land, and improperly considered a
+part of the Denny survey. They based this assertion and their claim
+upon the land upon the demonstrated facts that the beginning corner of
+the Denny survey was plainly identified; that its field notes called to
+run west 5,760 varas, and then called for Chiquito River; thence it ran
+south, with the meanders—and so on—and that the Chiquito River was, on
+the ground, fully a mile farther west from the point reached by course
+and distance. To sum up: there were two thousand acres of vacant land
+between the Denny survey proper and Chiquito River.
+
+One sweltering day in July the Commissioner called for the papers in
+connection with this new location. They were brought, and heaped, a
+foot deep, upon his desk—field notes, statements, sketches, affidavits,
+connecting lines—documents of every description that shrewdness and
+money could call to the aid of Hamlin and Avery.
+
+The firm was pressing the Commissioner to issue a patent upon their
+location. They possesed inside information concerning a new railroad
+that would probably pass somewhere near this land.
+
+The General Land Office was very still while the Commissioner was
+delving into the heart of the mass of evidence. The pigeons could be
+heard on the roof of the old, castle-like building, cooing and
+fretting. The clerks were droning everywhere, scarcely pretending to
+earn their salaries. Each little sound echoed hollow and loud from the
+bare, stone-flagged floors, the plastered walls, and the iron-joisted
+ceiling. The impalpable, perpetual limestone dust that never settled,
+whitened a long streamer of sunlight that pierced the tattered
+window-awning.
+
+It seemed that Hamlin and Avery had builded well. The Denny survey was
+carelessly made, even for a careless period. Its beginning corner was
+identical with that of a well-defined old Spanish grant, but its other
+calls were sinfully vague. The field notes contained no other object
+that survived—no tree, no natural object save Chiquito River, and it
+was a mile wrong there. According to precedent, the Office would be
+justified in giving it its complement by course and distance, and
+considering the remainder vacant instead of a mere excess.
+
+The Actual Settler was besieging the office with wild protests _in re_.
+Having the nose of a pointer and the eye of a hawk for the land-shark,
+he had observed his myrmidons running the lines upon his ground. Making
+inquiries, he learned that the spoiler had attacked his home, and he
+left the plough in the furrow and took his pen in hand.
+
+One of the protests the Commissioner read twice. It was from a woman, a
+widow, the granddaughter of Elias Denny himself. She told how her
+grandfather had sold most of the survey years before at a trivial
+price—land that was now a principality in extent and value. Her mother
+had also sold a part, and she herself had succeeded to this western
+portion, along Chiquito River. Much of it she had been forced to part
+with in order to live, and now she owned only about three hundred
+acres, on which she had her home. Her letter wound up rather
+pathetically:
+
+“I’ve got eight children, the oldest fifteen years. I work all day and
+half the night to till what little land I can and keep us in clothes
+and books. I teach my children too. My neighbours is all poor and has
+big families. The drought kills the crops every two or three years and
+then we has hard times to get enough to eat. There is ten families on
+this land what the land-sharks is trying to rob us of, and all of them
+got titles from me. I sold to them cheap, and they aint paid out yet,
+but part of them is, and if their land should be took from them I would
+die. My grandfather was an honest man, and he helped to build up this
+state, and he taught his children to be honest, and how could I make it
+up to them who bought from me? Mr. Commissioner, if you let them
+land-sharks take the roof from over my children and the little from
+them as they has to live on, whoever again calls this state great or
+its government just will have a lie in their mouths”
+
+The Commissioner laid this letter aside with a sigh. Many, many such
+letters he had received. He had never been hurt by them, nor had he
+ever felt that they appealed to him personally. He was but the state’s
+servant, and must follow its laws. And yet, somehow, this reflection
+did not always eliminate a certain responsible feeling that hung upon
+him. Of all the state’s officers he was supremest in his department,
+not even excepting the Governor. Broad, general land laws he followed,
+it was true, but he had a wide latitude in particular ramifications.
+Rather than law, what he followed was Rulings: Office Rulings and
+precedents. In the complicated and new questions that were being
+engendered by the state’s development the Commissioner’s ruling was
+rarely appealed from. Even the courts sustained it when its equity was
+apparent.
+
+The Commissioner stepped to the door and spoke to a clerk in the other
+room—spoke as he always did, as if he were addressing a prince of the
+blood:
+
+“Mr. Weldon, will you be kind enough to ask Mr. Ashe, the state
+school-land appraiser, to please come to my office as soon as
+convenient?”
+
+Ashe came quickly from the big table where he was arranging his
+reports.
+
+“Mr. Ashe,” said the Commissioner, “you worked along the Chiquito
+River, in Salado County, during your last trip, I believe. Do you
+remember anything of the Elias Denny three-league survey?”
+
+“Yes, sir, I do,” the blunt, breezy, surveyor answered. “I crossed it
+on my way to Block H, on the north side of it. The road runs with the
+Chiquito River, along the valley. The Denny survey fronts three miles
+on the Chiquito.”
+
+“It is claimed,” continued the commissioner, “that it fails to reach
+the river by as much as a mile.”
+
+The appraiser shrugged his shoulder. He was by birth and instinct an
+Actual Settler, and the natural foe of the land-shark.
+
+“It has always been considered to extend to the river,” he said, dryly.
+
+“But that is not the point I desired to discuss,” said the
+Commissioner. “What kind of country is this valley portion of (let us
+say, then) the Denny tract?”
+
+The spirit of the Actual Settler beamed in Ashe’s face.
+
+“Beautiful,” he said, with enthusiasm. “Valley as level as this floor,
+with just a little swell on, like the sea, and rich as cream. Just
+enough brakes to shelter the cattle in winter. Black loamy soil for six
+feet, and then clay. Holds water. A dozen nice little houses on it,
+with windmills and gardens. People pretty poor, I guess—too far from
+market—but comfortable. Never saw so many kids in my life.”
+
+“They raise flocks?” inquired the Commissioner.
+
+“Ho, ho! I mean two-legged kids,” laughed the surveyor; “two-legged,
+and bare-legged, and tow-headed.”
+
+“Children! oh, children!” mused the Commissioner, as though a new view
+had opened to him; “they raise children!
+
+“It’s a lonesome country, Commissioner,” said the surveyor. “Can you
+blame ’em?”
+
+“I suppose,” continued the Commissioner, slowly, as one carefully
+pursues deductions from a new, stupendous theory, “not all of them are
+tow-headed. It would not be unreasonable, Mr. Ashe, I conjecture, to
+believe that a portion of them have brown, or even black, hair.”
+
+“Brown and black, sure,” said Ashe; “also red.”
+
+“No doubt,” said the Commissioner. “Well, I thank you for your courtesy
+in informing me, Mr. Ashe. I will not detain you any longer from your
+duties.”
+
+Later, in the afternoon, came Hamlin and Avery, big, handsome, genial,
+sauntering men, clothed in white duck and low-cut shoes. They permeated
+the whole office with an aura of debonair prosperity. They passed among
+the clerks and left a wake of abbreviated given names and fat brown
+cigars.
+
+These were the aristocracy of the land-sharks, who went in for big
+things. Full of serene confidence in themselves, there was no
+corporation, no syndicate, no railroad company or attorney general too
+big for them to tackle. The peculiar smoke of their rare, fat brown
+cigars was to be perceived in the sanctum of every department of state,
+in every committee-room of the Legislature, in every bank parlour and
+every private caucus-room in the state Capital. Always pleasant, never
+in a hurry, in seeming to possess unlimited leisure, people wondered
+when they gave their attention to the many audacious enterprises in
+which they were known to be engaged.
+
+By and by the two dropped carelessly into the Commissioner’s room and
+reclined lazily in the big, leather-upholstered arm-chairs. They
+drawled a good-natured complaint of the weather, and Hamlin told the
+Commissioner an excellent story he had amassed that morning from the
+Secretary of State.
+
+But the Commissioner knew why they were there. He had half promised to
+render a decision that day upon their location.
+
+The chief clerk now brought in a batch of duplicate certificates for
+the Commissioner to sign. As he traced his sprawling signature, “Hollis
+Summerfield, Comr. Genl. Land Office,” on each one, the chief clerk
+stood, deftly removing them and applying the blotter.
+
+“I notice,” said the chief clerk, “you’ve been going through that
+Salado County location. Kampfer is making a new map of Salado, and I
+believe is platting in that section of the county now.”
+
+“I will see it,” said the Commissioner. A few moments later he went to
+the draughtsmen’s room.
+
+As he entered he saw five or six of the draughtsmen grouped about
+Kampfer’s desk, gargling away at each other in pectoral German, and
+gazing at something thereupon. At the Commissioner’s approach they
+scattered to their several places. Kampfer, a wizened little German,
+with long, frizzled ringlets and a watery eye, began to stammer forth
+some sort of an apology, the Commissioner thought, for the congregation
+of his fellows about his desk.
+
+“Never mind,” said the Commissioner, “I wish to see the map you are
+making”; and, passing around the old German, seated himself upon the
+high draughtsman’s stool. Kampfer continued to break English in trying
+to explain.
+
+“Herr Gommissioner, I assure you blenty sat I haf not it
+bremeditated—sat it wass—sat it itself make. Look you! from se field
+notes wass it blatted—blease to observe se calls: South, 10 degrees
+west 1,050 varas; south, 10 degrees east 300 varas; south, 100; south,
+9 west, 200; south, 40 degrees west 400—and so on. Herr Gommissioner,
+nefer would I have—”
+
+The Commissioner raised one white hand, silently, Kampfer dropped his
+pipe and fled.
+
+With a hand at each side of his face, and his elbows resting upon the
+desk, the Commissioner sat staring at the map which was spread and
+fastened there—staring at the sweet and living profile of little
+Georgia drawn thereupon—at her face, pensive, delicate, and infantile,
+outlined in a perfect likeness.
+
+When his mind at length came to inquire into the reason of it, he saw
+that it must have been, as Kampfer had said, unpremeditated. The old
+draughtsman had been platting in the Elias Denny survey, and Georgia’s
+likeness, striking though it was, was formed by nothing more than the
+meanders of Chiquito River. Indeed, Kampfer’s blotter, whereon his
+preliminary work was done, showed the laborious tracings of the calls
+and the countless pricks of the compasses. Then, over his faint
+pencilling, Kampfer had drawn in India ink with a full, firm pen the
+similitude of Chiquito River, and forth had blossomed mysteriously the
+dainty, pathetic profile of the child.
+
+The Commissioner sat for half an hour with his face in his hands,
+gazing downward, and none dared approach him. Then he arose and walked
+out. In the business office he paused long enough to ask that the Denny
+file be brought to his desk.
+
+He found Hamlin and Avery still reclining in their chairs, apparently
+oblivious of business. They were lazily discussing summer opera, it
+being, their habit—perhaps their pride also—to appear supernaturally
+indifferent whenever they stood with large interests imperilled. And
+they stood to win more on this stake than most people knew. They
+possessed inside information to the effect that a new railroad would,
+within a year, split this very Chiquito River valley and send land
+values ballooning all along its route. A dollar under thirty thousand
+profit on this location, if it should hold good, would be a loss to
+their expectations. So, while they chatted lightly and waited for the
+Commissioner to open the subject, there was a quick, sidelong sparkle
+in their eyes, evincing a desire to read their title clear to those
+fair acres on the Chiquito.
+
+A clerk brought in the file. The Commissioner seated himself and wrote
+upon it in red ink. Then he rose to his feet and stood for a while
+looking straight out of the window. The Land Office capped the summit
+of a bold hill. The eyes of the Commissioner passed over the roofs of
+many houses set in a packing of deep green, the whole checkered by
+strips of blinding white streets. The horizon, where his gaze was
+focussed, swelled to a fair wooded eminence flecked with faint dots of
+shining white. There was the cemetery, where lay many who were
+forgotten, and a few who had not lived in vain. And one lay there,
+occupying very small space, whose childish heart had been large enough
+to desire, while near its last beats, good to others. The
+Commissioner’s lips moved slightly as he whispered to himself: “It was
+her last will and testament, and I have neglected it so long!”
+
+The big brown cigars of Hamlin and Avery were fireless, but they still
+gripped them between their teeth and waited, while they marvelled at
+the absent expression upon the Commissioner’s face.
+
+By and by he spoke suddenly and promptly.
+
+“Gentlemen, I have just indorsed the Elias Denny survey for patenting.
+This office will not regard your location upon a part of it as legal.”
+He paused a moment, and then, extending his hand as those dear old-time
+ones used to do in debate, he enunciated the spirit of that Ruling that
+subsequently drove the land-sharks to the wall, and placed the seal of
+peace and security over the doors of ten thousand homes.
+
+“And, furthermore,” he continued, with a clear, soft light upon his
+face, “it may interest you to know that from this time on this office
+will consider that when a survey of land made by virtue of a
+certificate granted by this state to the men who wrested it from the
+wilderness and the savage—made in good faith, settled in good faith,
+and left in good faith to their children or innocent purchasers—when
+such a survey, although overrunning its complement, shall call for any
+natural object visible to the eye of man, to that object it shall hold,
+and be good and valid. And the children of this state shall lie down to
+sleep at night, and rumours of disturbers of title shall not disquiet
+them. For,” concluded the Commissioner, “of such is the Kingdom of
+Heaven.”
+
+In the silence that followed, a laugh floated up from the patent-room
+below. The man who carried down the Denny file was exhibiting it among
+the clerks.
+
+“Look here,” he said, delightedly, “the old man has forgotten his name.
+He’s written ‘Patent to original grantee,’ and signed it ‘Georgia
+Summerfield, Comr.’”
+
+The speech of the Commissioner rebounded lightly from the impregnable
+Hamlin and Avery. They smiled, rose gracefully, spoke of the baseball
+team, and argued feelingly that quite a perceptible breeze had arisen
+from the east. They lit fresh fat brown cigars, and drifted courteously
+away. But later they made another tiger-spring for their quarry in the
+courts. But the courts, according to reports in the papers, “coolly
+roasted them” (a remarkable performance, suggestive of liquid-air
+didoes), and sustained the Commissioner’s Ruling.
+
+And this Ruling itself grew to be a Precedent, and the Actual Settler
+framed it, and taught his children to spell from it, and there was
+sound sleep o’ nights from the pines to the sage-brush, and from the
+chaparral to the great brown river of the north.
+
+But I think, and I am sure the Commissioner never thought otherwise,
+that whether Kampfer was a snuffy old instrument of destiny, or whether
+the meanders of the Chiquito accidentally platted themselves into that
+memorable sweet profile or not, there was brought about “something good
+for a whole lot of children,” and the result ought to be called
+“Georgia’s Ruling.”
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+BLIND MAN’S HOLIDAY
+
+
+Alas for the man and for the artist with the shifting point of
+perspective! Life shall be a confusion of ways to the one; the
+landscape shall rise up and confound the other. Take the case of
+Lorison. At one time he appeared to himself to be the feeblest of
+fools; at another he conceived that he followed ideals so fine that the
+world was not yet ready to accept them. During one mood he cursed his
+folly; possessed by the other, he bore himself with a serene grandeur
+akin to greatness: in neither did he attain the perspective.
+
+Generations before, the name had been “Larsen.” His race had bequeathed
+him its fine-strung, melancholy temperament, its saving balance of
+thrift and industry.
+
+From his point of perspective he saw himself an outcast from society,
+forever to be a shady skulker along the ragged edge of respectability;
+a denizen _des trois-quarts de monde_, that pathetic spheroid lying
+between the _haut_ and the _demi_, whose inhabitants envy each of their
+neighbours, and are scorned by both. He was self-condemned to this
+opinion, as he was self-exiled, through it, to this quaint Southern
+city a thousand miles from his former home. Here he had dwelt for
+longer than a year, knowing but few, keeping in a subjective world of
+shadows which was invaded at times by the perplexing bulks of jarring
+realities. Then he fell in love with a girl whom he met in a cheap
+restaurant, and his story begins.
+
+The Rue Chartres, in New Orleans, is a street of ghosts. It lies in the
+quarter where the Frenchman, in his prime, set up his translated pride
+and glory; where, also, the arrogant don had swaggered, and dreamed of
+gold and grants and ladies’ gloves. Every flagstone has its grooves
+worn by footsteps going royally to the wooing and the fighting. Every
+house has a princely heartbreak; each doorway its untold tale of
+gallant promise and slow decay.
+
+By night the Rue Chartres is now but a murky fissure, from which the
+groping wayfarer sees, flung against the sky, the tangled filigree of
+Moorish iron balconies. The old houses of monsieur stand yet,
+indomitable against the century, but their essence is gone. The street
+is one of ghosts to whosoever can see them.
+
+A faint heartbeat of the street’s ancient glory still survives in a
+corner occupied by the Café Carabine d’Or. Once men gathered there to
+plot against kings, and to warn presidents. They do so yet, but they
+are not the same kind of men. A brass button will scatter these; those
+would have set their faces against an army. Above the door hangs the
+sign board, upon which has been depicted a vast animal of unfamiliar
+species. In the act of firing upon this monster is represented an
+unobtrusive human levelling an obtrusive gun, once the colour of bright
+gold. Now the legend above the picture is faded beyond conjecture; the
+gun’s relation to the title is a matter of faith; the menaced animal,
+wearied of the long aim of the hunter, has resolved itself into a
+shapeless blot.
+
+The place is known as “Antonio’s,” as the name, white upon the red-lit
+transparency, and gilt upon the windows, attests. There is a promise in
+“Antonio”; a justifiable expectancy of savoury things in oil and pepper
+and wine, and perhaps an angel’s whisper of garlic. But the rest of the
+name is “O’Riley.” Antonio O’Riley!
+
+The Carabine d’Or is an ignominious ghost of the Rue Chartres. The café
+where Bienville and Conti dined, where a prince has broken bread, is
+become a “family ristaurant.”
+
+Its customers are working men and women, almost to a unit. Occasionally
+you will see chorus girls from the cheaper theatres, and men who follow
+avocations subject to quick vicissitudes; but at Antonio’s—name rich in
+Bohemian promise, but tame in fulfillment—manners debonair and gay are
+toned down to the “family” standard. Should you light a cigarette, mine
+host will touch you on the “arrum” and remind you that the proprieties
+are menaced. “Antonio” entices and beguiles from fiery legend without,
+but “O’Riley” teaches decorum within.
+
+It was at this restaurant that Lorison first saw the girl. A flashy
+fellow with a predatory eye had followed her in, and had advanced to
+take the other chair at the little table where she stopped, but Lorison
+slipped into the seat before him. Their acquaintance began, and grew,
+and now for two months they had sat at the same table each evening, not
+meeting by appointment, but as if by a series of fortuitous and happy
+accidents. After dining, they would take a walk together in one of the
+little city parks, or among the panoramic markets where exhibits a
+continuous vaudeville of sights and sounds. Always at eight o’clock
+their steps led them to a certain street corner, where she prettily but
+firmly bade him good night and left him. “I do not live far from here,”
+she frequently said, “and you must let me go the rest of the way
+alone.”
+
+But now Lorison had discovered that he wanted to go the rest of the way
+with her, or happiness would depart, leaving, him on a very lonely
+corner of life. And at the same time that he made the discovery, the
+secret of his banishment from the society of the good laid its finger
+in his face and told him it must not be.
+
+Man is too thoroughly an egoist not to be also an egotist; if he love,
+the object shall know it. During a lifetime he may conceal it through
+stress of expediency and honour, but it shall bubble from his dying
+lips, though it disrupt a neighbourhood. It is known, however, that
+most men do not wait so long to disclose their passion. In the case of
+Lorison, his particular ethics positively forbade him to declare his
+sentiments, but he must needs dally with the subject, and woo by
+innuendo at least.
+
+On this night, after the usual meal at the Carabine d’Or, he strolled
+with his companion down the dim old street toward the river.
+
+The Rue Chartres perishes in the old Place d’Armes. The ancient
+Cabildo, where Spanish justice fell like hail, faces it, and the
+Cathedral, another provincial ghost, overlooks it. Its centre is a
+little, iron-railed park of flowers and immaculate gravelled walks,
+where citizens take the air of evenings. Pedestalled high above it, the
+general sits his cavorting steed, with his face turned stonily down the
+river toward English Turn, whence come no more Britons to bombard his
+cotton bales.
+
+Often the two sat in this square, but to-night Lorison guided her past
+the stone-stepped gate, and still riverward. As they walked, he smiled
+to himself to think that all he knew of her—except that he loved
+her—was her name, Norah Greenway, and that she lived with her brother.
+They had talked about everything except themselves. Perhaps her
+reticence had been caused by his.
+
+They came, at length, upon the levee, and sat upon a great, prostrate
+beam. The air was pungent with the dust of commerce. The great river
+slipped yellowly past. Across it Algiers lay, a longitudinous black
+bulk against a vibrant electric haze sprinkled with exact stars.
+
+The girl was young and of the piquant order. A certain bright
+melancholy pervaded her; she possessed an untarnished, pale prettiness
+doomed to please. Her voice, when she spoke, dwarfed her theme. It was
+the voice capable of investing little subjects with a large interest.
+She sat at ease, bestowing her skirts with the little womanly touch,
+serene as if the begrimed pier were a summer garden. Lorison poked the
+rotting boards with his cane.
+
+He began by telling her that he was in love with some one to whom he
+durst not speak of it. “And why not?” she asked, accepting swiftly his
+fatuous presentation of a third person of straw. “My place in the
+world,” he answered, “is none to ask a woman to share. I am an outcast
+from honest people; I am wrongly accused of one crime, and am, I
+believe, guilty of another.”
+
+Thence he plunged into the story of his abdication from society. The
+story, pruned of his moral philosophy, deserves no more than the
+slightest touch. It is no new tale, that of the gambler’s declension.
+During one night’s sitting he lost, and then had imperilled a certain
+amount of his employer’s money, which, by accident, he carried with
+him. He continued to lose, to the last wager, and then began to gain,
+leaving the game winner to a somewhat formidable sum. The same night
+his employer’s safe was robbed. A search was had; the winnings of
+Lorison were found in his room, their total forming an accusative
+nearness to the sum purloined. He was taken, tried and, through
+incomplete evidence, released, smutched with the sinister _devoirs_ of
+a disagreeing jury.
+
+“It is not in the unjust accusation,” he said to the girl, “that my
+burden lies, but in the knowledge that from the moment I staked the
+first dollar of the firm’s money I was a criminal—no matter whether I
+lost or won. You see why it is impossible for me to speak of love to
+her.”
+
+“It is a sad thing,” said Norah, after a little pause, “to think what
+very good people there are in the world.”
+
+“Good?” said Lorison.
+
+“I was thinking of this superior person whom you say you love. She must
+be a very poor sort of creature.”
+
+“I do not understand.”
+
+“Nearly,” she continued, “as poor a sort of creature as yourself.”
+
+“You do not understand,” said Lorison, removing his hat and sweeping
+back his fine, light hair. “Suppose she loved me in return, and were
+willing to marry me. Think, if you can, what would follow. Never a day
+would pass but she would be reminded of her sacrifice. I would read a
+condescension in her smile, a pity even in her affection, that would
+madden me. No. The thing would stand between us forever. Only equals
+should mate. I could never ask her to come down upon my lower plane.”
+
+An arc light faintly shone upon Lorison’s face. An illumination from
+within also pervaded it. The girl saw the rapt, ascetic look; it was
+the face either of Sir Galahad or Sir Fool.
+
+“Quite starlike,” she said, “is this unapproachable angel. Really too
+high to be grasped.”
+
+“By me, yes.”
+
+She faced him suddenly. “My dear friend, would you prefer your star
+fallen?” Lorison made a wide gesture.
+
+“You push me to the bald fact,” he declared; “you are not in sympathy
+with my argument. But I will answer you so. If I could reach my
+particular star, to drag it down, I would not do it; but if it were
+fallen, I would pick it up, and thank Heaven for the privilege.”
+
+They were silent for some minutes. Norah shivered, and thrust her hands
+deep into the pockets of her jacket. Lorison uttered a remorseful
+exclamation.
+
+“I’m not cold,” she said. “I was just thinking. I ought to tell you
+something. You have selected a strange confidante. But you cannot
+expect a chance acquaintance, picked up in a doubtful restaurant, to be
+an angel.”
+
+“Norah!” cried Lorison.
+
+“Let me go on. You have told me about yourself. We have been such good
+friends. I must tell you now what I never wanted you to know. I
+am—worse than you are. I was on the stage . . . I sang in the chorus .
+. . I was pretty bad, I guess . . . I stole diamonds from the prima
+donna . . . they arrested me . . . I gave most of them up, and they let
+me go . . . I drank wine every night . . . a great deal . . . I was
+very wicked, but—”
+
+Lorison knelt quickly by her side and took her hands.
+
+“Dear Norah!” he said, exultantly. “It is you, it is you I love! You
+never guessed it, did you? ’Tis you I meant all the time. Now I can
+speak. Let me make you forget the past. We have both suffered; let us
+shut out the world, and live for each other. Norah, do you hear me say
+I love you?”
+
+“In spite of—”
+
+“Rather say because of it. You have come out of your past noble and
+good. Your heart is an angel’s. Give it to me.”
+
+“A little while ago you feared the future too much to even speak.”
+
+“But for you; not for myself. Can you love me?”
+
+She cast herself, wildly sobbing, upon his breast.
+
+“Better than life—than truth itself—than everything.”
+
+“And my own past,” said Lorison, with a note of solicitude—“can you
+forgive and—”
+
+“I answered you that,” she whispered, “when I told you I loved you.”
+She leaned away, and looked thoughtfully at him. “If I had not told you
+about myself, would you have—would you—”
+
+“No,” he interrupted; “I would never have let you know I loved you. I
+would never have asked you this—Norah, will you be my wife?”
+
+She wept again.
+
+“Oh, believe me; I am good now—I am no longer wicked! I will be the
+best wife in the world. Don’t think I am—bad any more. If you do I
+shall die, I shall die!”
+
+While he was consoling, her, she brightened up, eager and impetuous.
+“Will you marry me to-night?” she said. “Will you prove it that way. I
+have a reason for wishing it to be to-night. Will you?”
+
+Of one of two things was this exceeding frankness the outcome: either
+of importunate brazenness or of utter innocence. The lover’s
+perspective contained only the one.
+
+“The sooner,” said Lorison, “the happier I shall be.”
+
+“What is there to do?” she asked. “What do you have to get? Come! You
+should know.”
+
+Her energy stirred the dreamer to action.
+
+“A city directory first,” he cried, gayly, “to find where the man lives
+who gives licenses to happiness. We will go together and rout him out.
+Cabs, cars, policemen, telephones and ministers shall aid us.”
+
+“Father Rogan shall marry us,” said the girl, with ardour. “I will take
+you to him.”
+
+An hour later the two stood at the open doorway of an immense, gloomy
+brick building in a narrow and lonely street. The license was tight in
+Norah’s hand.
+
+“Wait here a moment,” she said, “till I find Father Rogan.”
+
+She plunged into the black hallway, and the lover was left standing, as
+it were, on one leg, outside. His impatience was not greatly taxed.
+Gazing curiously into what seemed the hallway to Erebus, he was
+presently reassured by a stream of light that bisected the darkness,
+far down the passage. Then he heard her call, and fluttered lampward,
+like the moth. She beckoned him through a doorway into the room whence
+emanated the light. The room was bare of nearly everything except
+books, which had subjugated all its space. Here and there little spots
+of territory had been reconquered. An elderly, bald man, with a
+superlatively calm, remote eye, stood by a table with a book in his
+hand, his finger still marking a page. His dress was sombre and
+appertained to a religious order. His eye denoted an acquaintance with
+the perspective.
+
+“Father Rogan,” said Norah, “this is _he_.”
+
+“The two of ye,” said Father Rogan, “want to get married?”
+
+They did not deny it. He married them. The ceremony was quickly done.
+One who could have witnessed it, and felt its scope, might have
+trembled at the terrible inadequacy of it to rise to the dignity of its
+endless chain of results.
+
+Afterward the priest spake briefly, as if by rote, of certain other
+civil and legal addenda that either might or should, at a later time,
+cap the ceremony. Lorison tendered a fee, which was declined, and
+before the door closed after the departing couple Father Rogan’s book
+popped open again where his finger marked it.
+
+In the dark hall Norah whirled and clung to her companion, tearful.
+
+“Will you never, never be sorry?”
+
+At last she was reassured.
+
+At the first light they reached upon the street, she asked the time,
+just as she had each night. Lorison looked at his watch. Half-past
+eight.
+
+Lorison thought it was from habit that she guided their steps toward
+the corner where they always parted. But, arrived there, she hesitated,
+and then released his arm. A drug store stood on the corner; its
+bright, soft light shone upon them.
+
+“Please leave me here as usual to-night,” said Norah, sweetly. “I
+must—I would rather you would. You will not object? At six to-morrow
+evening I will meet you at Antonio’s. I want to sit with you there once
+more. And then—I will go where you say.” She gave him a bewildering,
+bright smile, and walked swiftly away.
+
+Surely it needed all the strength of her charm to carry off this
+astounding behaviour. It was no discredit to Lorison’s strength of mind
+that his head began to whirl. Pocketing his hands, he rambled vacuously
+over to the druggist’s windows, and began assiduously to spell over the
+names of the patent medicines therein displayed.
+
+As soon as he had recovered his wits, he proceeded along the street in
+an aimless fashion. After drifting for two or three squares, he flowed
+into a somewhat more pretentious thoroughfare, a way much frequented by
+him in his solitary ramblings. For here was a row of shops devoted to
+traffic in goods of the widest range of choice—handiworks of art, skill
+and fancy, products of nature and labour from every zone.
+
+Here, for a time, he loitered among the conspicuous windows, where was
+set, emphasized by congested floods of light, the cunningest spoil of
+the interiors. There were few passers, and of this Lorison was glad. He
+was not of the world. For a long time he had touched his fellow man
+only at the gear of a levelled cog-wheel—at right angles, and upon a
+different axis. He had dropped into a distinctly new orbit. The stroke
+of ill fortune had acted upon him, in effect, as a blow delivered upon
+the apex of a certain ingenious toy, the musical top, which, when thus
+buffeted while spinning, gives forth, with scarcely retarded motion, a
+complete change of key and chord.
+
+Strolling along the pacific avenue, he experienced singular,
+supernatural calm, accompanied by an unusual activity of brain.
+Reflecting upon recent affairs, he assured himself of his happiness in
+having won for a bride the one he had so greatly desired, yet he
+wondered mildly at his dearth of active emotion. Her strange behaviour
+in abandoning him without valid excuse on his bridal eve aroused in him
+only a vague and curious speculation. Again, he found himself
+contemplating, with complaisant serenity, the incidents of her somewhat
+lively career. His perspective seemed to have been queerly shifted.
+
+As he stood before a window near a corner, his ears were assailed by a
+waxing clamour and commotion. He stood close to the window to allow
+passage to the cause of the hubbub—a procession of human beings, which
+rounded the corner and headed in his direction. He perceived a salient
+hue of blue and a glitter of brass about a central figure of dazzling
+white and silver, and a ragged wake of black, bobbing figures.
+
+Two ponderous policemen were conducting between them a woman dressed as
+if for the stage, in a short, white, satiny skirt reaching to the
+knees, pink stockings, and a sort of sleeveless bodice bright with
+relucent, armour-like scales. Upon her curly, light hair was perched,
+at a rollicking angle, a shining tin helmet. The costume was to be
+instantly recognized as one of those amazing conceptions to which
+competition has harried the inventors of the spectacular ballet. One of
+the officers bore a long cloak upon his arm, which, doubtless, had been
+intended to veil the candid attractions of their effulgent prisoner,
+but, for some reason, it had not been called into use, to the
+vociferous delight of the tail of the procession.
+
+Compelled by a sudden and vigorous movement of the woman, the parade
+halted before the window by which Lorison stood. He saw that she was
+young, and, at the first glance, was deceived by a sophistical
+prettiness of her face, which waned before a more judicious scrutiny.
+Her look was bold and reckless, and upon her countenance, where yet the
+contours of youth survived, were the finger-marks of old age’s
+credentialed courier, Late Hours.
+
+The young woman fixed her unshrinking gaze upon Lorison, and called to
+him in the voice of the wronged heroine in straits:
+
+“Say! You look like a good fellow; come and put up the bail, won’t you?
+I’ve done nothing to get pinched for. It’s all a mistake. See how
+they’re treating me! You won’t be sorry, if you’ll help me out of this.
+Think of your sister or your girl being dragged along the streets this
+way! I say, come along now, like a good fellow.”
+
+It may be that Lorison, in spite of the unconvincing bathos of this
+appeal, showed a sympathetic face, for one of the officers left the
+woman’s side, and went over to him.
+
+“It’s all right, Sir,” he said, in a husky, confidential tone; “she’s
+the right party. We took her after the first act at the Green Light
+Theatre, on a wire from the chief of police of Chicago. It’s only a
+square or two to the station. Her rig’s pretty bad, but she refused to
+change clothes—or, rather,” added the officer, with a smile, “to put on
+some. I thought I’d explain matters to you so you wouldn’t think she
+was being imposed upon.”
+
+“What is the charge?” asked Lorison.
+
+“Grand larceny. Diamonds. Her husband is a jeweller in Chicago. She
+cleaned his show case of the sparklers, and skipped with a comic-opera
+troupe.”
+
+The policeman, perceiving that the interest of the entire group of
+spectators was centred upon himself and Lorison—their conference being
+regarded as a possible new complication—was fain to prolong the
+situation—which reflected his own importance—by a little afterpiece of
+philosophical comment.
+
+“A gentleman like you, Sir,” he went on affably, “would never notice
+it, but it comes in my line to observe what an immense amount of
+trouble is made by that combination—I mean the stage, diamonds and
+light-headed women who aren’t satisfied with good homes. I tell you,
+Sir, a man these days and nights wants to know what his women folks are
+up to.”
+
+The policeman smiled a good night, and returned to the side of his
+charge, who had been intently watching Lorison’s face during the
+conversation, no doubt for some indication of his intention to render
+succour. Now, at the failure of the sign, and at the movement made to
+continue the ignominious progress, she abandoned hope, and addressed
+him thus, pointedly:
+
+“You damn chalk-faced quitter! You was thinking of giving me a hand,
+but you let the cop talk you out of it the first word. You’re a dandy
+to tie to. Say, if you ever get a girl, she’ll have a picnic. Won’t she
+work you to the queen’s taste! Oh, my!” She concluded with a taunting,
+shrill laugh that rasped Lorison like a saw. The policemen urged her
+forward; the delighted train of gaping followers closed up the rear;
+and the captive Amazon, accepting her fate, extended the scope of her
+maledictions so that none in hearing might seem to be slighted.
+
+Then there came upon Lorison an overwhelming revulsion of his
+perspective. It may be that he had been ripe for it, that the abnormal
+condition of mind in which he had for so long existed was already about
+to revert to its balance; however, it is certain that the events of the
+last few minutes had furnished the channel, if not the impetus, for the
+change.
+
+The initial determining influence had been so small a thing as the fact
+and manner of his having been approached by the officer. That agent
+had, by the style of his accost, restored the loiterer to his former
+place in society. In an instant he had been transformed from a somewhat
+rancid prowler along the fishy side streets of gentility into an honest
+gentleman, with whom even so lordly a guardian of the peace might
+agreeably exchange the compliments.
+
+This, then, first broke the spell, and set thrilling in him a
+resurrected longing for the fellowship of his kind, and the rewards of
+the virtuous. To what end, he vehemently asked himself, was this
+fanciful self-accusation, this empty renunciation, this moral
+squeamishness through which he had been led to abandon what was his
+heritage in life, and not beyond his deserts? Technically, he was
+uncondemned; his sole guilty spot was in thought rather than deed, and
+cognizance of it unshared by others. For what good, moral or
+sentimental, did he slink, retreating like the hedgehog from his own
+shadow, to and fro in this musty Bohemia that lacked even the
+picturesque?
+
+But the thing that struck home and set him raging was the part played
+by the Amazonian prisoner. To the counterpart of that astounding
+belligerent—identical at least, in the way of experience—to one, by her
+own confession, thus far fallen, had he, not three hours since, been
+united in marriage. How desirable and natural it had seemed to him
+then, and how monstrous it seemed now! How the words of diamond thief
+number two yet burned in his ears: “If you ever get a girl, she’ll have
+a picnic.” What did that mean but that women instinctively knew him for
+one they could hoodwink? Still again, there reverberated the
+policeman’s sapient contribution to his agony: “A man these days and
+nights wants to know what his women folks are up to.” Oh, yes, he had
+been a fool; he had looked at things from the wrong standpoint.
+
+But the wildest note in all the clamour was struck by pain’s
+forefinger, jealousy. Now, at least, he felt that keenest sting—a
+mounting love unworthily bestowed. Whatever she might be, he loved her;
+he bore in his own breast his doom. A grating, comic flavour to his
+predicament struck him suddenly, and he laughed creakingly as he swung
+down the echoing pavement. An impetuous desire to act, to battle with
+his fate, seized him. He stopped upon his heel, and smote his palms
+together triumphantly. His wife was—where? But there was a tangible
+link; an outlet more or less navigable, through which his derelict ship
+of matrimony might yet be safely towed—the priest!
+
+Like all imaginative men with pliable natures, Lorison was, when
+thoroughly stirred, apt to become tempestuous. With a high and stubborn
+indignation upon him, be retraced his steps to the intersecting street
+by which he had come. Down this he hurried to the corner where he had
+parted with—an astringent grimace tinctured the thought—his wife.
+Thence still back he harked, following through an unfamiliar district
+his stimulated recollections of the way they had come from that
+preposterous wedding. Many times he went abroad, and nosed his way back
+to the trail, furious.
+
+At last, when he reached the dark, calamitous building in which his
+madness had culminated, and found the black hallway, he dashed down it,
+perceiving no light or sound. But he raised his voice, hailing loudly;
+reckless of everything but that he should find the old mischief-maker
+with the eyes that looked too far away to see the disaster he had
+wrought. The door opened, and in the stream of light Father Rogan
+stood, his book in hand, with his finger marking the place.
+
+“Ah!” cried Lorison. “You are the man I want. I had a wife of you a few
+hours ago. I would not trouble you, but I neglected to note how it was
+done. Will you oblige me with the information whether the business is
+beyond remedy?”
+
+“Come inside,” said the priest; “there are other lodgers in the house,
+who might prefer sleep to even a gratified curiosity.”
+
+Lorison entered the room and took the chair offered him. The priest’s
+eyes looked a courteous interrogation.
+
+“I must apologize again,” said the young man, “for so soon intruding
+upon you with my marital infelicities, but, as my wife has neglected to
+furnish me with her address, I am deprived of the legitimate recourse
+of a family row.”
+
+“I am quite a plain man,” said Father Rogan, pleasantly; “but I do not
+see how I am to ask you questions.”
+
+“Pardon my indirectness,” said Lorison; “I will ask one. In this room
+to-night you pronounced me to be a husband. You afterward spoke of
+additional rites or performances that either should or could be
+effected. I paid little attention to your words then, but I am hungry
+to hear them repeated now. As matters stand, am I married past all
+help?”
+
+“You are as legally and as firmly bound,” said the priest, “as though
+it had been done in a cathedral, in the presence of thousands. The
+additional observances I referred to are not necessary to the strictest
+legality of the act, but were advised as a precaution for the
+future—for convenience of proof in such contingencies as wills,
+inheritances and the like.”
+
+Lorison laughed harshly.
+
+“Many thanks,” he said. “Then there is no mistake, and I am the happy
+benedict. I suppose I should go stand upon the bridal corner, and when
+my wife gets through walking the streets she will look me up.”
+
+Father Rogan regarded him calmly.
+
+“My son,” he said, “when a man and woman come to me to be married I
+always marry them. I do this for the sake of other people whom they
+might go away and marry if they did not marry each other. As you see, I
+do not seek your confidence; but your case seems to me to be one not
+altogether devoid of interest. Very few marriages that have come to my
+notice have brought such well-expressed regret within so short a time.
+I will hazard one question: were you not under the impression that you
+loved the lady you married, at the time you did so;”
+
+“Loved her!” cried Lorison, wildly. “Never so well as now, though she
+told me she deceived and sinned and stole. Never more than now, when,
+perhaps, she is laughing at the fool she cajoled and left, with
+scarcely a word, to return to God only knows what particular line of
+her former folly.”
+
+Father Rogan answered nothing. During the silence that succeeded, he
+sat with a quiet expectation beaming in his full, lambent eye.
+
+“If you would listen—” began Lorison. The priest held up his hand.
+
+“As I hoped,” he said. “I thought you would trust me. Wait but a
+moment.” He brought a long clay pipe, filled and lighted it.
+
+“Now, my son,” he said.
+
+Lorison poured a twelve month’s accumulated confidence into Father
+Rogan’s ear. He told all; not sparing himself or omitting the facts of
+his past, the events of the night, or his disturbing conjectures and
+fears.
+
+“The main point,” said the priest, when he had concluded, “seems to me
+to be this—are you reasonably sure that you love this woman whom you
+have married?”
+
+“Why,” exclaimed Lorison, rising impulsively to his feet—“why should I
+deny it? But look at me—am I fish, flesh or fowl? That is the main
+point to me, I assure you.”
+
+“I understand you,” said the priest, also rising, and laying down his
+pipe. “The situation is one that has taxed the endurance of much older
+men than you—in fact, especially much older men than you. I will try to
+relieve you from it, and this night. You shall see for yourself into
+exactly what predicament you have fallen, and how you shall, possibly,
+be extricated. There is no evidence so credible as that of the
+eyesight.”
+
+Father Rogan moved about the room, and donned a soft black hat.
+Buttoning his coat to his throat, he laid his hand on the doorknob.
+“Let us walk,” he said.
+
+The two went out upon the street. The priest turned his face down it,
+and Lorison walked with him through a squalid district, where the
+houses loomed, awry and desolate-looking, high above them. Presently
+they turned into a less dismal side street, where the houses were
+smaller, and, though hinting of the most meagre comfort, lacked the
+concentrated wretchedness of the more populous byways.
+
+At a segregated, two-story house Father Rogan halted, and mounted the
+steps with the confidence of a familiar visitor. He ushered Lorison
+into a narrow hallway, faintly lighted by a cobwebbed hanging lamp.
+Almost immediately a door to the right opened and a dingy Irishwoman
+protruded her head.
+
+“Good evening to ye, Mistress Geehan,” said the priest, unconsciously,
+it seemed, falling into a delicately flavoured brogue. “And is it
+yourself can tell me if Norah has gone out again, the night, maybe?”
+
+“Oh, it’s yer blissid riverence! Sure and I can tell ye the same. The
+purty darlin’ wint out, as usual, but a bit later. And she says:
+‘Mother Geehan,’ says she, ‘it’s me last noight out, praise the saints,
+this noight is!’ And, oh, yer riverence, the swate, beautiful drame of
+a dress she had this toime! White satin and silk and ribbons, and lace
+about the neck and arrums—’twas a sin, yer reverence, the gold was
+spint upon it.”
+
+The priest heard Lorison catch his breath painfully, and a faint smile
+flickered across his own clean-cut mouth.
+
+“Well, then, Mistress Geehan,” said he, “I’ll just step upstairs and
+see the bit boy for a minute, and I’ll take this gentleman up with me.”
+
+“He’s awake, thin,” said the woman. “I’ve just come down from sitting
+wid him the last hour, tilling him fine shtories of ould County Tyrone.
+’Tis a greedy gossoon, it is, yer riverence, for me shtories.”
+
+“Small the doubt,” said Father Rogan. “There’s no rocking would put him
+to slape the quicker, I’m thinking.”
+
+Amid the woman’s shrill protest against the retort, the two men
+ascended the steep stairway. The priest pushed open the door of a room
+near its top.
+
+“Is that you already, sister?” drawled a sweet, childish voice from the
+darkness.
+
+“It’s only ould Father Denny come to see ye, darlin’; and a foine
+gentleman I’ve brought to make ye a gr-r-and call. And ye resaves us
+fast aslape in bed! Shame on yez manners!”
+
+“Oh, Father Denny, is that you? I’m glad. And will you light the lamp,
+please? It’s on the table by the door. And quit talking like Mother
+Geehan, Father Denny.”
+
+The priest lit the lamp, and Lorison saw a tiny, towsled-haired boy,
+with a thin, delicate face, sitting up in a small bed in a corner.
+Quickly, also, his rapid glance considered the room and its contents.
+It was furnished with more than comfort, and its adornments plainly
+indicated a woman’s discerning taste. An open door beyond revealed the
+blackness of an adjoining room’s interior.
+
+The boy clutched both of Father Rogan’s hands. “I’m so glad you came,”
+he said; “but why did you come in the night? Did sister send you?”
+
+“Off wid ye! Am I to be sint about, at me age, as was Terence McShane,
+of Ballymahone? I come on me own r-r-responsibility.”
+
+Lorison had also advanced to the boy’s bedside. He was fond of
+children; and the wee fellow, laying himself down to sleep alone in
+that dark room, stirred-his heart.
+
+“Aren’t you afraid, little man?” he asked, stooping down beside him.
+
+“Sometimes,” answered the boy, with a shy smile, “when the rats make
+too much noise. But nearly every night, when sister goes out, Mother
+Geehan stays a while with me, and tells me funny stories. I’m not often
+afraid, sir.”
+
+“This brave little gentleman,” said Father Rogan, “is a scholar of
+mine. Every day from half-past six to half-past eight—when sister comes
+for him—he stops in my study, and we find out what’s in the inside of
+books. He knows multiplication, division and fractions; and he’s
+troubling me to begin wid the chronicles of Ciaran of Clonmacnoise,
+Corurac McCullenan and Cuan O’Lochain, the gr-r-reat Irish
+histhorians.” The boy was evidently accustomed to the priest’s Celtic
+pleasantries. A little, appreciative grin was all the attention the
+insinuation of pedantry received.
+
+Lorison, to have saved his life, could not have put to the child one of
+those vital questions that were wildly beating about, unanswered, in
+his own brain. The little fellow was very like Norah; he had the same
+shining hair and candid eyes.
+
+“Oh, Father Denny,” cried the boy, suddenly, “I forgot to tell you!
+Sister is not going away at night any more! She told me so when she
+kissed me good night as she was leaving. And she said she was so happy,
+and then she cried. Wasn’t that queer? But I’m glad; aren’t you?”
+
+“Yes, lad. And now, ye omadhaun, go to sleep, and say good night; we
+must be going.”
+
+“Which shall I do first, Father Denny?”
+
+“Faith, he’s caught me again! Wait till I get the sassenach into the
+annals of Tageruach, the hagiographer; I’ll give him enough of the
+Irish idiom to make him more respectful.”
+
+The light was out, and the small, brave voice bidding them good night
+from the dark room. They groped downstairs, and tore away from the
+garrulity of Mother Geehan.
+
+Again the priest steered them through the dim ways, but this time in
+another direction. His conductor was serenely silent, and Lorison
+followed his example to the extent of seldom speaking. Serene he could
+not be. His heart beat suffocatingly in his breast. The following of
+this blind, menacing trail was pregnant with he knew not what
+humiliating revelation to be delivered at its end.
+
+They came into a more pretentious street, where trade, it could be
+surmised, flourished by day. And again the priest paused; this time
+before a lofty building, whose great doors and windows in the lowest
+floor were carefully shuttered and barred. Its higher apertures were
+dark, save in the third story, the windows of which were brilliantly
+lighted. Lorison’s ear caught a distant, regular, pleasing thrumming,
+as of music above. They stood at an angle of the building. Up, along
+the side nearest them, mounted an iron stairway. At its top was an
+upright, illuminated parallelogram. Father Rogan had stopped, and
+stood, musing.
+
+“I will say this much,” he remarked, thoughtfully: “I believe you to be
+a better man than you think yourself to be, and a better man than I
+thought some hours ago. But do not take this,” he added, with a smile,
+“as much praise. I promised you a possible deliverance from an unhappy
+perplexity. I will have to modify that promise. I can only remove the
+mystery that enhanced that perplexity. Your deliverance depends upon
+yourself. Come.”
+
+He led his companion up the stairway. Halfway up, Lorison caught him by
+the sleeve. “Remember,” he gasped, “I love that woman.”
+
+“You desired to know.
+
+“I—Go on.”
+
+The priest reached the landing at the top of the stairway. Lorison,
+behind him, saw that the illuminated space was the glass upper half of
+a door opening into the lighted room. The rhythmic music increased as
+they neared it; the stairs shook with the mellow vibrations.
+
+Lorison stopped breathing when he set foot upon the highest step, for
+the priest stood aside, and motioned him to look through the glass of
+the door.
+
+His eye, accustomed to the darkness, met first a blinding glare, and
+then he made out the faces and forms of many people, amid an
+extravagant display of splendid robings—billowy laces, brilliant-hued
+finery, ribbons, silks and misty drapery. And then he caught the
+meaning of that jarring hum, and he saw the tired, pale, happy face of
+his wife, bending, as were a score of others, over her sewing
+machine—toiling, toiling. Here was the folly she pursued, and the end
+of his quest.
+
+But not his deliverance, though even then remorse struck him. His
+shamed soul fluttered once more before it retired to make room for the
+other and better one. For, to temper his thrill of joy, the shine of
+the satin and the glimmer of ornaments recalled the disturbing figure
+of the bespangled Amazon, and the base duplicate histories lit by the
+glare of footlights and stolen diamonds. It is past the wisdom of him
+who only sets the scenes, either to praise or blame the man. But this
+time his love overcame his scruples. He took a quick step, and reached
+out his hand for the doorknob. Father Rogan was quicker to arrest it
+and draw him back.
+
+“You use my trust in you queerly,” said the priest sternly. “What are
+you about to do?”
+
+“I am going to my wife,” said Lorison. “Let me pass.”
+
+“Listen,” said the priest, holding him firmly by the arm. “I am about
+to put you in possession of a piece of knowledge of which, thus far,
+you have scarcely proved deserving. I do not think you ever will; but I
+will not dwell upon that. You see in that room the woman you married,
+working for a frugal living for herself, and a generous comfort for an
+idolized brother. This building belongs to the chief costumer of the
+city. For months the advance orders for the coming Mardi Gras festivals
+have kept the work going day and night. I myself secured employment
+here for Norah. She toils here each night from nine o’clock until
+daylight, and, besides, carries home with her some of the finer
+costumes, requiring more delicate needlework, and works there part of
+the day. Somehow, you two have remained strangely ignorant of each
+other’s lives. Are you convinced now that your wife is not walking the
+streets?”
+
+“Let me go to her,” cried Lorison, again struggling, “and beg her
+forgiveness!’
+
+“Sir,” said the priest, “do you owe me nothing? Be quiet. It seems so
+often that Heaven lets fall its choicest gifts into hands that must be
+taught to hold them. Listen again. You forgot that repentant sin must
+not compromise, but look up, for redemption, to the purest and best.
+You went to her with the fine-spun sophistry that peace could be found
+in a mutual guilt; and she, fearful of losing what her heart so craved,
+thought it worth the price to buy it with a desperate, pure, beautiful
+lie. I have known her since the day she was born; she is as innocent
+and unsullied in life and deed as a holy saint. In that lowly street
+where she dwells she first saw the light, and she has lived there ever
+since, spending her days in generous self-sacrifice for others. Och, ye
+spalpeen!” continued Father Rogan, raising his finger in kindly anger
+at Lorison. “What for, I wonder, could she be after making a fool of
+hersilf, and shamin’ her swate soul with lies, for the like of you!”
+
+“Sir,” said Lorison, trembling, “say what you please of me. Doubt it as
+you must, I will yet prove my gratitude to you, and my devotion to her.
+But let me speak to her once now, let me kneel for just one moment at
+her feet, and—”
+
+“Tut, tut!” said the priest. “How many acts of a love drama do you
+think an old bookworm like me capable of witnessing? Besides, what kind
+of figures do we cut, spying upon the mysteries of midnight millinery!
+Go to meet your wife to-morrow, as she ordered you, and obey her
+thereafter, and maybe some time I shall get forgiveness for the part I
+have played in this night’s work. Off wid yez down the shtairs, now!
+’Tis late, and an ould man like me should be takin’ his rest.”
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES
+
+
+“Aunt Ellen,” said Octavia, cheerfully, as she threw her black kid
+gloves carefully at the dignified Persian cat on the window-seat, “I’m
+a pauper.”
+
+“You are so extreme in your statements, Octavia, dear,” said Aunt
+Ellen, mildly, looking up from her paper. “If you find yourself
+temporarily in need of some small change for bonbons, you will find my
+purse in the drawer of the writing desk.”
+
+Octavia Beaupree removed her hat and seated herself on a footstool near
+her aunt’s chair, clasping her hands about her knees. Her slim and
+flexible figure, clad in a modish mourning costume, accommodated itself
+easily and gracefully to the trying position. Her bright and youthful
+face, with its pair of sparkling, life-enamoured eyes, tried to compose
+itself to the seriousness that the occasion seemed to demand.
+
+“You good auntie, it isn’t a case of bonbons; it is abject, staring,
+unpicturesque poverty, with ready-made clothes, gasolined gloves, and
+probably one o’clock dinners all waiting with the traditional wolf at
+the door. I’ve just come from my lawyer, auntie, and, ‘Please, ma’am, I
+ain’t got nothink ’t all. Flowers, lady? Buttonhole, gentleman?
+Pencils, sir, three for five, to help a poor widow?’ Do I do it nicely,
+auntie, or, as a bread-winner accomplishment, were my lessons in
+elocution entirely wasted?”
+
+“Do be serious, my dear,” said Aunt Ellen, letting her paper fall to
+the floor, “long enough to tell me what you mean. Colonel Beaupree’s
+estate—”
+
+“Colonel Beaupree’s estate,” interrupted Octavia, emphasizing her words
+with appropriate dramatic gestures, “is of Spanish castellar
+architecture. Colonel Beaupree’s resources are—wind. Colonel Beaupree’s
+stocks are—water. Colonel Beaupree’s income is—all in. The statement
+lacks the legal technicalities to which I have been listening for an
+hour, but that is what it means when translated.”
+
+“Octavia!” Aunt Ellen was now visibly possessed by consternation. “I
+can hardly believe it. And it was the impression that he was worth a
+million. And the De Peysters themselves introduced him!”
+
+Octavia rippled out a laugh, and then became properly grave.
+
+“_De mortuis nil_, auntie—not even the rest of it. The dear old
+colonel—what a gold brick he was, after all! I paid for my bargain
+fairly—I’m all here, am I not?—items: eyes, fingers, toes, youth, old
+family, unquestionable position in society as called for in the
+contract—no wild-cat stock here.” Octavia picked up the morning paper
+from the floor. “But I’m not going to ‘squeal’—isn’t that what they
+call it when you rail at Fortune because you’ve, lost the game?” She
+turned the pages of the paper calmly. “‘Stock market’—no use for that.
+‘Society’s doings’—that’s done. Here is my page— the wish column. A Van
+Dresser could not be said to ‘want’ for anything, of course.
+‘Chamber-maids, cooks, canvassers, stenographers—’”
+
+“Dear,” said Aunt Ellen, with a little tremor in her voice, “please do
+not talk in that way. Even if your affairs are in so unfortunate a
+condition, there is my three thousand—”
+
+Octavia sprang up lithely, and deposited a smart kiss on the delicate
+cheek of the prim little elderly maid.
+
+“Blessed auntie, your three thousand is just sufficient to insure your
+Hyson to be free from willow leaves and keep the Persian in sterilized
+cream. I know I’d be welcome, but I prefer to strike bottom like
+Beelzebub rather than hang around like the Peri listening to the music
+from the side entrance. I’m going to earn my own living. There’s
+nothing else to do. I’m a—Oh, oh, oh!—I had forgotten. There’s one
+thing saved from the wreck. It’s a corral—no, a ranch in—let me
+see—Texas: an asset, dear old Mr. Bannister called it. How pleased he
+was to show me something he could describe as unencumbered! I’ve a
+description of it among those stupid papers he made me bring away with
+me from his office. I’ll try to find it.”
+
+Octavia found her shopping-bag, and drew from it a long envelope filled
+with typewritten documents.
+
+“A ranch in Texas,” sighed Aunt Ellen. “It sounds to me more like a
+liability than an asset. Those are the places where the centipedes are
+found, and cowboys, and fandangos.”
+
+“‘The Rancho de las Sombras,’” read Octavia from a sheet of violently
+purple typewriting, “‘is situated one hundred and ten miles southeast
+of San Antonio, and thirty-eight miles from its nearest railroad
+station, Nopal, on the I. and G. N. Ranch, consists of 7,680 acres of
+well-watered land, with title conferred by State patents, and
+twenty-two sections, or 14,080 acres, partly under yearly running lease
+and partly bought under State’s twenty-year-purchase act. Eight
+thousand graded merino sheep, with the necessary equipment of horses,
+vehicles and general ranch paraphernalia. Ranch-house built of brick,
+with six rooms comfortably furnished according to the requirements of
+the climate. All within a strong barbed-wire fence.
+
+“‘The present ranch manager seems to be competent and reliable, and is
+rapidly placing upon a paying basis a business that, in other hands,
+had been allowed to suffer from neglect and misconduct.
+
+“‘This property was secured by Colonel Beaupree in a deal with a
+Western irrigation syndicate, and the title to it seems to be perfect.
+With careful management and the natural increase of land values, it
+ought to be made the foundation for a comfortable fortune for its
+owner.’”
+
+When Octavia ceased reading, Aunt Ellen uttered something as near a
+sniff as her breeding permitted.
+
+“The prospectus,” she said, with uncompromising metropolitan suspicion,
+“doesn’t mention the centipedes, or the Indians. And you never did like
+mutton, Octavia. I don’t see what advantage you can derive from
+this—desert.”
+
+But Octavia was in a trance. Her eyes were steadily regarding something
+quite beyond their focus. Her lips were parted, and her face was
+lighted by the kindling furor of the explorer, the ardent, stirring
+disquiet of the adventurer. Suddenly she clasped her hands together
+exultantly.
+
+“The problem solves itself, auntie,” she cried. “I’m going to that
+ranch. I’m going to live on it. I’m going to learn to like mutton, and
+even concede the good qualities of centipedes—at a respectful distance.
+It’s just what I need. It’s a new life that comes when my old one is
+just ending. It’s a release, auntie; it isn’t a narrowing. Think of the
+gallops over those leagues of prairies, with the wind tugging at the
+roots of your hair, the coming close to the earth and learning over
+again the stories of the growing grass and the little wild flowers
+without names! Glorious is what it will be. Shall I be a shepherdess
+with a Watteau hat, and a crook to keep the bad wolves from the lambs,
+or a typical Western ranch girl, with short hair, like the pictures of
+her in the Sunday papers? I think the latter. And they’ll have my
+picture, too, with the wild-cats I’ve slain, single-handed, hanging
+from my saddle horn. ‘From the Four Hundred to the Flocks’ is the way
+they’ll headline it, and they’ll print photographs of the old Van
+Dresser mansion and the church where I was married. They won’t have my
+picture, but they’ll get an artist to draw it. I’ll be wild and woolly,
+and I’ll grow my own wool.”
+
+“Octavia!” Aunt Ellen condensed into the one word all the protests she
+was unable to utter.
+
+“Don’t say a word, auntie. I’m going. I’ll see the sky at night fit
+down on the world like a big butter-dish cover, and I’ll make friends
+again with the stars that I haven’t had a chat with since I was a wee
+child. I wish to go. I’m tired of all this. I’m glad I haven’t any
+money. I could bless Colonel Beaupree for that ranch, and forgive him
+for all his bubbles. What if the life will be rough and lonely! I—I
+deserve it. I shut my heart to everything except that miserable
+ambition. I—oh, I wish to go away, and forget—forget!”
+
+Octavia swerved suddenly to her knees, laid her flushed face in her
+aunt’s lap, and shook with turbulent sobs.
+
+Aunt Ellen bent over her, and smoothed the coppery-brown hair.
+
+“I didn’t know,” she said, gently; “I didn’t know—that. Who was it,
+dear?”
+
+When Mrs. Octavia Beaupree, née Van Dresser, stepped from the train at
+Nopal, her manner lost, for the moment, some of that easy certitude
+which had always marked her movements. The town was of recent
+establishment, and seemed to have been hastily constructed of undressed
+lumber and flapping canvas. The element that had congregated about the
+station, though not offensively demonstrative, was clearly composed of
+citizens accustomed to and prepared for rude alarms.
+
+Octavia stood on the platform, against the telegraph office, and
+attempted to choose by intuition from the swaggering, straggling string
+of loungers, the manager of the Rancho de las Sombras, who had been
+instructed by Mr. Bannister to meet her there. That tall, serious,
+looking, elderly man in the blue flannel shirt and white tie she
+thought must be he. But, no; he passed by, removing his gaze from the
+lady as hers rested on him, according to the Southern custom. The
+manager, she thought, with some impatience at being kept waiting,
+should have no difficulty in selecting her. Young women wearing the
+most recent thing in ash-coloured travelling suits were not so
+plentiful in Nopal!
+
+Thus keeping a speculative watch on all persons of possible managerial
+aspect, Octavia, with a catching breath and a start of surprise,
+suddenly became aware of Teddy Westlake hurrying along the platform in
+the direction of the train—of Teddy Westlake or his sun-browned ghost
+in cheviot, boots and leather-girdled hat—Theodore Westlake, Jr.,
+amateur polo (almost) champion, all-round butterfly and cumberer of the
+soil; but a broader, surer, more emphasized and determined Teddy than
+the one she had known a year ago when last she saw him.
+
+He perceived Octavia at almost the same time, deflected his course, and
+steered for her in his old, straightforward way. Something like awe
+came upon her as the strangeness of his metamorphosis was brought into
+closer range; the rich, red-brown of his complexion brought out so
+vividly his straw-coloured mustache and steel-gray eyes. He seemed more
+grown-up, and, somehow, farther away. But, when he spoke, the old,
+boyish Teddy came back again. They had been friends from childhood.
+
+“Why, ’Tave!” he exclaimed, unable to reduce his perplexity to
+coherence. “How—what—when—where?”
+
+“Train,” said Octavia; “necessity; ten minutes ago; home. Your
+complexion’s gone, Teddy. Now, how—what—when—where?”
+
+“I’m working down here,” said Teddy. He cast side glances about the
+station as one does who tries to combine politeness with duty.
+
+“You didn’t notice on the train,” he asked, “an old lady with gray
+curls and a poodle, who occupied two seats with her bundles and
+quarrelled with the conductor, did you?”
+
+“I think not,” answered Octavia, reflecting. “And you haven’t, by any
+chance, noticed a big, gray-mustached man in a blue shirt and
+six-shooters, with little flakes of merino wool sticking in his hair,
+have you?”
+
+“Lots of ’em,” said Teddy, with symptoms of mental delirium under the
+strain. Do you happen to know any such individual?”
+
+“No; the description is imaginary. Is your interest in the old lady
+whom you describe a personal one?”
+
+“Never saw her in my life. She’s painted entirely from fancy. She owns
+the little piece of property where I earn my bread and butter—the
+Rancho de las Sombras. I drove up to meet her according to arrangement
+with her lawyer.”
+
+Octavia leaned against the wall of the telegraph office. Was this
+possible? And didn’t he know?
+
+“Are you the manager of that ranch?” she asked weakly.
+
+“I am,” said Teddy, with pride.
+
+“I am Mrs. Beaupree,” said Octavia faintly; “but my hair never would
+curl, and I was polite to the conductor.”
+
+For a moment that strange, grown-up look came back, and removed Teddy
+miles away from her.
+
+“I hope you’ll excuse me,” he said, rather awkwardly. “You see, I’ve
+been down here in the chaparral a year. I hadn’t heard. Give me your
+checks, please, and I’ll have your traps loaded into the wagon. José
+will follow with them. We travel ahead in the buckboard.”
+
+Seated by Teddy in a feather-weight buckboard, behind a pair of wild,
+cream-coloured Spanish ponies, Octavia abandoned all thought for the
+exhilaration of the present. They swept out of the little town and down
+the level road toward the south. Soon the road dwindled and
+disappeared, and they struck across a world carpeted with an endless
+reach of curly mesquite grass. The wheels made no sound. The tireless
+ponies bounded ahead at an unbroken gallop. The temperate wind, made
+fragrant by thousands of acres of blue and yellow wild flowers, roared
+gloriously in their ears. The motion was aërial, ecstatic, with a
+thrilling sense of perpetuity in its effect. Octavia sat silent,
+possessed by a feeling of elemental, sensual bliss. Teddy seemed to be
+wrestling with some internal problem.
+
+“I’m going to call you madama,” he announced as the result of his
+labours. “That is what the Mexicans will call you—they’re nearly all
+Mexicans on the ranch, you know. That seems to me about the proper
+thing.”
+
+“Very well, Mr. Westlake,” said Octavia, primly.
+
+“Oh, now,” said Teddy, in some consternation, “that’s carrying the
+thing too far, isn’t it?”
+
+“Don’t worry me with your beastly etiquette. I’m just beginning to
+live. Don’t remind me of anything artificial. If only this air could be
+bottled! This much alone is worth coming for. Oh, look I there goes a
+deer!”
+
+“Jack-rabbit,” said Teddy, without turning his head.
+
+“Could I—might I drive?” suggested Octavia, panting, with rose-tinted
+cheeks and the eye of an eager child.
+
+“On one condition. Could I—might I smoke?”
+
+“Forever!” cried Octavia, taking the lines with solemn joy. “How shall
+I know which way to drive?”
+
+“Keep her sou’ by sou’east, and all sail set. You see that black speck
+on the horizon under that lowermost Gulf cloud? That’s a group of
+live-oaks and a landmark. Steer halfway between that and the little
+hill to the left. I’ll recite you the whole code of driving rules for
+the Texas prairies: keep the reins from under the horses’ feet, and
+swear at ’em frequent.”
+
+“I’m too happy to swear, Ted. Oh, why do people buy yachts or travel in
+palace-cars, when a buckboard and a pair of plugs and a spring morning
+like this can satisfy all desire?”
+
+“Now, I’ll ask you,” protested Teddy, who was futilely striking match
+after match on the dashboard, “not to call those denizens of the air
+plugs. They can kick out a hundred miles between daylight and dark.” At
+last he succeeded in snatching a light for his cigar from the flame
+held in the hollow of his hands.
+
+“Room!” said Octavia, intensely. “That’s what produces the effect. I
+know now what I’ve wanted—scope—range—room!”
+
+“Smoking-room,” said Teddy, unsentimentally. “I love to smoke in a
+buckboard. The wind blows the smoke into you and out again. It saves
+exertion.”
+
+The two fell so naturally into their old-time goodfellowship that it
+was only by degrees that a sense of the strangeness of the new
+relations between them came to be felt.
+
+“Madama,” said Teddy, wonderingly, “however did you get it into your
+head to cut the crowd and come down here? Is it a fad now among the
+upper classes to trot off to sheep ranches instead of to Newport?”
+
+“I was broke, Teddy,” said Octavia, sweetly, with her interest centred
+upon steering safely between a Spanish dagger plant and a clump of
+chaparral; “I haven’t a thing in the world but this ranch—not even any
+other home to go to.”
+
+“Come, now,” said Teddy, anxiously but incredulously, “you don’t mean
+it?”
+
+“When my husband,” said Octavia, with a shy slurring of the word, “died
+three months ago I thought I had a reasonable amount of the world’s
+goods. His lawyer exploded that theory in a sixty-minute fully
+illustrated lecture. I took to the sheep as a last resort. Do you
+happen to know of any fashionable caprice among the gilded youth of
+Manhattan that induces them to abandon polo and club windows to become
+managers of sheep ranches?”
+
+“It’s easily explained in my case,” responded Teddy, promptly. “I had
+to go to work. I couldn’t have earned my board in New York, so I
+chummed a while with old Sandford, one of the syndicate that owned the
+ranch before Colonel Beaupree bought it, and got a place down here. I
+wasn’t manager at first. I jogged around on ponies and studied the
+business in detail, until I got all the points in my head. I saw where
+it was losing and what the remedies were, and then Sandford put me in
+charge. I get a hundred dollars a month, and I earn it.”
+
+“Poor Teddy!” said Octavia, with a smile.
+
+“You needn’t. I like it. I save half my wages, and I’m as hard as a
+water plug. It beats polo.”
+
+“Will it furnish bread and tea and jam for another outcast from
+civilization?”
+
+“The spring shearing,” said the manager, “just cleaned up a deficit in
+last year’s business. Wastefulness and inattention have been the rule
+heretofore. The autumn clip will leave a small profit over all
+expenses. Next year there will be jam.”
+
+When, about four o’clock in the afternoon, the ponies rounded a gentle,
+brush-covered hill, and then swooped, like a double cream-coloured
+cyclone, upon the Rancho de las Sombras, Octavia gave a little cry of
+delight. A lordly grove of magnificent live-oaks cast an area of
+grateful, cool shade, whence the ranch had drawn its name, “de las
+Sombras”—of the shadows. The house, of red brick, one story, ran low
+and long beneath the trees. Through its middle, dividing its six rooms
+in half, extended a broad, arched passageway, picturesque with
+flowering cactus and hanging red earthen jars. A “gallery,” low and
+broad, encircled the building. Vines climbed about it, and the adjacent
+ground was, for a space, covered with transplanted grass and shrubs. A
+little lake, long and narrow, glimmered in the sun at the rear. Further
+away stood the shacks of the Mexican workers, the corrals, wool sheds
+and shearing pens. To the right lay the low hills, splattered with dark
+patches of chaparral; to the left the unbounded green prairie blending
+against the blue heavens.
+
+“It’s a home, Teddy,” said Octavia, breathlessly; that’s what it
+is—it’s a home.”
+
+“Not so bad for a sheep ranch,” admitted Teddy, with excusable pride.
+“I’ve been tinkering on it at odd times.”
+
+A Mexican youth sprang from somewhere in the grass, and took charge of
+the creams. The mistress and the manager entered the house.
+
+“Here’s Mrs. MacIntyre,” said Teddy, as a placid, neat, elderly lady
+came out upon the gallery to meet them. “Mrs. Mac, here’s the boss.
+Very likely she will be wanting a hunk of ham and a dish of beans after
+her drive.”
+
+Mrs. MacIntyre, the housekeeper, as much a fixture on the place as the
+lake or the live-oaks, received the imputation of the ranch’s resources
+of refreshment with mild indignation, and was about to give it
+utterance when Octavia spoke.
+
+“Oh, Mrs. MacIntyre, don’t apologize for Teddy. Yes, I call him Teddy.
+So does every one whom he hasn’t duped into taking him seriously. You
+see, we used to cut paper dolls and play jackstraws together ages ago.
+No one minds what he says.”
+
+“No,” said Teddy, “no one minds what he says, just so he doesn’t do it
+again.”
+
+Octavia cast one of those subtle, sidelong glances toward him from
+beneath her lowered eyelids—a glance that Teddy used to describe as an
+upper-cut. But there was nothing in his ingenuous, weather-tanned face
+to warrant a suspicion that he was making an allusion—nothing. Beyond a
+doubt, thought Octavia, he had forgotten.
+
+“Mr. Westlake likes his fun,” said Mrs. Maclntyre, as she conducted
+Octavia to her rooms. “But,” she added, loyally, “people around here
+usually pay attention to what he says when he talks in earnest. I don’t
+know what would have become of this place without him.”
+
+Two rooms at the east end of the house had been arranged for the
+occupancy of the ranch’s mistress. When she entered them a slight
+dismay seized her at their bare appearance and the scantiness of their
+furniture; but she quickly reflected that the climate was a
+semi-tropical one, and was moved to appreciation of the well-conceived
+efforts to conform to it. The sashes had already been removed from the
+big windows, and white curtains waved in the Gulf breeze that streamed
+through the wide jalousies. The bare floor was amply strewn with cool
+rugs; the chairs were inviting, deep, dreamy willows; the walls were
+papered with a light, cheerful olive. One whole side of her sitting
+room was covered with books on smooth, unpainted pine shelves. She flew
+to these at once. Before her was a well-selected library. She caught
+glimpses of titles of volumes of fiction and travel not yet seasoned
+from the dampness of the press.
+
+Presently, recollecting that she was now in a wilderness given over to
+mutton, centipedes and privations, the incongruity of these luxuries
+struck her, and, with intuitive feminine suspicion, she began turning
+to the fly-leaves of volume after volume. Upon each one was inscribed
+in fluent characters the name of Theodore Westlake, Jr.
+
+Octavia, fatigued by her long journey, retired early that night. Lying
+upon her white, cool bed, she rested deliciously, but sleep coquetted
+long with her. She listened to faint noises whose strangeness kept her
+faculties on the alert—the fractious yelping of the coyotes, the
+ceaseless, low symphony of the wind, the distant booming of the frogs
+about the lake, the lamentation of a concertina in the Mexicans’
+quarters. There were many conflicting feelings in her
+heart—thankfulness and rebellion, peace and disquietude, loneliness and
+a sense of protecting care, happiness and an old, haunting pain.
+
+She did what any other woman would have done—sought relief in a
+wholesome tide of unreasonable tears, and her last words, murmured to
+herself before slumber, capitulating, came softly to woo her, were “He
+has forgotten.”
+
+The manager of the Rancho de las Sombras was no dilettante. He was a
+“hustler.” He was generally up, mounted, and away of mornings before
+the rest of the household were awake, making the rounds of the flocks
+and camps. This was the duty of the major-domo, a stately old Mexican
+with a princely air and manner, but Teddy seemed to have a great deal
+of confidence in his own eyesight. Except in the busy seasons, he
+nearly always returned to the ranch to breakfast at eight o’clock, with
+Octavia and Mrs. Maclntyre, at the little table set in the central
+hallway, bringing with him a tonic and breezy cheerfulness full of the
+health and flavour of the prairies.
+
+A few days after Octavia’s arrival he made her get out one of her
+riding skirts, and curtail it to a shortness demanded by the chaparral
+brakes.
+
+With some misgivings she donned this and the pair of buckskin leggings
+he prescribed in addition, and, mounted upon a dancing pony, rode with
+him to view her possessions. He showed her everything—the flocks of
+ewes, muttons and grazing lambs, the dipping vats, the shearing pens,
+the uncouth merino rams in their little pasture, the water-tanks
+prepared against the summer drought—giving account of his stewardship
+with a boyish enthusiasm that never flagged.
+
+Where was the old Teddy that she knew so well? This side of him was the
+same, and it was a side that pleased her; but this was all she ever saw
+of him now. Where was his sentimentality—those old, varying moods of
+impetuous love-making, of fanciful, quixotic devotion, of
+heart-breaking gloom, of alternating, absurd tenderness and haughty
+dignity? His nature had been a sensitive one, his temperament bordering
+closely on the artistic. She knew that, besides being a follower of
+fashion and its fads and sports, he had cultivated tastes of a finer
+nature. He had written things, he had tampered with colours, he was
+something of a student in certain branches of art, and once she had
+been admitted to all his aspirations and thoughts. But now—and she
+could not avoid the conclusion—Teddy had barricaded against her every
+side of himself except one—the side that showed the manager of the
+Rancho de las Sombras and a jolly chum who had forgiven and forgotten.
+Queerly enough the words of Mr. Bannister’s description of her property
+came into her mind—“all inclosed within a strong barbed-wire fence.”
+
+“Teddy’s fenced, too,” said Octavia to herself.
+
+It was not difficult for her to reason out the cause of his
+fortifications. It had originated one night at the Hammersmiths’ ball.
+It occurred at a time soon after she had decided to accept Colonel
+Beaupree and his million, which was no more than her looks and the
+entrée she held to the inner circles were worth. Teddy had proposed
+with all his impetuosity and fire, and she looked him straight in the
+eyes, and said, coldly and finally: “Never let me hear any such silly
+nonsense from you again.” “You won’t,” said Teddy, with an expression
+around his mouth, and—now Teddy was inclosed within a strong
+barbed-wire fence.
+
+It was on this first ride of inspection that Teddy was seized by the
+inspiration that suggested the name of Mother Goose’s heroine, and he
+at once bestowed it upon Octavia. The idea, supported by both a
+similarity of names and identity of occupations, seemed to strike him
+as a peculiarly happy one, and he never tired of using it. The Mexicans
+on the ranch also took up the name, adding another syllable to
+accommodate their lingual incapacity for the final “p,” gravely
+referring to her as “La Madama Bo-Peepy.” Eventually it spread, and
+“Madame Bo-Peep’s ranch” was as often mentioned as the “Rancho de las
+Sombras.”
+
+Came the long, hot season from May to September, when work is scarce on
+the ranches. Octavia passed the days in a kind of lotus-eater’s dream.
+Books, hammocks, correspondence with a few intimate friends, a renewed
+interest in her old water-colour box and easel—these disposed of the
+sultry hours of daylight. The evenings were always sure to bring
+enjoyment. Best of all were the rapturous horseback rides with Teddy,
+when the moon gave light over the wind-swept leagues, chaperoned by the
+wheeling night-hawk and the startled owl. Often the Mexicans would come
+up from their shacks with their guitars and sing the weirdest of
+heart-breaking songs. There were long, cosy chats on the breezy
+gallery, and an interminable warfare of wits between Teddy and Mrs.
+MacIntyre, whose abundant Scotch shrewdness often more than overmatched
+the lighter humour in which she was lacking.
+
+And the nights came, one after another, and were filed away by weeks
+and months—nights soft and languorous and fragrant, that should have
+driven Strephon to Chloe over wires however barbed, that might have
+drawn Cupid himself to hunt, lasso in hand, among those amorous
+pastures—but Teddy kept his fences up.
+
+One July night Madame Bo-Peep and her ranch manager were sitting on the
+east gallery. Teddy had been exhausting the science of prognostication
+as to the probabilities of a price of twenty-four cents for the autumn
+clip, and had then subsided into an anesthetic cloud of Havana smoke.
+Only as incompetent a judge as a woman would have failed to note long
+ago that at least a third of his salary must have gone up in the fumes
+of those imported Regalias.
+
+“Teddy,” said Octavia, suddenly, and rather sharply, “what are you
+working down here on a ranch for?”
+
+“One hundred per,” said Teddy, glibly, “and found.”
+
+“I’ve a good mind to discharge you.”
+
+“Can’t do it,” said Teddy, with a grin.
+
+“Why not?” demanded Octavia, with argumentative heat.
+
+“Under contract. Terms of sale respect all unexpired contracts. Mine
+runs until 12 P. M., December thirty-first. You might get up at
+midnight on that date and fire me. If you try it sooner I’ll be in a
+position to bring legal proceedings.”
+
+Octavia seemed to be considering the prospects of litigation.
+
+“But,” continued Teddy cheerfully, “I’ve been thinking of resigning
+anyway.”
+
+Octavia’s rocking-chair ceased its motion. There were centipedes in
+this country, she felt sure; and Indians, and vast, lonely, desolate,
+empty wastes; all within strong barbed-wire fence. There was a Van
+Dresser pride, but there was also a Van Dresser heart. She must know
+for certain whether or not he had forgotten.
+
+“Ah, well, Teddy,” she said, with a fine assumption of polite interest,
+“it’s lonely down here; you’re longing to get back to the old life—to
+polo and lobsters and theatres and balls.”
+
+“Never cared much for balls,” said Teddy virtuously.
+
+“You’re getting old, Teddy. Your memory is failing. Nobody ever knew
+you to miss a dance, unless it occurred on the same night with another
+one which you attended. And you showed such shocking bad taste, too, in
+dancing too often with the same partner. Let me see, what was that
+Forbes girl’s name—the one with wall eyes—Mabel, wasn’t it?”
+
+“No; Adèle. Mabel was the one with the bony elbows. That wasn’t wall in
+Adèle’s eyes. It was soul. We used to talk sonnets together, and
+Verlaine. Just then I was trying to run a pipe from the Pierian
+spring.”
+
+“You were on the floor with her,” said Octavia, undeflected, “five
+times at the Hammersmiths’.”
+
+“Hammersmiths’ what?” questioned Teddy, vacuously.
+
+“Ball—ball,” said Octavia, viciously. “What were we talking of?”
+
+“Eyes, I thought,” said Teddy, after some reflection; “and elbows.”
+
+“Those Hammersmiths,” went on Octavia, in her sweetest society prattle,
+after subduing an intense desire to yank a handful of sunburnt, sandy
+hair from the head lying back contentedly against the canvas of the
+steamer chair, “had too much money. Mines, wasn’t it? It was something
+that paid something to the ton. You couldn’t get a glass of plain water
+in their house. Everything at that ball was dreadfully overdone.”
+
+“It was,” said Teddy.
+
+“Such a crowd there was!” Octavia continued, conscious that she was
+talking the rapid drivel of a school-girl describing her first dance.
+“The balconies were as warm as the rooms. I—lost—something at that
+ball.” The last sentence was uttered in a tone calculated to remove the
+barbs from miles of wire.
+
+“So did I,” confessed Teddy, in a lower voice.
+
+“A glove,” said Octavia, falling back as the enemy approached her
+ditches.
+
+“Caste,” said Teddy, halting his firing line without loss. “I
+hobnobbed, half the evening with one of Hammersmith’s miners, a fellow
+who kept his hands in his pockets, and talked like an archangel about
+reduction plants and drifts and levels and sluice-boxes.”
+
+“A pearl-gray glove, nearly new,” sighed Octavia, mournfully.
+
+“A bang-up chap, that McArdle,” maintained Teddy approvingly. “A man
+who hated olives and elevators; a man who handled mountains as
+croquettes, and built tunnels in the air; a man who never uttered a
+word of silly nonsense in his life. Did you sign those lease-renewal
+applications yet, madama? They’ve got to be on file in the land office
+by the thirty-first.”
+
+Teddy turned his head lazily. Octavia’s chair was vacant.
+
+A certain centipede, crawling along the lines marked out by fate,
+expounded the situation. It was early one morning while Octavia and
+Mrs. Maclntyre were trimming the honeysuckle on the west gallery. Teddy
+had risen and departed hastily before daylight in response to word that
+a flock of ewes had been scattered from their bedding ground during the
+night by a thunder-storm.
+
+The centipede, driven by destiny, showed himself on the floor of the
+gallery, and then, the screeches of the two women giving him his cue,
+he scuttled with all his yellow legs through the open door into the
+furthermost west room, which was Teddy’s. Arming themselves with
+domestic utensils selected with regard to their length, Octavia and
+Mrs. Maclntyre, with much clutching of skirts and skirmishing for the
+position of rear guard in the attacking force, followed.
+
+Once outside, the centipede seemed to have disappeared, and his
+prospective murderers began a thorough but cautious search for their
+victim.
+
+Even in the midst of such a dangerous and absorbing adventure Octavia
+was conscious of an awed curiosity on finding herself in Teddy’s
+sanctum. In that room he sat alone, silently communing with those
+secret thoughts that he now shared with no one, dreamed there whatever
+dreams he now called on no one to interpret.
+
+It was the room of a Spartan or a soldier. In one corner stood a wide,
+canvas-covered cot; in another, a small bookcase; in another, a grim
+stand of Winchesters and shotguns. An immense table, strewn with
+letters, papers and documents and surmounted by a set of pigeon-holes,
+occupied one side.
+
+The centipede showed genius in concealing himself in such bare
+quarters. Mrs. Maclntyre was poking a broom-handle behind the bookcase.
+Octavia approached Teddy’s cot. The room was just as the manager had
+left it in his hurry. The Mexican maid had not yet given it her
+attention. There was his big pillow with the imprint of his head still
+in the centre. She thought the horrid beast might have climbed the cot
+and hidden itself to bite Teddy. Centipedes were thus cruel and
+vindictive toward managers.
+
+She cautiously overturned the pillow, and then parted her lips to give
+the signal for reinforcements at sight of a long, slender, dark object
+lying there. But, repressing it in time, she caught up a glove, a
+pearl-gray glove, flattened—it might be conceived—by many, many months
+of nightly pressure beneath the pillow of the man who had forgotten the
+Hammersmiths’ ball. Teddy must have left so hurriedly that morning that
+he had, for once, forgotten to transfer it to its resting-place by day.
+Even managers, who are notoriously wily and cunning, are sometimes
+caught up with.
+
+Octavia slid the gray glove into the bosom of her summery morning gown.
+It was hers. Men who put themselves within a strong barbed-wire fence,
+and remember Hammersmith balls only by the talk of miners about
+sluice-boxes, should not be allowed to possess such articles.
+
+After all, what a paradise this prairie country was! How it blossomed
+like the rose when you found things that were thought to be lost! How
+delicious was that morning breeze coming in the windows, fresh and
+sweet with the breath of the yellow ratama blooms! Might one not stand,
+for a minute, with shining, far-gazing eyes, and dream that mistakes
+might be corrected?
+
+Why was Mrs. Maclntyre poking about so absurdly with a broom?
+
+“I’ve found it,” said Mrs. MacIntyre, banging the door. “Here it is.”
+
+“Did you lose something? asked Octavia, with sweetly polite
+non-interest.
+
+“The little devil!” said Mrs. Maclntyre, driven to violence. “Ye’ve no
+forgotten him alretty?”
+
+Between them they slew the centipede. Thus was he rewarded for his
+agency toward the recovery of things lost at the Hammersmiths’ ball.
+
+It seems that Teddy, in due course, remembered the glove, and when he
+returned to the house at sunset made a secret but exhaustive search for
+it. Not until evening, upon the moonlit eastern gallery, did he find
+it. It was upon the hand that he had thought lost to him forever, and
+so he was moved to repeat certain nonsense that he had been commanded
+never, never to utter again. Teddy’s fences were down.
+
+This time there was no ambition to stand in the way, and the wooing was
+as natural and successful as should be between ardent shepherd and
+gentle shepherdess.
+
+The prairies changed to a garden. The Rancho de las Sombras became the
+Ranch of Light.
+
+A few days later Octavia received a letter from Mr. Bannister, in reply
+to one she had written to him asking some questions about her business.
+A portion of the letter ran as follows:
+
+“I am at a loss to account for your references to the sheep ranch. Two
+months after your departure to take up your residence upon it, it was
+discovered that Colonel Beaupree’s title was worthless. A deed came to
+light showing that he disposed of the property before his death. The
+matter was reported to your manager, Mr. Westlake, who at once
+repurchased the property. It is entirely beyond my powers of conjecture
+to imagine how you have remained in ignorance of this fact. I beg that
+you that will at once confer with that gentleman, who will, at least,
+corroborate my statement.”
+
+
+Octavia sought Teddy, with battle in her eye.
+
+“What are you working on this ranch for?” she asked once more.
+
+“One hundred—” he began to repeat, but saw in her face that she knew.
+She held Mr. Bannister’s letter in her hand. He knew that the game was
+up.
+
+“It’s my ranch,” said Teddy, like a schoolboy detected in evil. “It’s a
+mighty poor manager that isn’t able to absorb the boss’s business if
+you give him time.”
+
+“Why were you working down here?” pursued Octavia still struggling
+after the key to the riddle of Teddy.
+
+“To tell the truth, ’Tave,” said Teddy, with quiet candour, “it wasn’t
+for the salary. That about kept me in cigars and sunburn lotions. I was
+sent south by my doctor. ’Twas that right lung that was going to the
+bad on account of over-exercise and strain at polo and gymnastics. I
+needed climate and ozone and rest and things of that sort.”
+
+In an instant Octavia was close against the vicinity of the affected
+organ. Mr. Bannister’s letter fluttered to the floor.
+
+“It’s—it’s well now, isn’t it, Teddy?”
+
+“Sound as a mesquite chunk. I deceived you in one thing. I paid fifty
+thousand for your ranch as soon as I found you had no title. I had just
+about that much income accumulated at my banker’s while I’ve been
+herding sheep down here, so it was almost like picking the thing up on
+a bargain-counter for a penny. There’s another little surplus of
+unearned increment piling up there, ’Tave. I’ve been thinking of a
+wedding trip in a yacht with white ribbons tied to the mast, through
+the Mediterranean, and then up among the Hebrides and down Norway to
+the Zuyder Zee.”
+
+“And I was thinking,” said Octavia, softly, “of a wedding gallop with
+my manager among the flocks of sheep and back to a wedding breakfast
+with Mrs. MacIntyre on the gallery, with, maybe, a sprig of orange
+blossom fastened to the red jar above the table.”
+
+Teddy laughed, and began to chant:
+
+“Little Bo-Peep has lost her sheep,
+And doesn’t know where to find ’em.
+Let ’em alone, and they’ll come home,
+And—”
+
+
+Octavia drew his head down, and whispered in his ear.
+
+But that is one of the tales they brought behind them.
+
+
+
+
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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Whirligigs, by O. Henry</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Sisters</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Martin</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January, 1999 [eBook #1595]<br>
+[Most recently updated: June 28, 2023]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: anonymous Project Gutenberg Volunteers and Joseph E. Loewenstein, M.D.</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHIRLIGIGS ***</div>
+
+<h1>Whirligigs</h1>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">by O. Henry</h2>
+
+<hr>
+
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+<table>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap01">CHAPTER I THE WORLD AND THE DOOR</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap02">CHAPTER II THE THEORY AND THE HOUND</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap03">CHAPTER III THE HYPOTHESES OF FAILURE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap04">CHAPTER IV CALLOWAY&rsquo;S CODE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap05">CHAPTER V A MATTER OF MEAN ELEVATION</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap06">CHAPTER VI &ldquo;GIRL&rdquo;</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap07">CHAPTER VII SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap09">CHAPTER IX THE MARRY MONTH OF MAY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap10">CHAPTER X A TECHNICAL ERROR</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap11">CHAPTER XI SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap12">CHAPTER XII THE WHIRLIGIG OF LIFE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap13">CHAPTER XIII A SACRIFICE HIT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap14">CHAPTER XIV THE ROADS WE TAKE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap15">CHAPTER XV A BLACKJACK BARGAINER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap16">CHAPTER XVI THE SONG AND THE SERGEANT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap17">CHAPTER XVII ONE DOLLAR&rsquo;S WORTH</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap18">CHAPTER XVIII A NEWSPAPER STORY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap19">CHAPTER XIX TOMMY&rsquo;S BURGLAR</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap20">CHAPTER XX A CHAPARRAL CHRISTMAS GIFT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap21">CHAPTER XXI A LITTLE LOCAL COLOUR</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap22">CHAPTER XXII GEORGIA&rsquo;S RULING</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap23">CHAPTER XXIII BLIND MAN&rsquo;S HOLIDAY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap24">CHAPTER XXIV MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap01"></a>I<br>
+THE WORLD AND THE DOOR</h2>
+
+<p>
+A favourite dodge to get your story read by the public is to assert that it is
+true, and then add that Truth is stranger than Fiction. I do not know if the
+yarn I am anxious for you to read is true; but the Spanish purser of the fruit
+steamer <i>El Carrero</i> swore to me by the shrine of Santa Guadalupe that he
+had the facts from the U. S. vice-consul at La Paz&mdash;a person who could not
+possibly have been cognizant of half of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for the adage quoted above, I take pleasure in puncturing it by affirming
+that I read in a purely fictional story the other day the line:
+&ldquo;&lsquo;Be it so,&rsquo; said the policeman.&rdquo; Nothing so strange
+has yet cropped out in Truth.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+When H. Ferguson Hedges, millionaire promoter, investor and man-about-New-York,
+turned his thoughts upon matters convivial, and word of it went &ldquo;down the
+line,&rdquo; bouncers took a precautionary turn at the Indian clubs, waiters
+put ironstone china on his favourite tables, cab drivers crowded close to the
+curbstone in front of all-night cafés, and careful cashiers in his regular
+haunts charged up a few bottles to his account by way of preface and
+introduction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As a money power a one-millionaire is of small account in a city where the man
+who cuts your slice of beef behind the free-lunch counter rides to work in his
+own automobile. But Hedges spent his money as lavishly, loudly and showily as
+though he were only a clerk squandering a week&rsquo;s wages. And, after all,
+the bartender takes no interest in your reserve fund. He would rather look you
+up on his cash register than in Bradstreet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the evening that the material allegation of facts begins, Hedges was bidding
+dull care begone in the company of five or six good fellows&mdash;acquaintances
+and friends who had gathered in his wake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among them were two younger men&mdash;Ralph Merriam, a broker, and Wade, his
+friend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two deep-sea cabmen were chartered. At Columbus Circle they hove to long enough
+to revile the statue of the great navigator, unpatriotically rebuking him for
+having voyaged in search of land instead of liquids. Midnight overtook the
+party marooned in the rear of a cheap café far uptown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hedges was arrogant, overriding and quarrelsome. He was burly and tough,
+iron-gray but vigorous, &ldquo;good&rdquo; for the rest of the night. There was
+a dispute&mdash;about nothing that matters&mdash;and the five-fingered words
+were passed&mdash;the words that represent the glove cast into the lists.
+Merriam played the rôle of the verbal Hotspur.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hedges rose quickly, seized his chair, swung it once and smashed wildly down at
+Merriam&rsquo;s head. Merriam dodged, drew a small revolver and shot Hedges in
+the chest. The leading roysterer stumbled, fell in a wry heap, and lay still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wade, a commuter, had formed that habit of promptness. He juggled Merriam out a
+side door, walked him to the corner, ran him a block and caught a hansom. They
+rode five minutes and then got out on a dark corner and dismissed the cab.
+Across the street the lights of a small saloon betrayed its hectic hospitality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go in the back room of that saloon,&rdquo; said Wade, &ldquo;and wait.
+I&rsquo;ll go find out what&rsquo;s doing and let you know. You may take two
+drinks while I am gone&mdash;no more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At ten minutes to one o&rsquo;clock Wade returned. &ldquo;Brace up, old
+chap,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;The ambulance got there just as I did. The doctor
+says he&rsquo;s dead. You may have one more drink. You let me run this thing
+for you. You&rsquo;ve got to skip. I don&rsquo;t believe a chair is legally a
+deadly weapon. You&rsquo;ve got to make tracks, that&rsquo;s all there is to
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merriam complained of the cold querulously, and asked for another drink.
+&ldquo;Did you notice what big veins he had on the back of his hands?&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;I never could stand&mdash;I never could&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take one more,&rdquo; said Wade, &ldquo;and then come on. I&rsquo;ll see
+you through.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wade kept his promise so well that at eleven o&rsquo;clock the next morning
+Merriam, with a new suit case full of new clothes and hair-brushes, stepped
+quietly on board a little 500-ton fruit steamer at an East River pier. The
+vessel had brought the season&rsquo;s first cargo of limes from Port Limon, and
+was homeward bound. Merriam had his bank balance of $2,800 in his pocket in
+large bills, and brief instructions to pile up as much water as he could
+between himself and New York. There was no time for anything more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From Port Limon Merriam worked down the coast by schooner and sloop to Colon,
+thence across the isthmus to Panama, where he caught a tramp bound for Callao
+and such intermediate ports as might tempt the discursive skipper from his
+course.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was at La Paz that Merriam decided to land&mdash;La Paz the Beautiful, a
+little harbourless town smothered in a living green ribbon that banded the foot
+of a cloud-piercing mountain. Here the little steamer stopped to tread water
+while the captain&rsquo;s dory took him ashore that he might feel the pulse of
+the cocoanut market. Merriam went too, with his suit case, and remained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Kalb, the vice-consul, a Gr&aelig;co-Armenian citizen of the United States,
+born in Hessen-Darmstadt, and educated in Cincinnati ward primaries, considered
+all Americans his brothers and bankers. He attached himself to Merriam&rsquo;s
+elbow, introduced him to every one in La Paz who wore shoes, borrowed ten
+dollars and went back to his hammock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a little wooden hotel in the edge of a banana grove, facing the sea,
+that catered to the tastes of the few foreigners that had dropped out of the
+world into the <i>triste</i> Peruvian town. At Kalb&rsquo;s introductory:
+&ldquo;Shake hands with &ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;,&rdquo; he had obediently
+exchanged manual salutations with a German doctor, one French and two Italian
+merchants, and three or four Americans who were spoken of as gold men, rubber
+men, mahogany men&mdash;anything but men of living tissue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After dinner Merriam sat in a corner of the broad front <i>galeria</i> with
+Bibb, a Vermonter interested in hydraulic mining, and smoked and drank Scotch
+&ldquo;smoke.&rdquo; The moonlit sea, spreading infinitely before him, seemed
+to separate him beyond all apprehension from his old life. The horrid tragedy
+in which he had played such a disastrous part now began, for the first time
+since he stole on board the fruiter, a wretched fugitive, to lose its sharper
+outlines. Distance lent assuagement to his view. Bibb had opened the
+flood-gates of a stream of long-dammed discourse, overjoyed to have captured an
+audience that had not suffered under a hundred repetitions of his views and
+theories.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One year more,&rdquo; said Bibb, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll go back to
+God&rsquo;s country. Oh, I know it&rsquo;s pretty here, and you get <i>dolce
+far niente</i> handed to you in chunks, but this country wasn&rsquo;t made for
+a white man to live in. You&rsquo;ve got to have to plug through snow now and
+then, and see a game of baseball and wear a stiff collar and have a policeman
+cuss you. Still, La Paz is a good sort of a pipe-dreamy old hole. And Mrs.
+Conant is here. When any of us feels particularly like jumping into the sea we
+rush around to her house and propose. It&rsquo;s nicer to be rejected by Mrs.
+Conant than it is to be drowned. And they say drowning is a delightful
+sensation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Many like her here?&rdquo; asked Merriam.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not anywhere,&rdquo; said Bibb, with a comfortable sigh. She&rsquo;s the
+only white woman in La Paz. The rest range from a dappled dun to the colour of
+a b-flat piano key. She&rsquo;s been here a year. Comes from&mdash;well, you
+know how a woman can talk&mdash;ask &rsquo;em to say &lsquo;string&rsquo; and
+they&rsquo;ll say &lsquo;crow&rsquo;s foot&rsquo; or &lsquo;cat&rsquo;s
+cradle.&rsquo; Sometimes you&rsquo;d think she was from Oshkosh, and again from
+Jacksonville, Florida, and the next day from Cape Cod.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mystery?&rdquo; ventured Merriam.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;M&mdash;well, she looks it; but her talk&rsquo;s translucent enough. But
+that&rsquo;s a woman. I suppose if the Sphinx were to begin talking she&rsquo;d
+merely say: &lsquo;Goodness me! more visitors coming for dinner, and nothing to
+eat but the sand which is here.&rsquo; But you won&rsquo;t think about that
+when you meet her, Merriam. You&rsquo;ll propose to her too.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To make a hard story soft, Merriam did meet her and propose to her. He found
+her to be a woman in black with hair the colour of a bronze turkey&rsquo;s
+wings, and mysterious, <i>remembering</i> eyes that&mdash;well, that looked as
+if she might have been a trained nurse looking on when Eve was created. Her
+words and manner, though, were translucent, as Bibb had said. She spoke,
+vaguely, of friends in California and some of the lower parishes in Louisiana.
+The tropical climate and indolent life suited her; she had thought of buying an
+orange grove later on; La Paz, all in all, charmed her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merriam&rsquo;s courtship of the Sphinx lasted three months, although he did
+not know that he was courting her. He was using her as an antidote for remorse,
+until he found, too late, that he had acquired the habit. During that time he
+had received no news from home. Wade did not know where he was; and he was not
+sure of Wade&rsquo;s exact address, and was afraid to write. He thought he had
+better let matters rest as they were for a while.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One afternoon he and Mrs. Conant hired two ponies and rode out along the
+mountain trail as far as the little cold river that came tumbling down the
+foothills. There they stopped for a drink, and Merriam spoke his piece&mdash;he
+proposed, as Bibb had prophesied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Conant gave him one glance of brilliant tenderness, and then her face took
+on such a strange, haggard look that Merriam was shaken out of his intoxication
+and back to his senses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I beg your pardon, Florence,&rdquo; he said, releasing her hand;
+&ldquo;but I&rsquo;ll have to hedge on part of what I said. I can&rsquo;t ask
+you to marry me, of course. I killed a man in New York&mdash;a man who was my
+friend&mdash;shot him down&mdash;in quite a cowardly manner, I understand. Of
+course, the drinking didn&rsquo;t excuse it. Well, I couldn&rsquo;t resist
+having my say; and I&rsquo;ll always mean it. I&rsquo;m here as a fugitive from
+justice, and&mdash;I suppose that ends our acquaintance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Conant plucked little leaves assiduously from the low-hanging branch of a
+lime tree.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose so,&rdquo; she said, in low and oddly uneven tones; &ldquo;but
+that depends upon you. I&rsquo;ll be as honest as you were. I poisoned my
+husband. I am a self-made widow. A man cannot love a murderess. So I suppose
+that ends our acquaintance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked up at him slowly. His face turned a little pale, and he stared at
+her blankly, like a deaf-and-dumb man who was wondering what it was all about.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She took a swift step toward him, with stiffened arms and eyes blazing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t look at me like that!&rdquo; she cried, as though she were
+in acute pain. &ldquo;Curse me, or turn your back on me, but don&rsquo;t look
+that way. Am I a woman to be beaten? If I could show you&mdash;here on my arms,
+and on my back are scars&mdash;and it has been more than a year&mdash;scars
+that he made in his brutal rages. A holy nun would have risen and struck the
+fiend down. Yes, I killed him. The foul and horrible words that he hurled at me
+that last day are repeated in my ears every night when I sleep. And then came
+his blows, and the end of my endurance. I got the poison that afternoon. It was
+his custom to drink every night in the library before going to bed a hot punch
+made of rum and wine. Only from my fair hands would he receive it&mdash;
+because he knew the fumes of spirits always sickened me. That night when the
+maid brought it to me I sent her downstairs on an errand. Before taking him his
+drink I went to my little private cabinet and poured into it more than a
+tea-spoonful of tincture of aconite&mdash;enough to kill three men, so I had
+learned. I had drawn $6,000 that I had in bank, and with that and a few things
+in a satchel I left the house without any one seeing me. As I passed the
+library I heard him stagger up and fall heavily on a couch. I took a night
+train for New Orleans, and from there I sailed to the Bermudas. I finally cast
+anchor in La Paz. And now what have you to say? Can you open your mouth?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merriam came back to life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Florence,&rdquo; he said earnestly, &ldquo;I want you. I don&rsquo;t
+care what you&rsquo;ve done. If the world&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ralph,&rdquo; she interrupted, almost with a scream, &ldquo;be my
+world!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her eyes melted; she relaxed magnificently and swayed toward Merriam so
+suddenly that he had to jump to catch her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dear me! in such scenes how the talk runs into artificial prose. But it
+can&rsquo;t be helped. It&rsquo;s the subconscious smell of the
+footlights&rsquo; smoke that&rsquo;s in all of us. Stir the depths of your
+cook&rsquo;s soul sufficiently and she will discourse in Bulwer-Lyttonese.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merriam and Mrs. Conant were very happy. He announced their engagement at the
+Hotel Orilla del Mar. Eight foreigners and four native Astors pounded his back
+and shouted insincere congratulations at him. Pedrito, the Castilian-mannered
+barkeep, was goaded to extra duty until his agility would have turned a Boston
+cherry-phosphate clerk a pale lilac with envy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were both very happy. According to the strange mathematics of the god of
+mutual affinity, the shadows that clouded their pasts when united became only
+half as dense instead of darker. They shut the world out and bolted the doors.
+Each was the other&rsquo;s world. Mrs. Conant lived again. The remembering look
+left her eyes. Merriam was with her every moment that was possible. On a little
+plateau under a grove of palms and calabash trees they were going to build a
+fairy bungalow. They were to be married in two months. Many hours of the day
+they had their heads together over the house plans. Their joint capital would
+set up a business in fruit or woods that would yield a comfortable support.
+&ldquo;Good night, my world,&rdquo; would say Mrs. Conant every evening when
+Merriam left her for his hotel. They were very happy. Their love had,
+circumstantially, that element of melancholy in it that it seems to require to
+attain its supremest elevation. And it seemed that their mutual great
+misfortune or sin was a bond that nothing could sever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day a steamer hove in the offing. Bare-legged and bare-shouldered La Paz
+scampered down to the beach, for the arrival of a steamer was their
+loop-the-loop, circus, Emancipation Day and four-o&rsquo;clock tea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the steamer was near enough, wise ones proclaimed that she was the
+<i>Pajaro</i>, bound up-coast from Callao to Panama.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <i>Pajaro</i> put on brakes a mile off shore. Soon a boat came bobbing
+shoreward. Merriam strolled down on the beach to look on. In the shallow water
+the Carib sailors sprang out and dragged the boat with a mighty rush to the
+firm shingle. Out climbed the purser, the captain and two passengers, ploughing
+their way through the deep sand toward the hotel. Merriam glanced toward them
+with the mild interest due to strangers. There was something familiar to him in
+the walk of one of the passengers. He looked again, and his blood seemed to
+turn to strawberry ice cream in his veins. Burly, arrogant, debonair as ever,
+H. Ferguson Hedges, the man he had killed, was coming toward him ten feet away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Hedges saw Merriam his face flushed a dark red. Then he shouted in his
+old, bluff way: &ldquo;Hello, Merriam. Glad to see you. Didn&rsquo;t expect to
+find you out here. Quinby, this is my old friend Merriam, of New
+York&mdash;Merriam, Mr. Quinby.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merriam gave Hedges and then Quinby an ice-cold hand. &ldquo;Br-r-r-r!&rdquo;
+said Hedges. &ldquo;But you&rsquo;ve got a frappéd flipper! Man, you&rsquo;re
+not well. You&rsquo;re as yellow as a Chinaman. Malarial here? Steer us to a
+bar if there is such a thing, and let&rsquo;s take a prophylactic.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merriam, still half comatose, led them toward the Hotel Orilla del Mar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Quinby and I,&rdquo; explained Hedges, puffing through the slippery
+sand, &ldquo;are looking out along the coast for some investments. We&rsquo;ve
+just come up from Concepci&oacute;n and Valparaiso and Lima. The captain of
+this subsidized ferry boat told us there was some good picking around here in
+silver mines. So we got off. Now, where is that café, Merriam? Oh, in this
+portable soda water pavilion?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Leaving Quinby at the bar, Hedges drew Merriam aside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, what does this mean?&rdquo; he said, with gruff kindness.
+&ldquo;Are you sulking about that fool row we had?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought,&rdquo; stammered Merriam&mdash;&ldquo;I heard&mdash;they told
+me you were&mdash;that I had&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, you didn&rsquo;t, and I&rsquo;m not,&rdquo; said Hedges.
+&ldquo;That fool young ambulance surgeon told Wade I was a candidate for a
+coffin just because I&rsquo;d got tired and quit breathing. I laid up in a
+private hospital for a month; but here I am, kicking as hard as ever. Wade and
+I tried to find you, but couldn&rsquo;t. Now, Merriam, shake hands and forget
+it all. I was as much to blame as you were; and the shot really did me
+good&mdash;I came out of the hospital as healthy and fit as a cab horse. Come
+on; that drink&rsquo;s waiting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Old man,&rdquo; said Merriam, brokenly, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know how to
+thank you&mdash;I&mdash;well, you know&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, forget it,&rdquo; boomed Hedges. &ldquo;Quinby&rsquo;ll die of
+thirst if we don&rsquo;t join him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bibb was sitting on the shady side of the gallery waiting for the
+eleven-o&rsquo;clock breakfast. Presently Merriam came out and joined him. His
+eye was strangely bright.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bibb, my boy,&rdquo; said he, slowly waving his hand, &ldquo;do you see
+those mountains and that sea and sky and sunshine?&mdash;they&rsquo;re mine,
+Bibbsy&mdash;all mine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You go in,&rdquo; said Bibb, &ldquo;and take eight grains of quinine,
+right away. It won&rsquo;t do in this climate for a man to get to thinking
+he&rsquo;s Rockefeller, or James O&rsquo;Neill either.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inside, the purser was untying a great roll of newspapers, many of them weeks
+old, gathered in the lower ports by the <i>Pajaro</i> to be distributed at
+casual stopping-places. Thus do the beneficent voyagers scatter news and
+entertainment among the prisoners of sea and mountains.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tio Pancho, the hotel proprietor, set his great silver-rimmed <i>anteojos</i>
+upon his nose and divided the papers into a number of smaller rolls. A
+barefooted <i>muchacho</i> dashed in, desiring the post of messenger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Bien venido</i>,&rdquo; said Tio Pancho. &ldquo;This to Señora
+Conant; that to el Doctor S-S-Schlegel&mdash;<i>Dios</i>! what a name to
+say!&mdash;that to Señor Davis&mdash;one for Don Alberto. These two for the
+<i>Casa de Huespedes</i>, <i>Numero 6</i>, <i>en la calle de las Buenas
+Gracias</i>. And say to them all, <i>muchacho</i>, that the <i>Pajaro</i> sails
+for Panama at three this afternoon. If any have letters to send by the post,
+let them come quickly, that they may first pass through the
+<i>correo</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Mrs. Conant received her roll of newspapers at four o&rsquo;clock. The boy was
+late in delivering them, because he had been deflected from his duty by an
+iguana that crossed his path and to which he immediately gave chase. But it
+made no hardship, for she had no letters to send.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was idling in a hammock in the patio of the house that she occupied, half
+awake, half happily dreaming of the paradise that she and Merriam had created
+out of the wrecks of their pasts. She was content now for the horizon of that
+shimmering sea to be the horizon of her life. They had shut out the world and
+closed the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merriam was coming to her house at seven, after his dinner at the hotel. She
+would put on a white dress and an apricot-coloured lace mantilla, and they
+would walk an hour under the cocoanut palms by the lagoon. She smiled
+contentedly, and chose a paper at random from the roll the boy had brought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At first the words of a certain headline of a Sunday newspaper meant nothing to
+her; they conveyed only a visualized sense of familiarity. The largest type ran
+thus: &ldquo;Lloyd B. Conant secures divorce.&rdquo; And then the subheadings:
+&ldquo;Well-known Saint Louis paint manufacturer wins suit, pleading one
+year&rsquo;s absence of wife.&rdquo; &ldquo;Her mysterious disappearance
+recalled.&rdquo; &ldquo;Nothing has been heard of her since.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Twisting herself quickly out of the hammock, Mrs. Conant&rsquo;s eye soon
+traversed the half-column of the &ldquo;Recall.&rdquo; It ended thus: &ldquo;It
+will be remembered that Mrs. Conant disappeared one evening in March of last
+year. It was freely rumoured that her marriage with Lloyd B. Conant resulted in
+much unhappiness. Stories were not wanting to the effect that his cruelty
+toward his wife had more than once taken the form of physical abuse. After her
+departure a full bottle of tincture of aconite, a deadly poison, was found in a
+small medicine cabinet in her bedroom. This might have been an indication that
+she meditated suicide. It is supposed that she abandoned such an intention if
+she possessed it, and left her home instead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Conant slowly dropped the paper, and sat on a chair, clasping her hands
+tightly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me think&mdash;O God!&mdash;let me think,&rdquo; she whispered.
+&ldquo;I took the bottle with me . . . I threw it out of the window of the
+train . . . I&mdash; . . . there was another bottle in the cabinet . . . there
+were two, side by side&mdash;the aconite&mdash;and the valerian that I took
+when I could not sleep . . . If they found the aconite bottle full,
+why&mdash;but, he is alive, of course&mdash;I gave him only a harmless dose of
+valerian . . . I am not a murderess in fact . . . Ralph, I&mdash;O God,
+don&rsquo;t let this be a dream!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She went into the part of the house that she rented from the old Peruvian man
+and his wife, shut the door, and walked up and down her room swiftly and
+feverishly for half an hour. Merriam&rsquo;s photograph stood in a frame on a
+table. She picked it up, looked at it with a smile of exquisite tenderness,
+and&mdash;dropped four tears on it. And Merriam only twenty rods away! Then she
+stood still for ten minutes, looking into space. She looked into space through
+a slowly opening door. On her side of the door was the building material for a
+castle of Romance&mdash;love, an Arcady of waving palms, a lullaby of waves on
+the shore of a haven of rest, respite, peace, a lotus land of dreamy ease and
+security&mdash;a life of poetry and heart&rsquo;s ease and refuge. Romanticist,
+will you tell me what Mrs. Conant saw on the other side of the door? You
+cannot?&mdash;that is, you will not? Very well; then listen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>She saw herself go into a department store and buy five spools of silk
+thread and three yards of gingham to make an apron for the cook. &ldquo;Shall I
+charge it, ma&rsquo;am?&rdquo; asked the clerk. As she walked out a lady whom
+she met greeted her cordially. &ldquo;Oh, where did you get the pattern for
+those sleeves, dear Mrs. Conant?&rdquo; she said. At the corner a policeman
+helped her across the street and touched his helmet. &ldquo;Any callers?&rdquo;
+she asked the maid when she reached home. &ldquo;Mrs. Waldron,&rdquo; answered
+the maid, &ldquo;and the two Misses Jenkinson.&rdquo; &ldquo;Very well,&rdquo;
+she said. &ldquo;You may bring me a cup of tea, Maggie.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Conant went to the door and called Angela, the old Peruvian woman.
+&ldquo;If Mateo is there send him to me.&rdquo; Mateo, a half-breed, shuffling
+and old but efficient, came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is there a steamer or a vessel of any kind leaving this coast to-night
+or to-morrow that I can get passage on?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mateo considered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;At Punta Reina, thirty miles down the coast, señora,&rdquo; he answered,
+&ldquo;there is a small steamer loading with cinchona and dyewoods. She sails
+for San Francisco to-morrow at sunrise. So says my brother, who arrived in his
+sloop to-day, passing by Punta Reina.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You must take me in that sloop to that steamer to-night. Will you do
+that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps&mdash;&rdquo; Mateo shrugged a suggestive shoulder. Mrs. Conant
+took a handful of money from a drawer and gave it to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Get the sloop ready behind the little point of land below the
+town,&rdquo; she ordered. &ldquo;Get sailors, and be ready to sail at six
+o&rsquo;clock. In half an hour bring a cart partly filled with straw into the
+patio here, and take my trunk to the sloop. There is more money yet. Now,
+hurry.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For one time Mateo walked away without shuffling his feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Angela,&rdquo; cried Mrs. Conant, almost fiercely, &ldquo;come and help
+me pack. I am going away. Out with this trunk. My clothes first. Stir yourself.
+Those dark dresses first. Hurry.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the first she did not waver from her decision. Her view was clear and
+final. Her door had opened and let the world in. Her love for Merriam was not
+lessened; but it now appeared a hopeless and unrealizable thing. The visions of
+their future that had seemed so blissful and complete had vanished. She tried
+to assure herself that her renunciation was rather for his sake than for her
+own. Now that she was cleared of her burden&mdash;at least,
+technically&mdash;would not his own weigh too heavily upon him? If she should
+cling to him, would not the difference forever silently mar and corrode their
+happiness? Thus she reasoned; but there were a thousand little voices calling
+to her that she could feel rather than hear, like the hum of distant, powerful
+machinery&mdash;the little voices of the world, that, when raised in unison,
+can send their insistent call through the thickest door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once while packing, a brief shadow of the lotus dream came back to her. She
+held Merriam&rsquo;s picture to her heart with one hand, while she threw a pair
+of shoes into the trunk with her other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At six o&rsquo;clock Mateo returned and reported the sloop ready. He and his
+brother lifted the trunk into the cart, covered it with straw and conveyed it
+to the point of embarkation. From there they transferred it on board in the
+sloop&rsquo;s dory. Then Mateo returned for additional orders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Conant was ready. She had settled all business matters with Angela, and
+was impatiently waiting. She wore a long, loose black-silk duster that she
+often walked about in when the evenings were chilly. On her head was a small
+round hat, and over it the apricot-coloured lace mantilla.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dusk had quickly followed the short twilight. Mateo led her by dark and
+grass-grown streets toward the point behind which the sloop was anchored. On
+turning a corner they beheld the Hotel Orilla del Mar three streets away,
+nebulously aglow with its array of kerosene lamps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Conant paused, with streaming eyes. &ldquo;I must, I <i>must</i> see him
+once before I go,&rdquo; she murmured in anguish. But even then she did not
+falter in her decision. Quickly she invented a plan by which she might speak to
+him, and yet make her departure without his knowing. She would walk past the
+hotel, ask some one to call him out and talk a few moments on some trivial
+excuse, leaving him expecting to see her at her home at seven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She unpinned her hat and gave it to Mateo. &ldquo;Keep this, and wait here till
+I come,&rdquo; she ordered. Then she draped the mantilla over her head as she
+usually did when walking after sunset, and went straight to the Orilla del Mar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was glad to see the bulky, white-clad figure of Tio Pancho standing alone
+on the gallery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tio Pancho,&rdquo; she said, with a charming smile, &ldquo;may I trouble
+you to ask Mr. Merriam to come out for just a few moments that I may speak with
+him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tio Pancho bowed as an elephant bows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Buenas tardes, Señora Conant,&rdquo; he said, as a cavalier talks. And
+then he went on, less at his ease:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But does not the señora know that Señor Merriam sailed on the
+<i>Pajaro</i> for Panama at three o&rsquo;clock of this afternoon?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap02"></a>II<br>
+THE THEORY AND THE HOUND</h2>
+
+<p>
+Not many days ago my old friend from the tropics, J. P. Bridger, United States
+consul on the island of Ratona, was in the city. We had wassail and jubilee and
+saw the Flatiron building, and missed seeing the Bronxless menagerie by about a
+couple of nights. And then, at the ebb tide, we were walking up a street that
+parallels and parodies Broadway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A woman with a comely and mundane countenance passed us, holding in leash a
+wheezing, vicious, waddling, brute of a yellow pug. The dog entangled himself
+with Bridger&rsquo;s legs and mumbled his ankles in a snarling, peevish, sulky
+bite. Bridger, with a happy smile, kicked the breath out of the brute; the
+woman showered us with a quick rain of well-conceived adjectives that left us
+in no doubt as to our place in her opinion, and we passed on. Ten yards farther
+an old woman with disordered white hair and her bankbook tucked well hidden
+beneath her tattered shawl begged. Bridger stopped and disinterred for her a
+quarter from his holiday waistcoat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the next corner a quarter of a ton of well-clothed man with a rice-powdered,
+fat, white jowl, stood holding the chain of a devil-born bulldog whose forelegs
+were strangers by the length of a dachshund. A little woman in a
+last-season&rsquo;s hat confronted him and wept, which was plainly all she
+could do, while he cursed her in low sweet, practised tones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bridger smiled again&mdash;strictly to himself&mdash;and this time he took out
+a little memorandum book and made a note of it. This he had no right to do
+without due explanation, and I said so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a new theory,&rdquo; said Bridger, &ldquo;that I picked up
+down in Ratona. I&rsquo;ve been gathering support for it as I knock about. The
+world isn&rsquo;t ripe for it yet, but&mdash;well I&rsquo;ll tell you; and then
+you run your mind back along the people you&rsquo;ve known and see what you
+make of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so I cornered Bridger in a place where they have artificial palms and wine;
+and he told me the story which is here in my words and on his responsibility.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One afternoon at three o&rsquo;clock, on the island of Ratona, a boy raced
+along the beach screaming, &ldquo;<i>Pajaro</i>, ahoy!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus he made known the keenness of his hearing and the justice of his
+discrimination in pitch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He who first heard and made oral proclamation concerning the toot of an
+approaching steamer&rsquo;s whistle, and correctly named the steamer, was a
+small hero in Ratona&mdash;until the next steamer came. Wherefore, there was
+rivalry among the barefoot youth of Ratona, and many fell victims to the softly
+blown conch shells of sloops which, as they enter harbour, sound surprisingly
+like a distant steamer&rsquo;s signal. And some could name you the vessel when
+its call, in your duller ears, sounded no louder than the sigh of the wind
+through the branches of the cocoanut palms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But to-day he who proclaimed the <i>Pajaro</i> gained his honours. Ratona bent
+its ear to listen; and soon the deep-tongued blast grew louder and nearer, and
+at length Ratona saw above the line of palms on the low &ldquo;point&rdquo; the
+two black funnels of the fruiter slowly creeping toward the mouth of the
+harbour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You must know that Ratona is an island twenty miles off the south of a South
+American republic. It is a port of that republic; and it sleeps sweetly in a
+smiling sea, toiling not nor spinning; fed by the abundant tropics where all
+things &ldquo;ripen, cease and fall toward the grave.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eight hundred people dream life away in a green-embowered village that follows
+the horseshoe curve of its bijou harbour. They are mostly Spanish and Indian
+<i>mestizos</i>, with a shading of San Domingo Negroes, a lightening of
+pure-blood Spanish officials and a slight leavening of the froth of three or
+four pioneering white races. No steamers touch at Ratona save the fruit
+steamers which take on their banana inspectors there on their way to the coast.
+They leave Sunday newspapers, ice, quinine, bacon, watermelons and vaccine
+matter at the island and that is about all the touch Ratona gets with the
+world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <i>Pajaro</i> paused at the mouth of the harbour, rolling heavily in the
+swell that sent the whitecaps racing beyond the smooth water inside. Already
+two dories from the village&mdash;one conveying fruit inspectors, the other
+going for what it could get&mdash;were halfway out to the steamer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The inspectors&rsquo; dory was taken on board with them, and the <i>Pajaro</i>
+steamed away for the mainland for its load of fruit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other boat returned to Ratona bearing a contribution from the
+<i>Pajaro&rsquo;s</i> store of ice, the usual roll of newspapers and one
+passenger&mdash;Taylor Plunkett, sheriff of Chatham County, Kentucky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bridger, the United States consul at Ratona, was cleaning his rifle in the
+official shanty under a bread-fruit tree twenty yards from the water of the
+harbour. The consul occupied a place somewhat near the tail of his political
+party&rsquo;s procession. The music of the band wagon sounded very faintly to
+him in the distance. The plums of office went to others. Bridger&rsquo;s share
+of the spoils&mdash;the consulship at Ratona&mdash;was little more than a
+prune&mdash;a dried prune from the boarding-house department of the public
+crib. But $900 yearly was opulence in Ratona. Besides, Bridger had contracted a
+passion for shooting alligators in the lagoons near his consulate, and was not
+unhappy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked up from a careful inspection of his rifle lock and saw a broad man
+filling his doorway. A broad, noiseless, slow-moving man, sunburned almost to
+the brown of Vandyke. A man of forty-five, neatly clothed in homespun, with
+scanty light hair, a close-clipped brown-and-gray beard and pale-blue eyes
+expressing mildness and simplicity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are Mr. Bridger, the consul,&rdquo; said the broad man. &ldquo;They
+directed me here. Can you tell me what those big bunches of things like gourds
+are in those trees that look like feather dusters along the edge of the
+water?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take that chair,&rdquo; said the consul, reoiling his cleaning rag.
+&ldquo;No, the other one&mdash;that bamboo thing won&rsquo;t hold you. Why,
+they&rsquo;re cocoanuts&mdash;green cocoanuts. The shell of &rsquo;em is always
+a light green before they&rsquo;re ripe.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Much obliged,&rdquo; said the other man, sitting down carefully.
+&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t quite like to tell the folks at home they were olives
+unless I was sure about it. My name is Plunkett. I&rsquo;m sheriff of Chatham
+County, Kentucky. I&rsquo;ve got extradition papers in my pocket authorizing
+the arrest of a man on this island. They&rsquo;ve been signed by the President
+of this country, and they&rsquo;re in correct shape. The man&rsquo;s name is
+Wade Williams. He&rsquo;s in the cocoanut raising business. What he&rsquo;s
+wanted for is the murder of his wife two years ago. Where can I find
+him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The consul squinted an eye and looked through his rifle barrel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s nobody on the island who calls himself
+&lsquo;Williams,&rsquo;&rdquo; he remarked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t suppose there was,&rdquo; said Plunkett mildly.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll do by any other name.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Besides myself,&rdquo; said Bridger, &ldquo;there are only two Americans
+on Ratona&mdash;Bob Reeves and Henry Morgan.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The man I want sells cocoanuts,&rdquo; suggested Plunkett.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You see that cocoanut walk extending up to the point?&rdquo; said the
+consul, waving his hand toward the open door. &ldquo;That belongs to Bob
+Reeves. Henry Morgan owns half the trees to loo&rsquo;ard on the island.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One, month ago,&rdquo; said the sheriff, &ldquo;Wade Williams wrote a
+confidential letter to a man in Chatham county, telling him where he was and
+how he was getting along. The letter was lost; and the person that found it
+gave it away. They sent me after him, and I&rsquo;ve got the papers. I reckon
+he&rsquo;s one of your cocoanut men for certain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got his picture, of course,&rdquo; said Bridger. &ldquo;It
+might be Reeves or Morgan, but I&rsquo;d hate to think it. They&rsquo;re both
+as fine fellows as you&rsquo;d meet in an all-day auto ride.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; doubtfully answered Plunkett; &ldquo;there wasn&rsquo;t any
+picture of Williams to be had. And I never saw him myself. I&rsquo;ve been
+sheriff only a year. But I&rsquo;ve got a pretty accurate description of him.
+About 5 feet 11; dark-hair and eyes; nose inclined to be Roman; heavy about the
+shoulders; strong, white teeth, with none missing; laughs a good deal,
+talkative; drinks considerably but never to intoxication; looks you square in
+the eye when talking; age thirty-five. Which one of your men does that
+description fit?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The consul grinned broadly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you what you do,&rdquo; he said, laying down his rifle
+and slipping on his dingy black alpaca coat. &ldquo;You come along, Mr.
+Plunkett, and I&rsquo;ll take you up to see the boys. If you can tell which one
+of &rsquo;em your description fits better than it does the other you have the
+advantage of me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bridger conducted the sheriff out and along the hard beach close to which the
+tiny houses of the village were distributed. Immediately back of the town rose
+sudden, small, thickly wooded hills. Up one of these, by means of steps cut in
+the hard clay, the consul led Plunkett. On the very verge of an eminence was
+perched a two-room wooden cottage with a thatched roof. A Carib woman was
+washing clothes outside. The consul ushered the sheriff to the door of the room
+that overlooked the harbour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two men were in the room, about to sit down, in their shirt sleeves, to a table
+spread for dinner. They bore little resemblance one to the other in detail; but
+the general description given by Plunkett could have been justly applied to
+either. In height, colour of hair, shape of nose, build and manners each of
+them tallied with it. They were fair types of jovial, ready-witted,
+broad-gauged Americans who had gravitated together for companionship in an
+alien land.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hello, Bridger&rdquo; they called in unison at sight Of the consul.
+&ldquo;Come and have dinner with us!&rdquo; And then they noticed Plunkett at
+his heels, and came forward with hospitable curiosity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gentlemen,&rdquo; said the consul, his voice taking on unaccustomed
+formality, &ldquo;this is Mr. Plunkett. Mr. Plunkett&mdash;Mr. Reeves and Mr.
+Morgan.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cocoanut barons greeted the newcomer joyously. Reeves seemed about an inch
+taller than Morgan, but his laugh was not quite as loud. Morgan&rsquo;s eyes
+were deep brown; Reeves&rsquo;s were black. Reeves was the host and busied
+himself with fetching other chairs and calling to the Carib woman for
+supplemental table ware. It was explained that Morgan lived in a bamboo shack
+to &#8220;loo&rsquo;ard,&#8221; but that every day the two friends dined
+together. Plunkett stood still during the preparations, looking about mildly
+with his pale-blue eyes. Bridger looked apologetic and uneasy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length two other covers were laid and the company was assigned to places.
+Reeves and Morgan stood side by side across the table from the visitors. Reeves
+nodded genially as a signal for all to seat themselves. And then suddenly
+Plunkett raised his hand with a gesture of authority. He was looking straight
+between Reeves and Morgan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wade Williams,&rdquo; he said quietly, &ldquo;you are under arrest for
+murder.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reeves and Morgan instantly exchanged a quick, bright glance, the quality of
+which was interrogation, with a seasoning of surprise. Then, simultaneously
+they turned to the speaker with a puzzled and frank deprecation in their gaze.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t say that we understand you, Mr. Plunkett,&rdquo; said
+Morgan, cheerfully. &ldquo;Did you say &lsquo;Williams&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the joke, Bridgy?&rdquo; asked Reeves, turning, to the
+consul with a smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before Bridger could answer Plunkett spoke again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll explain,&rdquo; he said, quietly. &ldquo;One of you
+don&rsquo;t need any explanation, but this is for the other one. One of you is
+Wade Williams of Chatham County, Kentucky. You murdered your wife on May 5, two
+years ago, after ill-treating and abusing her continually for five years. I
+have the proper papers in my pocket for taking you back with me, and you are
+going. We will return on the fruit steamer that comes back by this island
+to-morrow to leave its inspectors. I acknowledge, gentlemen, that I&rsquo;m not
+quite sure which one of you is Williams. But Wade Williams goes back to Chatham
+County to-morrow. I want you to understand that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A great sound of merry laughter from Morgan and Reeves went out over the still
+harbour. Two or three fishermen in the fleet of sloops anchored there looked up
+at the house of the diablos Americanos on the hill and wondered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear Mr. Plunkett,&rdquo; cried Morgan, conquering his mirth,
+&ldquo;the dinner is getting, cold. Let us sit down and eat. I am anxious to
+get my spoon into that shark-fin soup. Business afterward.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sit down, gentlemen, if you please,&rdquo; added Reeves, pleasantly.
+&ldquo;I am sure Mr. Plunkett will not object. Perhaps a little time may be of
+advantage to him in identifying&mdash;the gentleman he wishes to arrest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No objections, I&rsquo;m sure,&rdquo; said Plunkett, dropping into his
+chair heavily. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m hungry myself. I didn&rsquo;t want to accept
+the hospitality of you folks without giving you notice; that&rsquo;s
+all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reeves set bottles and glasses on the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s cognac,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and anisada, and Scotch
+&lsquo;smoke,&rsquo; and rye. Take your choice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bridger chose rye, Reeves poured three fingers of Scotch for himself, Morgan
+took the same. The sheriff, against much protestation, filled his glass from
+the water bottle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s to the appetite,&rdquo; said Reeves, raising his glass,
+&ldquo;of Mr. Williams!&rdquo; Morgan&rsquo;s laugh and his drink encountering
+sent him into a choking splutter. All began to pay attention to the dinner,
+which was well cooked and palatable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Williams!&rdquo; called Plunkett, suddenly and sharply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All looked up wonderingly. Reeves found the sheriff&rsquo;s mild eye resting
+upon him. He flushed a little.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;See here,&rdquo; he said, with some asperity, &ldquo;my name&rsquo;s
+Reeves, and I don&rsquo;t want you to&mdash;&rdquo; But the comedy of the thing
+came to his rescue, and he ended with a laugh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose, Mr. Plunkett,&rdquo; said Morgan, carefully seasoning an
+alligator pear, &ldquo;that you are aware of the fact that you will import a
+good deal of trouble for yourself into Kentucky if you take back the wrong
+man&mdash;that is, of course, if you take anybody back?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thank you for the salt,&rdquo; said the sheriff. &ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;ll
+take somebody back. It&rsquo;ll be one of you two gentlemen. Yes, I know
+I&rsquo;d get stuck for damages if I make a mistake. But I&rsquo;m going to try
+to get the right man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you what you do,&rdquo; said Morgan, leaning forward
+with a jolly twinkle in his eyes. &ldquo;You take me. I&rsquo;ll go without any
+trouble. The cocoanut business hasn&rsquo;t panned out well this year, and
+I&rsquo;d like to make some extra money out of your bondsmen.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s not fair,&rdquo; chimed in Reeves. &ldquo;I got only $16 a
+thousand for my last shipment. Take me, Mr. Plunkett.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll take Wade Williams,&rdquo; said the sheriff, patiently,
+&ldquo;or I&rsquo;ll come pretty close to it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s like dining with a ghost,&rdquo; remarked Morgan, with a
+pretended shiver. &ldquo;The ghost of a murderer, too! Will somebody pass the
+toothpicks to the shade of the naughty Mr. Williams?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Plunkett seemed as unconcerned as if he were dining at his own table in Chatham
+County. He was a gallant trencherman, and the strange tropic viands tickled his
+palate. Heavy, commonplace, almost slothful in his movements, he appeared to be
+devoid of all the cunning and watchfulness of the sleuth. He even ceased to
+observe, with any sharpness or attempted discrimination, the two men, one of
+whom he had undertaken with surprising self-confidence, to drag away upon the
+serious charge of wife-murder. Here, indeed, was a problem set before him that
+if wrongly solved would have amounted to his serious discomfiture, yet there he
+sat puzzling his soul (to all appearances) over the novel flavour of a broiled
+iguana cutlet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The consul felt a decided discomfort. Reeves and Morgan were his friends and
+pals; yet the sheriff from Kentucky had a certain right to his official aid and
+moral support. So Bridger sat the silentest around the board and tried to
+estimate the peculiar situation. His conclusion was that both Reeves and
+Morgan, quickwitted, as he knew them to be, had conceived at the moment of
+Plunkett&rsquo;s disclosure of his mission&mdash;and in the brief space of a
+lightning flash&mdash;the idea that the other might be the guilty Williams; and
+that each of them had decided in that moment loyally to protect his comrade
+against the doom that threatened him. This was the consul&rsquo;s theory and if
+he had been a bookmaker at a race of wits for life and liberty he would have
+offered heavy odds against the plodding sheriff from Chatham County, Kentucky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the meal was concluded the Carib woman came and removed the dishes and
+cloth. Reeves strewed the table with excellent cigars, and Plunkett, with the
+others, lighted one of these with evident gratification.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I may be dull,&rdquo; said Morgan, with a grin and a wink at Bridger;
+&ldquo;but I want to know if I am. Now, I say this is all a joke of Mr.
+Plunkett&rsquo;s, concocted to frighten two babes-in-the-woods. Is this
+Williamson to be taken seriously or not?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;Williams,&rsquo;&rdquo; corrected Plunkett gravely. &ldquo;I
+never got off any jokes in my life. I know I wouldn&rsquo;t travel 2,000 miles
+to get off a poor one as this would be if I didn&rsquo;t take Wade Williams
+back with me. Gentlemen!&rdquo; continued the sheriff, now letting his mild
+eyes travel impartially from one of the company to another, &ldquo;see if you
+can find any joke in this case. Wade Williams is listening to the words I utter
+now; but out of politeness, I will speak of him as a third person. For five
+years he made his wife lead the life of a dog&mdash;No; I&rsquo;ll take that
+back. No dog in Kentucky was ever treated as she was. He spent the money that
+she brought him&mdash;spent it at races, at the card table and on horses and
+hunting. He was a good fellow to his friends, but a cold, sullen demon at home.
+He wound up the five years of neglect by striking her with his closed
+hand&mdash;a hand as hard as a stone&mdash;when she was ill and weak from
+suffering. She died the next day; and he skipped. That&rsquo;s all there is to
+it. It&rsquo;s enough. I never saw Williams; but I knew his wife. I&rsquo;m not
+a man to tell half. She and I were keeping company when she met him. She went
+to Louisville on a visit and saw him there. I&rsquo;ll admit that he spoilt my
+chances in no time. I lived then on the edge of the Cumberland mountains. I was
+elected sheriff of Chatham County a year after Wade Williams killed his wife.
+My official duty sends me out here after him; but I&rsquo;ll admit that
+there&rsquo;s personal feeling, too. And he&rsquo;s going back with me.
+Mr.&mdash;er&mdash;Reeves, will you pass me a match?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Awfully imprudent of Williams,&rdquo; said Morgan, putting his feet up
+against the wall, &ldquo;to strike a Kentucky lady. Seems to me I&rsquo;ve
+heard they were scrappers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bad, bad Williams,&rdquo; said Reeves, pouring out more Scotch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two men spoke lightly, but the consul saw and felt the tension and the
+carefulness in their actions and words. &ldquo;Good old fellows,&rdquo; he said
+to himself; &ldquo;they&rsquo;re both all right. Each of &rsquo;em is standing
+by the other like a little brick church.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then a dog walked into the room where they sat&mdash;a black-and-tan hound,
+long-eared, lazy, confident of welcome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Plunkett turned his head and looked at the animal, which halted, confidently,
+within a few feet of his chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly the sheriff, with a deep-mouthed oath, left his seat and, bestowed
+upon the dog a vicious and heavy kick, with his ponderous shoe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hound, heartbroken, astonished, with flapping ears and incurved tail,
+uttered a piercing yelp of pain and surprise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reeves and the consul remained in their chairs, saying nothing, but astonished
+at the unexpected show of intolerance from the easy-going man from Chatham
+county.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Morgan, with a suddenly purpling face, leaped, to his feet and raised a
+threatening arm above the guest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&mdash;brute!&rdquo; he shouted, passionately; &ldquo;why did you do
+that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Quickly the amenities returned, Plunkett muttered some indistinct apology and
+regained his seat. Morgan with a decided effort controlled his indignation and
+also returned to his chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then Plunkett with the spring of a tiger, leaped around the corner of the
+table and snapped handcuffs on the paralyzed Morgan&rsquo;s wrists.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hound-lover and woman-killer!&rdquo; he cried; &ldquo;get ready to meet
+your God.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Bridger had finished I asked him:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did he get the right man?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He did,&rdquo; said the Consul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And how did he know?&rdquo; I inquired, being in a kind of bewilderment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When he put Morgan in the dory,&rdquo; answered Bridger, &ldquo;the next
+day to take him aboard the <i>Pajaro</i>, this man Plunkett stopped to shake
+hands with me and I asked him the same question.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;Mr. Bridger,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;I&rsquo;m a Kentuckian, and
+I&rsquo;ve seen a great deal of both men and animals. And I never yet saw a man
+that was overfond of horses and dogs but what was cruel to women.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap03"></a>III<br>
+THE HYPOTHESES OF FAILURE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Lawyer Gooch bestowed his undivided attention upon the engrossing arts of his
+profession. But one flight of fancy did he allow his mind to entertain. He was
+fond of likening his suite of office rooms to the bottom of a ship. The rooms
+were three in number, with a door opening from one to another. These doors
+could also be closed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ships,&rdquo; Lawyer Gooch would say, &ldquo;are constructed for safety,
+with separate, water-tight compartments in their bottoms. If one compartment
+springs a leak it fills with water; but the good ship goes on unhurt. Were it
+not for the separating bulkheads one leak would sink the vessel. Now it often
+happens that while I am occupied with clients, other clients with conflicting
+interests call. With the assistance of Archibald&mdash;an office boy with a
+future&mdash;I cause the dangerous influx to be diverted into separate
+compartments, while I sound with my legal plummet the depth of each. If
+necessary, they may be baled into the hallway and permitted to escape by way of
+the stairs, which we may term the lee scuppers. Thus the good ship of business
+is kept afloat; whereas if the element that supports her were allowed to mingle
+freely in her hold we might be swamped&mdash;ha, ha, ha!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The law is dry. Good jokes are few. Surely it might be permitted Lawyer Gooch
+to mitigate the bore of briefs, the tedium of torts and the prosiness of
+processes with even so light a levy upon the good property of humour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lawyer Gooch&rsquo;s practice leaned largely to the settlement of marital
+infelicities. Did matrimony languish through complications, he mediated,
+soothed and arbitrated. Did it suffer from implications, he readjusted,
+defended and championed. Did it arrive at the extremity of duplications, he
+always got light sentences for his clients.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But not always was Lawyer Gooch the keen, armed, wily belligerent, ready with
+his two-edged sword to lop off the shackles of Hymen. He had been known to
+build up instead of demolishing, to reunite instead of severing, to lead erring
+and foolish ones back into the fold instead of scattering the flock. Often had
+he by his eloquent and moving appeals sent husband and wife, weeping, back into
+each other&rsquo;s arms. Frequently he had coached childhood so successfully
+that, at the psychological moment (and at a given signal) the plaintive pipe of
+&ldquo;Papa, won&rsquo;t you tum home adain to me and muvver?&rdquo; had won
+the day and upheld the pillars of a tottering home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unprejudiced persons admitted that Lawyer Gooch received as big fees from these
+reyoked clients as would have been paid him had the cases been contested in
+court. Prejudiced ones intimated that his fees were doubled, because the
+penitent couples always came back later for the divorce, anyhow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There came a season in June when the legal ship of Lawyer Gooch (to borrow his
+own figure) was nearly becalmed. The divorce mill grinds slowly in June. It is
+the month of Cupid and Hymen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lawyer Gooch, then, sat idle in the middle room of his clientless suite. A
+small anteroom connected&mdash;or rather separated&mdash;this apartment from
+the hallway. Here was stationed Archibald, who wrested from visitors their
+cards or oral nomenclature which he bore to his master while they waited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly, on this day, there came a great knocking at the outermost door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Archibald, opening it, was thrust aside as superfluous by the visitor, who
+without due reverence at once penetrated to the office of Lawyer Gooch and
+threw himself with good-natured insolence into a comfortable chair facing that
+gentlemen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are Phineas C. Gooch, attorney-at-law?&rdquo; said the visitor, his
+tone of voice and inflection making his words at once a question, an assertion
+and an accusation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before committing himself by a reply, the lawyer estimated his possible client
+in one of his brief but shrewd and calculating glances.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man was of the emphatic type&mdash;large-sized, active, bold and debonair
+in demeanour, vain beyond a doubt, slightly swaggering, ready and at ease. He
+was well-clothed, but with a shade too much ornateness. He was seeking a
+lawyer; but if that fact would seem to saddle him with troubles they were not
+patent in his beaming eye and courageous air.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My name is Gooch,&rdquo; at length the lawyer admitted. Upon pressure he
+would also have confessed to the Phineas C. But he did not consider it good
+practice to volunteer information. &ldquo;I did not receive your card,&rdquo;
+he continued, by way of rebuke, &ldquo;so I&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know you didn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; remarked the visitor, coolly; &ldquo;And
+you won&rsquo;t just yet. Light up?&rdquo; He threw a leg over an arm of his
+chair, and tossed a handful of rich-hued cigars upon the table. Lawyer Gooch
+knew the brand. He thawed just enough to accept the invitation to smoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are a divorce lawyer,&rdquo; said the cardless visitor. This time
+there was no interrogation in his voice. Nor did his words constitute a simple
+assertion. They formed a charge&mdash;a denunciation&mdash;as one would say to
+a dog: &ldquo;You are a dog.&rdquo; Lawyer Gooch was silent under the
+imputation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You handle,&rdquo; continued the visitor, &ldquo;all the various
+ramifications of busted-up connubiality. You are a surgeon, we might say, who
+extracts Cupid&rsquo;s darts when he shoots &rsquo;em into the wrong parties.
+You furnish patent, incandescent lights for premises where the torch of Hymen
+has burned so low you can&rsquo;t light a cigar at it. Am I right, Mr.
+Gooch?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have undertaken cases,&rdquo; said the lawyer, guardedly, &ldquo;in
+the line to which your figurative speech seems to refer. Do you wish to consult
+me professionally, Mr. &ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; The lawyer paused,
+with significance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not yet,&rdquo; said the other, with an arch wave of his cigar,
+&ldquo;not just yet. Let us approach the subject with the caution that should
+have been used in the original act that makes this pow-wow necessary. There
+exists a matrimonial jumble to be straightened out. But before I give you names
+I want your honest&mdash;well, anyhow, your professional opinion on the merits
+of the mix-up. I want you to size up the catastrophe&mdash;abstractly&mdash;you
+understand? I&rsquo;m Mr. Nobody; and I&rsquo;ve got a story to tell you. Then
+you say what&rsquo;s what. Do you get my wireless?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You want to state a hypothetical case?&rdquo; suggested Lawyer Gooch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the word I was after. &lsquo;Apothecary&rsquo; was the best
+shot I could make at it in my mind. The hypothetical goes. I&rsquo;ll state the
+case. Suppose there&rsquo;s a woman&mdash;a deuced fine-looking woman&mdash;who
+has run away from her husband and home? She&rsquo;s badly mashed on another man
+who went to her town to work up some real estate business. Now, we may as well
+call this woman&rsquo;s husband Thomas R. Billings, for that&rsquo;s his name.
+I&rsquo;m giving you straight tips on the cognomens. The Lothario chap is Henry
+K. Jessup. The Billingses lived in a little town called Susanville&mdash;a good
+many miles from here. Now, Jessup leaves Susanville two weeks ago. The next day
+Mrs. Billings follows him. She&rsquo;s dead gone on this man Jessup; you can
+bet your law library on that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lawyer Gooch&rsquo;s client said this with such unctuous satisfaction that even
+the callous lawyer experienced a slight ripple of repulsion. He now saw clearly
+in his fatuous visitor the conceit of the lady-killer, the egoistic complacency
+of the successful trifler.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; continued the visitor, &ldquo;suppose this Mrs. Billings
+wasn&rsquo;t happy at home? We&rsquo;ll say she and her husband didn&rsquo;t
+gee worth a cent. They&rsquo;ve got incompatibility to burn. The things she
+likes, Billings wouldn&rsquo;t have as a gift with trading-stamps. It&rsquo;s
+Tabby and Rover with them all the time. She&rsquo;s an educated woman in
+science and culture, and she reads things out loud at meetings. Billings is not
+on. He don&rsquo;t appreciate progress and obelisks and ethics, and things of
+that sort. Old Billings is simply a blink when it comes to such things. The
+lady is out and out above his class. Now, lawyer, don&rsquo;t it look like a
+fair equalization of rights and wrongs that a woman like that should be allowed
+to throw down Billings and take the man that can appreciate her?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Incompatibility,&rdquo; said Lawyer Gooch, &ldquo;is undoubtedly the
+source of much marital discord and unhappiness. Where it is positively proved,
+divorce would seem to be the equitable remedy. Are you&mdash;excuse me&mdash;is
+this man Jessup one to whom the lady may safely trust her future?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, you can bet on Jessup,&rdquo; said the client, with a confident wag
+of his head. &ldquo;Jessup&rsquo;s all right. He&rsquo;ll do the square thing.
+Why, he left Susanville just to keep people from talking about Mrs. Billings.
+But she followed him up, and now, of course, he&rsquo;ll stick to her. When she
+gets a divorce, all legal and proper, Jessup will do the proper thing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And now,&rdquo; said Lawyer Gooch, &ldquo;continuing the hypothesis, if
+you prefer, and supposing that my services should be desired in the case,
+what&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The client rose impulsively to his feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, dang the hypothetical business,&rdquo; he exclaimed, impatiently.
+&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s let her drop, and get down to straight talk. You ought to
+know who I am by this time. I want that woman to have her divorce. I&rsquo;ll
+pay for it. The day you set Mrs. Billings free I&rsquo;ll pay you five hundred
+dollars.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lawyer Gooch&rsquo;s client banged his fist upon the table to punctuate his
+generosity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If that is the case&mdash;&rdquo; began the lawyer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lady to see you, sir,&rdquo; bawled Archibald, bouncing in from his
+anteroom. He had orders to always announce immediately any client that might
+come. There was no sense in turning business away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lawyer Gooch took client number one by the arm and led him suavely into one of
+the adjoining rooms. &ldquo;Favour me by remaining here a few minutes,
+sir,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I will return and resume our consultation with the
+least possible delay. I am rather expecting a visit from a very wealthy old
+lady in connection with a will. I will not keep you waiting long.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The breezy gentleman seated himself with obliging acquiescence, and took up a
+magazine. The lawyer returned to the middle office, carefully closing behind
+him the connecting door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Show the lady in, Archibald,&rdquo; he said to the office boy, who was
+awaiting the order.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A tall lady, of commanding presence and sternly handsome, entered the room. She
+wore robes&mdash;robes; not clothes&mdash;ample and fluent. In her eye could be
+perceived the lambent flame of genius and soul. In her hand was a green bag of
+the capacity of a bushel, and an umbrella that also seemed to wear a robe,
+ample and fluent. She accepted a chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you Mr. Phineas C. Gooch, the lawyer?&rdquo; she asked, in formal
+and unconciliatory tones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am,&rdquo; answered Lawyer Gooch, without circumlocution. He never
+circumlocuted when dealing with a woman. Women circumlocute. Time is wasted
+when both sides in debate employ the same tactics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As a lawyer, sir,&rdquo; began the lady, &ldquo;you may have acquired
+some knowledge of the human heart. Do you believe that the pusillanimous and
+petty conventions of our artificial social life should stand as an obstacle in
+the way of a noble and affectionate heart when it finds its true mate among the
+miserable and worthless wretches in the world that are called men?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said Lawyer Gooch, in the tone that he used in curbing his
+female clients, &ldquo;this is an office for conducting the practice of law. I
+am a lawyer, not a philosopher, nor the editor of an &lsquo;Answers to the
+Lovelorn&rsquo; column of a newspaper. I have other clients waiting. I will ask
+you kindly to come to the point.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, you needn&rsquo;t get so stiff around the gills about it,&rdquo;
+said the lady, with a snap of her luminous eyes and a startling gyration of her
+umbrella. &ldquo;Business is what I&rsquo;ve come for. I want your opinion in
+the matter of a suit for divorce, as the vulgar would call it, but which is
+really only the readjustment of the false and ignoble conditions that the
+short-sighted laws of man have interposed between a loving&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I beg your pardon, madam,&rdquo; interrupted Lawyer Gooch, with some
+impatience, &ldquo;for reminding you again that this is a law office. Perhaps
+Mrs. Wilcox&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mrs. Wilcox is all right,&rdquo; cut in the lady, with a hint of
+asperity. &ldquo;And so are Tolstoi, and Mrs. Gertrude Atherton, and Omar
+Khayyam, and Mr. Edward Bok. I&rsquo;ve read &rsquo;em all. I would like to
+discuss with you the divine right of the soul as opposed to the
+freedom-destroying restrictions of a bigoted and narrow-minded society. But I
+will proceed to business. I would prefer to lay the matter before you in an
+impersonal way until you pass upon its merits. That is to describe it as a
+supposable instance, without&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You wish to state a hypothetical case?&rdquo; said Lawyer Gooch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was going to say that,&rdquo; said the lady, sharply. &ldquo;Now,
+suppose there is a woman who is all soul and heart and aspirations for a
+complete existence. This woman has a husband who is far below her in intellect,
+in taste&mdash;in everything. Bah! he is a brute. He despises literature. He
+sneers at the lofty thoughts of the world&rsquo;s great thinkers. He thinks
+only of real estate and such sordid things. He is no mate for a woman with
+soul. We will say that this unfortunate wife one day meets with her
+ideal&mdash;a man with brain and heart and force. She loves him. Although this
+man feels the thrill of a new-found affinity he is too noble, too honourable to
+declare himself. He flies from the presence of his beloved. She flies after
+him, trampling, with superb indifference, upon the fetters with which an
+unenlightened social system would bind her. Now, what will a divorce cost?
+Eliza Ann Timmins, the poetess of Sycamore Gap, got one for three hundred and
+forty dollars. Can I&mdash;I mean can this lady I speak of get one that
+cheap?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said Lawyer Gooch, &ldquo;your last two or three sentences
+delight me with their intelligence and clearness. Can we not now abandon the
+hypothetical and come down to names and business?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should say so,&rdquo; exclaimed the lady, adopting the practical with
+admirable readiness. &ldquo;Thomas R. Billings is the name of the low brute who
+stands between the happiness of his legal&mdash;his legal, but not his
+spiritual&mdash;wife and Henry K. Jessup, the noble man whom nature intended
+for her mate. I,&rdquo; concluded the client, with an air of dramatic
+revelation, &ldquo;am Mrs. Billings!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gentlemen to see you, sir,&rdquo; shouted Archibald, invading the room
+almost at a handspring. Lawyer Gooch arose from his chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mrs. Billings,&rdquo; he said courteously, &ldquo;allow me to conduct
+you into the adjoining office apartment for a few minutes. I am expecting a
+very wealthy old gentleman on business connected with a will. In a very short
+while I will join you, and continue our consultation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With his accustomed chivalrous manner, Lawyer Gooch ushered his soulful client
+into the remaining unoccupied room, and came out, closing the door with
+circumspection.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next visitor introduced by Archibald was a thin, nervous, irritable-looking
+man of middle age, with a worried and apprehensive expression of countenance.
+He carried in one hand a small satchel, which he set down upon the floor beside
+the chair which the lawyer placed for him. His clothing was of good quality,
+but it was worn without regard to neatness or style, and appeared to be covered
+with the dust of travel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You make a specialty of divorce cases,&rdquo; he said, in, an agitated
+but business-like tone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I may say,&rdquo; began Lawyer Gooch, &ldquo;that my practice has not
+altogether avoided&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know you do,&rdquo; interrupted client number three. &ldquo;You
+needn&rsquo;t tell me. I&rsquo;ve heard all about you. I have a case to lay
+before you without necessarily disclosing any connection that I might have with
+it&mdash;that is&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You wish,&rdquo; said Lawyer Gooch, &ldquo;to state a hypothetical case.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You may call it that. I am a plain man of business. I will be as brief
+as possible. We will first take up hypothetical woman. We will say she is
+married uncongenially. In many ways she is a superior woman. Physically she is
+considered to be handsome. She is devoted to what she calls
+literature&mdash;poetry and prose, and such stuff. Her husband is a plain man
+in the business walks of life. Their home has not been happy, although the
+husband has tried to make it so. Some time ago a man&mdash;a
+stranger&mdash;came to the peaceful town in which they lived and engaged in
+some real estate operations. This woman met him, and became unaccountably
+infatuated with him. Her attentions became so open that the man felt the
+community to be no safe place for him, so he left it. She abandoned husband and
+home, and followed him. She forsook her home, where she was provided with every
+comfort, to follow this man who had inspired her with such a strange affection.
+Is there anything more to be deplored,&rdquo; concluded the client, in a
+trembling voice, &ldquo;than the wrecking of a home by a woman&rsquo;s
+uncalculating folly?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lawyer Gooch delivered the cautious opinion that there was not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This man she has gone to join,&rdquo; resumed the visitor, &ldquo;is not
+the man to make her happy. It is a wild and foolish self-deception that makes
+her think he will. Her husband, in spite of their many disagreements, is the
+only one capable of dealing with her sensitive and peculiar nature. But this
+she does not realize now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would you consider a divorce the logical cure in the case you
+present?&rdquo; asked Lawyer Gooch, who felt that the conversation was
+wandering too far from the field of business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A divorce!&rdquo; exclaimed the client, feelingly&mdash;almost
+tearfully. &ldquo;No, no&mdash;not that. I have read, Mr. Gooch, of many
+instances where your sympathy and kindly interest led you to act as a mediator
+between estranged husband and wife, and brought them together again. Let us
+drop the hypothetical case&mdash;I need conceal no longer that it is I who am
+the sufferer in this sad affair&mdash;the names you shall have&mdash;Thomas R.
+Billings and wife&mdash;and Henry K. Jessup, the man with whom she is
+infatuated.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Client number three laid his hand upon Mr. Gooch&rsquo;s arm. Deep emotion was
+written upon his careworn face. &ldquo;For Heaven&rsquo;s sake&rdquo;, he said
+fervently, &ldquo;help me in this hour of trouble. Seek out Mrs. Billings, and
+persuade her to abandon this distressing pursuit of her lamentable folly. Tell
+her, Mr. Gooch, that her husband is willing to receive her back to his heart
+and home&mdash;promise her anything that will induce her to return. I have
+heard of your success in these matters. Mrs. Billings cannot be very far away.
+I am worn out with travel and weariness. Twice during the pursuit I saw her,
+but various circumstances prevented our having an interview. Will you undertake
+this mission for me, Mr. Gooch, and earn my everlasting gratitude?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is true,&rdquo; said Lawyer Gooch, frowning slightly at the
+other&rsquo;s last words, but immediately calling up an expression of virtuous
+benevolence, &ldquo;that on a number of occasions I have been successful in
+persuading couples who sought the severing of their matrimonial bonds to think
+better of their rash intentions and return to their homes reconciled. But I
+assure you that the work is often exceedingly difficult. The amount of
+argument, perseverance, and, if I may be allowed to say it, eloquence that it
+requires would astonish you. But this is a case in which my sympathies would be
+wholly enlisted. I feel deeply for you sir, and I would be most happy to see
+husband and wife reunited. But my time,&rdquo; concluded the lawyer, looking at
+his watch as if suddenly reminded of the fact, &ldquo;is valuable.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am aware of that,&rdquo; said the client, &ldquo;and if you will take
+the case and persuade Mrs. Billings to return home and leave the man alone that
+she is following&mdash;on that day I will pay you the sum of one thousand
+dollars. I have made a little money in real estate during the recent boom in
+Susanville, and I will not begrudge that amount.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Retain your seat for a few moments, please,&rdquo; said Lawyer Gooch,
+arising, and again consulting his watch. &ldquo;I have another client waiting
+in an adjoining room whom I had very nearly forgotten. I will return in the
+briefest possible space.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The situation was now one that fully satisfied Lawyer Gooch&rsquo;s love of
+intricacy and complication. He revelled in cases that presented such subtle
+problems and possibilities. It pleased him to think that he was master of the
+happiness and fate of the three individuals who sat, unconscious of one
+another&rsquo;s presence, within his reach. His old figure of the ship glided
+into his mind. But now the figure failed, for to have filled every compartment
+of an actual vessel would have been to endanger her safety; with his
+compartments full, his ship of affairs could but sail on to the advantageous
+port of a fine, fat fee. The thing for him to do, of course, was to wring the
+best bargain he could from some one of his anxious cargo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+First he called to the office boy: &ldquo;Lock the outer door, Archibald, and
+admit no one.&rdquo; Then he moved, with long, silent strides into the room in
+which client number one waited. That gentleman sat, patiently scanning the
+pictures in the magazine, with a cigar in his mouth and his feet upon a table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he remarked, cheerfully, as the lawyer entered, &ldquo;have
+you made up your mind? Does five hundred dollars go for getting the fair lady a
+divorce?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You mean that as a retainer?&rdquo; asked Lawyer Gooch, softly
+interrogative.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hey? No; for the whole job. It&rsquo;s enough, ain&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My fee,&rdquo; said Lawyer Gooch, &ldquo;would be one thousand five
+hundred dollars. Five hundred dollars down, and the remainder upon issuance of
+the divorce.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A loud whistle came from client number one. His feet descended to the floor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Guess we can&rsquo;t close the deal,&rdquo; he said, arising, &ldquo;I
+cleaned up five hundred dollars in a little real estate dicker down in
+Susanville. I&rsquo;d do anything I could to free the lady, but it out-sizes my
+pile.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Could you stand one thousand two hundred dollars?&rdquo; asked the
+lawyer, insinuatingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Five hundred is my limit, I tell you. Guess I&rsquo;ll have to hunt up a
+cheaper lawyer.&rdquo; The client put on his hat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Out this way, please,&rdquo; said Lawyer Gooch, opening the door that
+led into the hallway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the gentleman flowed out of the compartment and down the stairs, Lawyer
+Gooch smiled to himself. &ldquo;Exit Mr. Jessup,&rdquo; he murmured, as he
+fingered the Henry Clay tuft of hair at his ear. &ldquo;And now for the
+forsaken husband.&rdquo; He returned to the middle office, and assumed a
+businesslike manner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I understand,&rdquo; he said to client number three, &ldquo;that you
+agree to pay one thousand dollars if I bring about, or am instrumental in
+bringing about, the return of Mrs. Billings to her home, and her abandonment of
+her infatuated pursuit of the man for whom she has conceived such a violent
+fancy. Also that the case is now unreservedly in my hands on that basis. Is
+that correct?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Entirely&rdquo;, said the other, eagerly. &ldquo;And I can produce the
+cash any time at two hours&rsquo; notice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lawyer Gooch stood up at his full height. His thin figure seemed to expand. His
+thumbs sought the arm-holes of his vest. Upon his face was a look of
+sympathetic benignity that he always wore during such undertakings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then, sir,&rdquo; he said, in kindly tones, &ldquo;I think I can promise
+you an early relief from your troubles. I have that much confidence in my
+powers of argument and persuasion, in the natural impulses of the human heart
+toward good, and in the strong influence of a husband&rsquo;s unfaltering love.
+Mrs. Billings, sir, is here&mdash;in that room&mdash;&rdquo; the lawyer&rsquo;s
+long arm pointed to the door. &ldquo;I will call her in at once; and our united
+pleadings&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lawyer Gooch paused, for client number three had leaped from his chair as if
+propelled by steel springs, and clutched his satchel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What the devil,&rdquo; he exclaimed, harshly, &ldquo;do you mean? That
+woman in there! I thought I shook her off forty miles back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He ran to the open window, looked out below, and threw one leg over the sill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; cried Lawyer Gooch, in amazement. &ldquo;What would you do?
+Come, Mr. Billings, and face your erring but innocent wife. Our combined
+entreaties cannot fail to&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Billings!&rdquo; shouted the now thoroughly moved client.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll Billings you, you old idiot!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Turning, he hurled his satchel with fury at the lawyer&rsquo;s head. It struck
+that astounded peacemaker between the eyes, causing him to stagger backward a
+pace or two. When Lawyer Gooch recovered his wits he saw that his client had
+disappeared. Rushing to the window, he leaned out, and saw the recreant
+gathering himself up from the top of a shed upon which he had dropped from the
+second-story window. Without stopping to collect his hat he then plunged
+downward the remaining ten feet to the alley, up which he flew with prodigious
+celerity until the surrounding building swallowed him up from view.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lawyer Gooch passed his hand tremblingly across his brow. It was a habitual act
+with him, serving to clear his thoughts. Perhaps also it now seemed to soothe
+the spot where a very hard alligator-hide satchel had struck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The satchel lay upon the floor, wide open, with its contents spilled about.
+Mechanically, Lawyer Gooch stooped to gather up the articles. The first was a
+collar; and the omniscient eye of the man of law perceived, wonderingly, the
+initials H. K. J. marked upon it. Then came a comb, a brush, a folded map, and
+a piece of soap. Lastly, a handful of old business letters,
+addressed&mdash;every one of them&mdash;to &ldquo;Henry K. Jessup, Esq.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lawyer Gooch closed the satchel, and set it upon the table. He hesitated for a
+moment, and then put on his hat and walked into the office boy&rsquo;s
+anteroom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Archibald,&rdquo; he said mildly, as he opened the hall door, &ldquo;I
+am going around to the Supreme Court rooms. In five minutes you may step into
+the inner office, and inform the lady who is waiting there
+that&rdquo;&mdash;here Lawyer Gooch made use of the
+vernacular&mdash;&ldquo;that there&rsquo;s nothing doing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap04"></a>IV<br>
+CALLOWAY&rsquo;S CODE</h2>
+
+<p>
+The New York <i>Enterprise</i> sent H. B. Calloway as special correspondent to
+the Russo-Japanese-Portsmouth war.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For two months Calloway hung about Yokohama and Tokio, shaking dice with the
+other correspondents for drinks of &lsquo;rickshaws&mdash;oh, no, that&rsquo;s
+something to ride in; anyhow, he wasn&rsquo;t earning the salary that his paper
+was paying him. But that was not Calloway&rsquo;s fault. The little brown men
+who held the strings of Fate between their fingers were not ready for the
+readers of the <i>Enterprise</i> to season their breakfast bacon and eggs with
+the battles of the descendants of the gods.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But soon the column of correspondents that were to go out with the First Army
+tightened their field-glass belts and went down to the Yalu with Kuroki.
+Calloway was one of these.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, this is no history of the battle of the Yalu River. That has been told in
+detail by the correspondents who gazed at the shrapnel smoke rings from a
+distance of three miles. But, for justice&rsquo;s sake, let it be understood
+that the Japanese commander prohibited a nearer view.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Calloway&rsquo;s feat was accomplished before the battle. What he did was to
+furnish the <i>Enterprise</i> with the biggest beat of the war. That paper
+published exclusively and in detail the news of the attack on the lines of the
+Russian General on the same day that it was made. No other paper printed a word
+about it for two days afterward, except a London paper, whose account was
+absolutely incorrect and untrue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Calloway did this in face of the fact that General Kuroki was making his moves
+and laying his plans with the profoundest secrecy as far as the world outside
+his camps was concerned. The correspondents were forbidden to send out any news
+whatever of his plans; and every message that was allowed on the wires was
+censored with rigid severity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The correspondent for the London paper handed in a cablegram describing
+Kuroki&rsquo;s plans; but as it was wrong from beginning to end the censor
+grinned and let it go through.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, there they were&mdash;Kuroki on one side of the Yalu with forty-two
+thousand infantry, five thousand cavalry, and one hundred and twenty-four guns.
+On the other side, Zassulitch waited for him with only twenty-three thousand
+men, and with a long stretch of river to guard. And Calloway had got hold of
+some important inside information that he knew would bring the
+<i>Enterprise</i> staff around a cablegram as thick as flies around a Park Row
+lemonade stand. If he could only get that message past the censor&mdash;the new
+censor who had arrived and taken his post that day!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Calloway did the obviously proper thing. He lit his pipe and sat down on a gun
+carriage to think it over. And there we must leave him; for the rest of the
+story belongs to Vesey, a sixteen-dollar-a-week reporter on the
+<i>Enterprise</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Calloway&rsquo;s cablegram was handed to the managing editor at four
+o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon. He read it three times; and then drew a pocket
+mirror from a pigeon-hole in his desk, and looked at his reflection carefully.
+Then he went over to the desk of Boyd, his assistant (he usually called Boyd
+when he wanted him), and laid the cablegram before him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s from Calloway,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;See what you make of
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The message was dated at Wi-ju, and these were the words of it:
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+Foregone preconcerted rash witching goes muffled rumour mine dark silent
+unfortunate richmond existing great hotly brute select mooted parlous beggars
+ye angel incontrovertible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Boyd read it twice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s either a cipher or a sunstroke,&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ever hear of anything like a code in the office&mdash;a secret
+code?&rdquo; asked the m. e., who had held his desk for only two years.
+Managing editors come and go.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;None except the vernacular that the lady specials write in,&rdquo; said
+Boyd. &ldquo;Couldn&rsquo;t be an acrostic, could it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought of that,&rdquo; said the m. e., &ldquo;but the beginning
+letters contain only four vowels. It must be a code of some sort.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Try em in groups,&rdquo; suggested Boyd. &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s
+see&mdash;&lsquo;Rash witching goes&rsquo;&mdash;not with me it doesn&rsquo;t.
+&lsquo;Muffled rumour mine&rsquo;&mdash;must have an underground wire.
+&lsquo;Dark silent unfortunate richmond&rsquo;&mdash;no reason why he should
+knock that town so hard. &lsquo;Existing great hotly&rsquo;&mdash;no it
+doesn&rsquo;t pan out. I&rsquo;ll call Scott.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The city editor came in a hurry, and tried his luck. A city editor must know
+something about everything; so Scott knew a little about cipher-writing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It may be what is called an inverted alphabet cipher,&rdquo; said he.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll try that. &lsquo;R&rsquo; seems to be the oftenest used
+initial letter, with the exception of &lsquo;m.&rsquo; Assuming &lsquo;r&rsquo;
+to mean &lsquo;e&rsquo;, the most frequently used vowel, we transpose the
+letters&mdash;so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scott worked rapidly with his pencil for two minutes; and then showed the first
+word according to his reading&mdash;the word &ldquo;Scejtzez.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Great!&rdquo; cried Boyd. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a charade. My first is a
+Russian general. Go on, Scott.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, that won&rsquo;t work,&rdquo; said the city editor.
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s undoubtedly a code. It&rsquo;s impossible to read it without
+the key. Has the office ever used a cipher code?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just what I was asking,&rdquo; said the m.e. &ldquo;Hustle everybody up
+that ought to know. We must get at it some way. Calloway has evidently got hold
+of something big, and the censor has put the screws on, or he wouldn&rsquo;t
+have cabled in a lot of chop suey like this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Throughout the office of the <i>Enterprise</i> a dragnet was sent, hauling in
+such members of the staff as would be likely to know of a code, past or
+present, by reason of their wisdom, information, natural intelligence, or
+length of servitude. They got together in a group in the city room, with the m.
+e. in the centre. No one had heard of a code. All began to explain to the head
+investigator that newspapers never use a code, anyhow&mdash;that is, a cipher
+code. Of course the Associated Press stuff is a sort of code&mdash;an
+abbreviation, rather&mdash;but&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The m. e. knew all that, and said so. He asked each man how long he had worked
+on the paper. Not one of them had drawn pay from an <i>Enterprise</i> envelope
+for longer than six years. Calloway had been on the paper twelve years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Try old Heffelbauer,&rdquo; said the m. e. &ldquo;He was here when Park
+Row was a potato patch.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Heffelbauer was an institution. He was half janitor, half handy-man about the
+office, and half watchman&mdash;thus becoming the peer of thirteen and one-half
+tailors. Sent for, he came, radiating his nationality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Heffelbauer,&rdquo; said the m. e., &ldquo;did you ever hear of a code
+belonging to the office a long time ago&mdash;a private code? You know what a
+code is, don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yah,&rdquo; said Heffelbauer. &ldquo;Sure I know vat a code is. Yah,
+apout dwelf or fifteen year ago der office had a code. Der reborters in der
+city-room haf it here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said the m. e. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re getting on the trail now.
+Where was it kept, Heffelbauer? What do you know about it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Somedimes,&rdquo; said the retainer, &ldquo;dey keep it in der little
+room behind der library room.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can you find it?&rdquo; asked the m. e. eagerly. &ldquo;Do you know
+where it is?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mein Gott!&rdquo; said Heffelbauer. &ldquo;How long you dink a code
+live? Der reborters call him a maskeet. But von day he butt mit his head der
+editor, und&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, he&rsquo;s talking about a goat,&rdquo; said Boyd. &ldquo;Get out,
+Heffelbauer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again discomfited, the concerted wit and resource of the <i>Enterprise</i>
+huddled around Calloway&rsquo;s puzzle, considering its mysterious words in
+vain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Vesey came in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vesey was the youngest reporter. He had a thirty-two-inch chest and wore a
+number fourteen collar; but his bright Scotch plaid suit gave him presence and
+conferred no obscurity upon his whereabouts. He wore his hat in such a position
+that people followed him about to see him take it off, convinced that it must
+be hung upon a peg driven into the back of his head. He was never without an
+immense, knotted, hard-wood cane with a German-silver tip on its crooked
+handle. Vesey was the best photograph hustler in the office. Scott said it was
+because no living human being could resist the personal triumph it was to hand
+his picture over to Vesey. Vesey always wrote his own news stories, except the
+big ones, which were sent to the rewrite men. Add to this fact that among all
+the inhabitants, temples, and groves of the earth nothing existed that could
+abash Vesey, and his dim sketch is concluded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vesey butted into the circle of cipher readers very much as Heffelbauer&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;code&rdquo; would have done, and asked what was up. Some one explained,
+with the touch of half-familiar condescension that they always used toward him.
+Vesey reached out and took the cablegram from the m. e.&rsquo;s hand. Under the
+protection of some special Providence, he was always doing appalling things
+like that, and coming, off unscathed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a code,&rdquo; said Vesey. &ldquo;Anybody got the key?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The office has no code,&rdquo; said Boyd, reaching for the message.
+Vesey held to it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then old Calloway expects us to read it, anyhow,&rdquo; said he.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s up a tree, or something, and he&rsquo;s made this up so as to
+get it by the censor. It&rsquo;s up to us. Gee! I wish they had sent me, too.
+Say&mdash;we can&rsquo;t afford to fall down on our end of it. &lsquo;Foregone,
+preconcerted rash, witching&rsquo;&mdash;h&rsquo;m.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vesey sat down on a table corner and began to whistle softly, frowning at the
+cablegram.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s have it, please,&rdquo; said the m. e. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve
+got to get to work on it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe I&rsquo;ve got a line on it,&rdquo; said Vesey. &ldquo;Give me
+ten minutes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He walked to his desk, threw his hat into a waste-basket, spread out flat on
+his chest like a gorgeous lizard, and started his pencil going. The wit and
+wisdom of the <i>Enterprise</i> remained in a loose group, and smiled at one
+another, nodding their heads toward Vesey. Then they began to exchange their
+theories about the cipher.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It took Vesey exactly fifteen minutes. He brought to the m. e. a pad with the
+code-key written on it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I felt the swing of it as soon as I saw it,&rdquo; said Vesey.
+&ldquo;Hurrah for old Calloway! He&rsquo;s done the Japs and every paper in
+town that prints literature instead of news. Take a look at that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus had Vesey set forth the reading of the code:
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+Foregone&mdash;conclusion<br>
+Preconcerted&mdash;arrangement<br>
+Rash&mdash;act<br>
+Witching&mdash;hour of midnight<br>
+Goes&mdash;without saying<br>
+Muffled&mdash;report<br>
+Rumour&mdash;hath it<br>
+Mine&mdash;host<br>
+Dark&mdash;horse<br>
+Silent&mdash;majority<br>
+Unfortunate&mdash;pedestrians*<br>
+Richmond&mdash;in the field<br>
+Existing&mdash;conditions<br>
+Great&mdash;White Way<br>
+Hotly&mdash;contested<br>
+Brute&mdash;force<br>
+Select&mdash;few<br>
+Mooted&mdash;question<br>
+Parlous&mdash;times<br>
+Beggars&mdash;description<br>
+Ye&mdash;correspondent<br>
+Angel&mdash;unawares<br>
+Incontrovertible&mdash;fact
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+* Mr. Vesey afterward explained that the logical journalistic complement of the
+word &ldquo;unfortunate&rdquo; was once the word &ldquo;victim.&rdquo; But,
+since the automobile became so popular, the correct following word is now
+&ldquo;pedestrians&rdquo;. Of course, in Calloway&rsquo;s code it meant
+infantry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s simply newspaper English,&rdquo; explained Vesey.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been reporting on the <i>Enterprise</i> long enough to know
+it by heart. Old Calloway gives us the cue word, and we use the word that
+naturally follows it just as we use &rsquo;em in the paper. Read it over, and
+you&rsquo;ll see how pat they drop into their places. Now, here&rsquo;s the
+message he intended us to get.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vesey handed out another sheet of paper.
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+Concluded arrangement to act at hour of midnight without saying. Report hath it
+that a large body of cavalry and an overwhelming force of infantry will be
+thrown into the field. Conditions white. Way contested by only a small force.
+Question the <i>Times</i> description. Its correspondent is unaware of the
+facts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Great stuff!&rdquo; cried Boyd excitedly. &ldquo;Kuroki crosses the Yalu
+to-night and attacks. Oh, we won&rsquo;t do a thing to the sheets that make up
+with Addison&rsquo;s essays, real estate transfers, and bowling scores!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Vesey,&rdquo; said the m. e., with his
+jollying-which-you-should-regard-as-a-favour manner, &ldquo;you have cast a
+serious reflection upon the literary standards of the paper that employs you.
+You have also assisted materially in giving us the biggest &lsquo;beat&rsquo;
+of the year. I will let you know in a day or two whether you are to be
+discharged or retained at a larger salary. Somebody send Ames to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ames was the king-pin, the snowy-petalled Marguerite, the star-bright looloo of
+the rewrite men. He saw attempted murder in the pains of green-apple colic,
+cyclones in the summer zephyr, lost children in every top-spinning urchin, an
+uprising of the down-trodden masses in every hurling of a derelict potato at a
+passing automobile. When not rewriting, Ames sat on the porch of his Brooklyn
+villa playing checkers with his ten-year-old son.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ames and the &ldquo;war editor&rdquo; shut themselves in a room. There was a
+map in there stuck full of little pins that represented armies and divisions.
+Their fingers had been itching for days to move those pins along the crooked
+line of the Yalu. They did so now; and in words of fire Ames translated
+Calloway&rsquo;s brief message into a front page masterpiece that set the world
+talking. He told of the secret councils of the Japanese officers; gave
+Kuroki&rsquo;s flaming speeches in full; counted the cavalry and infantry to a
+man and a horse; described the quick and silent building of the bridge at
+Suikauchen, across which the Mikado&rsquo;s legions were hurled upon the
+surprised Zassulitch, whose troops were widely scattered along the river. And
+the battle!&mdash;well, you know what Ames can do with a battle if you give him
+just one smell of smoke for a foundation. And in the same story, with seemingly
+supernatural knowledge, he gleefully scored the most profound and ponderous
+paper in England for the false and misleading account of the intended movements
+of the Japanese First Army printed in its issue of <i>the same date</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Only one error was made; and that was the fault of the cable operator at Wi-ju.
+Calloway pointed it out after he came back. The word &ldquo;great&rdquo; in his
+code should have been &ldquo;gage,&rdquo; and its complemental words &ldquo;of
+battle.&rdquo; But it went to Ames &ldquo;conditions white,&rdquo; and of
+course he took that to mean snow. His description of the Japanese army
+struggling through the snowstorm, blinded by the whirling flakes, was
+thrillingly vivid. The artists turned out some effective illustrations that
+made a hit as pictures of the artillery dragging their guns through the drifts.
+But, as the attack was made on the first day of May, &ldquo;conditions
+white&rdquo; excited some amusement. But it in made no difference to the
+<i>Enterprise</i>, anyway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was wonderful. And Calloway was wonderful in having made the new censor
+believe that his jargon of words meant no more than a complaint of the dearth
+of news and a petition for more expense money. And Vesey was wonderful. And
+most wonderful of all are words, and how they make friends one with another,
+being oft associated, until not even obituary notices them do part.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+On the second day following, the city editor halted at Vesey&rsquo;s desk where
+the reporter was writing the story of a man who had broken his leg by falling
+into a coal-hole&mdash;Ames having failed to find a murder motive in it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The old man says your salary is to be raised to twenty a week,&rdquo;
+said Scott.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said Vesey. &ldquo;Every little helps. Say&mdash;Mr.
+Scott, which would you say&mdash;&lsquo;We can state without fear of successful
+contradiction,&rsquo; or, &lsquo;On the whole it can be safely
+asserted&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap05"></a>V<br>
+A MATTER OF MEAN ELEVATION</h2>
+
+<p>
+One winter the Alcazar Opera Company of New Orleans made a speculative trip
+along the Mexican, Central American and South American coasts. The venture
+proved a most successful one. The music-loving, impressionable
+Spanish-Americans deluged the company with dollars and &ldquo;vivas.&rdquo; The
+manager waxed plump and amiable. But for the prohibitive climate he would have
+put forth the distinctive flower of his prosperity&mdash;the overcoat of fur,
+braided, frogged and opulent. Almost was he persuaded to raise the salaries of
+his company. But with a mighty effort he conquered the impulse toward such an
+unprofitable effervescence of joy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Macuto, on the coast of Venezuela, the company scored its greatest success.
+Imagine Coney Island translated into Spanish and you will comprehend Macuto.
+The fashionable season is from November to March. Down from La Guayra and
+Caracas and Valencia and other interior towns flock the people for their
+holiday season. There are bathing and fiestas and bull fights and scandal. And
+then the people have a passion for music that the bands in the plaza and on the
+sea beach stir but do not satisfy. The coming of the Alcazar Opera Company
+aroused the utmost ardour and zeal among the pleasure seekers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The illustrious Guzman Blanco, President and Dictator of Venezuela, sojourned
+in Macuto with his court for the season. That potent ruler&mdash;who himself
+paid a subsidy of 40,000 pesos each year to grand opera in
+Caracas&mdash;ordered one of the Government warehouses to be cleared for a
+temporary theatre. A stage was quickly constructed and rough wooden benches
+made for the audience. Private boxes were added for the use of the President
+and the notables of the army and Government.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The company remained in Macuto for two weeks. Each performance filled the house
+as closely as it could be packed. Then the music-mad people fought for room in
+the open doors and windows, and crowded about, hundreds deep, on the outside.
+Those audiences formed a brilliantly diversified patch of colour. The hue of
+their faces ranged from the clear olive of the pure-blood Spaniards down
+through the yellow and brown shades of the Mestizos to the coal-black Carib and
+the Jamaica Negro. Scattered among them were little groups of Indians with
+faces like stone idols, wrapped in gaudy fibre-woven blankets&mdash;Indians
+down from the mountain states of Zamora and Los Andes and Miranda to trade
+their gold dust in the coast towns.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The spell cast upon these denizens of the interior fastnesses was remarkable.
+They sat in petrified ecstasy, conspicuous among the excitable Macutians, who
+wildly strove with tongue and hand to give evidence of their delight. Only once
+did the sombre rapture of these aboriginals find expression. During the
+rendition of &ldquo;Faust,&rdquo; Guzman Blanco, extravagantly pleased by the
+&ldquo;Jewel Song,&rdquo; cast upon the stage a purse of gold pieces. Other
+distinguished citizens followed his lead to the extent of whatever loose coin
+they had convenient, while some of the fair and fashionable señoras were moved,
+in imitation, to fling a jewel or a ring or two at the feet of the
+Marguerite&mdash;who was, according to the bills, Mlle. Nina Giraud. Then, from
+different parts of the house rose sundry of the stolid hillmen and cast upon
+the stage little brown and dun bags that fell with soft &ldquo;thumps&rdquo;
+and did not rebound. It was, no doubt, pleasure at the tribute to her art that
+caused Mlle. Giraud&rsquo;s eyes to shine so brightly when she opened these
+little deerskin bags in her dressing room and found them to contain pure gold
+dust. If so, the pleasure was rightly hers, for her voice in song, pure, strong
+and thrilling with the feeling of the emotional artist, deserved the tribute
+that it earned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the triumph of the Alcazar Opera Company is not the theme&mdash;it but
+leans upon and colours it. There happened in Macuto a tragic thing, an
+unsolvable mystery, that sobered for a time the gaiety of the happy season.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One evening between the short twilight and the time when she should have
+whirled upon the stage in the red and black of the ardent Carmen, Mlle. Nina
+Giraud disappeared from the sight and ken of 6,000 pairs of eyes and as many
+minds in Macuto. There was the usual turmoil and hurrying to seek her.
+Messengers flew to the little French-kept hotel where she stayed; others of the
+company hastened here or there where she might be lingering in some tienda or
+unduly prolonging her bath upon the beach. All search was fruitless.
+Mademoiselle had vanished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Half an hour passed and she did not appear. The dictator, unused to the
+caprices of prime donne, became impatient. He sent an aide from his box to say
+to the manager that if the curtain did not at once rise he would immediately
+hale the entire company to the calabosa, though it would desolate his heart,
+indeed, to be compelled to such an act. Birds in Macuto could be made to sing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The manager abandoned hope for the time of Mlle. Giraud. A member of the
+chorus, who had dreamed hopelessly for years of the blessed opportunity,
+quickly Carmenized herself and the opera went on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Afterward, when the lost cantatrice appeared not, the aid of the authorities
+was invoked. The President at once set the army, the police and all citizens to
+the search. Not one clue to Mlle. Giraud&rsquo;s disappearance was found. The
+Alcazar left to fill engagements farther down the coast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the way back the steamer stopped at Macuto and the manager made anxious
+inquiry. Not a trace of the lady had been discovered. The Alcazar could do no
+more. The personal belongings of the missing lady were stored in the hotel
+against her possible later reappearance and the opera company continued upon
+its homeward voyage to New Orleans.
+</p>
+
+<hr>
+
+<p>
+On the <i>camino real</i> along the beach the two saddle mules and the four
+pack mules of Don Señor Johnny Armstrong stood, patiently awaiting the crack of
+the whip of the <i>arriero</i>, Luis. That would be the signal for the start on
+another long journey into the mountains. The pack mules were loaded with a
+varied assortment of hardware and cutlery. These articles Don Johnny traded to
+the interior Indians for the gold dust that they washed from the Andean streams
+and stored in quills and bags against his coming. It was a profitable business,
+and Señor Armstrong expected soon to be able to purchase the coffee plantation
+that he coveted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Armstrong stood on the narrow sidewalk, exchanging garbled Spanish with old
+Peralto, the rich native merchant who had just charged him four prices for half
+a gross of pot-metal hatchets, and abridged English with Rucker, the little
+German who was Consul for the United States.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take with you, señor,&rdquo; said Peralto, &ldquo;the blessings of the
+saints upon your journey.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Better try quinine,&rdquo; growled Rucker through his pipe. &ldquo;Take
+two grains every night. And don&rsquo;t make your trip too long, Johnny,
+because we haf needs of you. It is ein villainous game dot Melville play of
+whist, and dere is no oder substitute. <i>Auf wiedersehen</i>, und keep your
+eyes dot mule&rsquo;s ears between when you on der edge of der brecipices
+ride.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bells of Luis&rsquo;s mule jingled and the pack train filed after the
+warning note. Armstrong, waved a good-bye and took his place at the tail of the
+procession. Up the narrow street they turned, and passed the two-story wooden
+Hotel Ingles, where Ives and Dawson and Richards and the rest of the chaps were
+dawdling on the broad piazza, reading week-old newspapers. They crowded to the
+railing and shouted many friendly and wise and foolish farewells after him.
+Across the plaza they trotted slowly past the bronze statue of Guzman Blanco,
+within its fence of bayoneted rifles captured from revolutionists, and out of
+the town between the rows of thatched huts swarming with the unclothed youth of
+Macuto. They plunged into the damp coolness of banana groves at length to
+emerge upon a bright stream, where brown women in scant raiment laundered
+clothes destructively upon the rocks. Then the pack train, fording the stream,
+attacked the sudden ascent, and bade adieu to such civilization as the coast
+afforded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For weeks Armstrong, guided by Luis, followed his regular route among the
+mountains. After he had collected an arroba of the precious metal, winning a
+profit of nearly $5,000, the heads of the lightened mules were turned
+down-trail again. Where the head of the Guarico River springs from a great gash
+in the mountain-side, Luis halted the train.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Half a day&rsquo;s journey from here, Señor,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;is
+the village of Tacuzama, which we have never visited. I think many ounces of
+gold may be procured there. It is worth the trial.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Armstrong concurred, and they turned again upward toward Tacuzama. The trail
+was abrupt and precipitous, mounting through a dense forest. As night fell,
+dark and gloomy, Luis once more halted. Before them was a black chasm,
+bisecting the path as far as they could see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Luis dismounted. &ldquo;There should be a bridge,&rdquo; he called, and ran
+along the cleft a distance. &ldquo;It is here,&rdquo; he cried, and remounting,
+led the way. In a few moments Armstrong, heard a sound as though a thunderous
+drum were beating somewhere in the dark. It was the falling of the mules&rsquo;
+hoofs upon the bridge made of strong hides lashed to poles and stretched across
+the chasm. Half a mile further was Tacuzama. The village was a congregation of
+rock and mud huts set in the profundity of an obscure wood. As they rode in a
+sound inconsistent with that brooding solitude met their ears. From a long, low
+mud hut that they were nearing rose the glorious voice of a woman in song. The
+words were English, the air familiar to Armstrong&rsquo;s memory, but not to
+his musical knowledge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He slipped from his mule and stole to a narrow window in one end of the house.
+Peering cautiously inside, he saw, within three feet of him, a woman of
+marvellous, imposing beauty, clothed in a splendid loose robe of leopard skins.
+The hut was packed close to the small space in which she stood with the
+squatting figures of Indians.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman finished her song and seated herself close to the little window, as
+if grateful for the unpolluted air that entered it. When she had ceased several
+of the audience rose and cast little softly-falling bags at her feet. A harsh
+murmur&mdash;no doubt a barbarous kind of applause and comment&mdash;went
+through the grim assembly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Armstrong, was used to seizing opportunities promptly. Taking advantage of the
+noise he called to the woman in a low but distinct voice: &ldquo;Do not turn
+your head this way, but listen. I am an American. If you need assistance tell
+me how I can render it. Answer as briefly as you can.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman was worthy of his boldness. Only by a sudden flush of her pale cheek
+did she acknowledge understanding of his words. Then she spoke, scarcely moving
+her lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am held a prisoner by these Indians. God knows I need help. In two
+hours come to the little hut twenty yards toward the Mountainside. There will
+be a light and a red curtain in the window. There is always a guard at the
+door, whom you will have to overcome. For the love of heaven, do not fail to
+come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The story seems to shrink from adventure and rescue and mystery. The theme is
+one too gentle for those brave and quickening tones. And yet it reaches as far
+back as time itself. It has been named &ldquo;environment,&rdquo; which is as
+weak a word as any to express the unnameable kinship of man to nature, that
+queer fraternity that causes stones and trees and salt water and clouds to play
+upon our emotions. Why are we made serious and solemn and sublime by mountain
+heights, grave and contemplative by an abundance of overhanging trees, reduced
+to inconstancy and monkey capers by the ripples on a sandy beach? Did the
+protoplasm&mdash;but enough. The chemists are looking into the matter, and
+before long they will have all life in the table of the symbols.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Briefly, then, in order to confine the story within scientific bounds, John
+Armstrong, went to the hut, choked the Indian guard and carried away Mlle.
+Giraud. With her was also conveyed a number of pounds of gold dust she had
+collected during her six months&rsquo; forced engagement in Tacuzama. The
+Carabobo Indians are easily the most enthusiastic lovers of music between the
+equator and the French Opera House in New Orleans. They are also strong
+believers that the advice of Emerson was good when he said: &ldquo;The thing
+thou wantest, O discontented man &mdash;take it, and pay the price.&rdquo; A
+number of them had attended the performance of the Alcazar Opera Company in
+Macuto, and found Mlle. Giraud&rsquo;s style and technique satisfactory. They
+wanted her, so they took her one evening suddenly and without any fuss. They
+treated her with much consideration, exacting only one song recital each day.
+She was quite pleased at being rescued by Mr. Armstrong. So much for mystery
+and adventure. Now to resume the theory of the protoplasm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John Armstrong and Mlle. Giraud rode among the Andean peaks, enveloped in their
+greatness and sublimity. The mightiest cousins, furthest removed, in
+nature&rsquo;s great family become conscious of the tie. Among those huge piles
+of primordial upheaval, amid those gigantic silences and elongated fields of
+distance the littlenesses of men are precipitated as one chemical throws down a
+sediment from another. They moved reverently, as in a temple. Their souls were
+uplifted in unison with the stately heights. They travelled in a zone of
+majesty and peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To Armstrong the woman seemed almost a holy thing. Yet bathed in the white,
+still dignity of her martyrdom that purified her earthly beauty and gave out,
+it seemed, an aura of transcendent loveliness, in those first hours of
+companionship she drew from him an adoration that was half human love, half the
+worship of a descended goddess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Never yet since her rescue had she smiled. Over her dress she still wore the
+robe of leopard skins, for the mountain air was cold. She looked to be some
+splendid princess belonging to those wild and awesome altitudes. The spirit of
+the region chimed with hers. Her eyes were always turned upon the sombre
+cliffs, the blue gorges and the snow-clad turrets, looking a sublime melancholy
+equal to their own. At times on the journey she sang thrilling te deums and
+misereres that struck the true note of the hills, and made their route seem
+like a solemn march down a cathedral aisle. The rescued one spoke but seldom,
+her mood partaking of the hush of nature that surrounded them. Armstrong looked
+upon her as an angel. He could not bring himself to the sacrilege of attempting
+to woo her as other women may be wooed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the third day they had descended as far as the <i>tierra templada</i>, the
+zona of the table lands and foot hills. The mountains were receding in their
+rear, but still towered, exhibiting yet impressively their formidable heads.
+Here they met signs of man. They saw the white houses of coffee plantations
+gleam across the clearings. They struck into a road where they met travellers
+and pack-mules. Cattle were grazing on the slopes. They passed a little village
+where the round-eyed <i>niños</i> shrieked and called at sight of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mlle. Giraud laid aside her leopard-skin robe. It seemed to be a trifle
+incongruous now. In the mountains it had appeared fitting and natural. And if
+Armstrong was not mistaken she laid aside with it something of the high dignity
+of her demeanour. As the country became more populous and significant of
+comfortable life he saw, with a feeling of joy, that the exalted princess and
+priestess of the Andean peaks was changing to a woman&mdash;an earth woman, but
+no less enticing. A little colour crept to the surface of her marble cheek. She
+arranged the conventional dress that the removal of the robe now disclosed with
+the solicitous touch of one who is conscious of the eyes of others. She
+smoothed the careless sweep of her hair. A mundane interest, long latent in the
+chilling atmosphere of the ascetic peaks, showed in her eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This thaw in his divinity sent Armstrong&rsquo;s heart going faster. So might
+an Arctic explorer thrill at his first ken of green fields and liquescent
+waters. They were on a lower plane of earth and life and were succumbing to its
+peculiar, subtle influence. The austerity of the hills no longer thinned the
+air they breathed. About them was the breath of fruit and corn and builded
+homes, the comfortable smell of smoke and warm earth and the consolations man
+has placed between himself and the dust of his brother earth from which he
+sprung. While traversing those awful mountains, Mlle. Giraud had seemed to be
+wrapped in their spirit of reverent reserve. Was this that same woman&mdash;now
+palpitating, warm, eager, throbbing with conscious life and charm, feminine to
+her finger-tips? Pondering over this, Armstrong felt certain misgivings intrude
+upon his thoughts. He wished he could stop there with this changing creature,
+descending no farther. Here was the elevation and environment to which her
+nature seemed to respond with its best. He feared to go down upon the
+man-dominated levels. Would her spirit not yield still further in that
+artificial zone to which they were descending?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now from a little plateau they saw the sea flash at the edge of the green
+lowlands. Mlle. Giraud gave a little, catching sigh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! look, Mr. Armstrong, there is the sea! Isn&rsquo;t it lovely?
+I&rsquo;m so tired of mountains.&rdquo; She heaved a pretty shoulder in a
+gesture of repugnance. &ldquo;Those horrid Indians! Just think of what I
+suffered! Although I suppose I attained my ambition of becoming a stellar
+attraction, I wouldn&rsquo;t care to repeat the engagement. It was very nice of
+you to bring me away. Tell me, Mr. Armstrong&mdash;honestly, now &mdash;do I
+look such an awful, awful fright? I haven&rsquo;t looked into a mirror, you
+know, for months.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Armstrong made answer according to his changed moods. Also he laid his hand
+upon hers as it rested upon the horn of her saddle. Luis was at the head of the
+pack train and could not see. She allowed it to remain there, and her eyes
+smiled frankly into his.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then at sundown they dropped upon the coast level under the palms and lemons
+among the vivid greens and scarlets and ochres of the <i>tierra caliente</i>.
+They rode into Macuto, and saw the line of volatile bathers frolicking in the
+surf. The mountains were very far away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mlle. Giraud&rsquo;s eyes were shining with a joy that could not have existed
+under the chaperonage of the mountain-tops. There were other spirits calling to
+her&mdash;nymphs of the orange groves, pixies from the chattering surf, imps,
+born of the music, the perfumes, colours and the insinuating presence of
+humanity. She laughed aloud, musically, at a sudden thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t there be a sensation?&rdquo; she called to Armstrong.
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t I wish I had an engagement just now, though! What a picnic
+the press agent would have! &lsquo;Held a prisoner by a band of savage Indians
+subdued by the spell of her wonderful voice&rsquo;&mdash;wouldn&rsquo;t that
+make great stuff? But I guess I quit the game winner, anyhow&mdash;there ought
+to be a couple of thousand dollars in that sack of gold dust I collected as
+encores, don&rsquo;t you think?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He left her at the door of the little Hotel de Buen Descansar, where she had
+stopped before. Two hours later he returned to the hotel. He glanced in at the
+open door of the little combined reception room and café.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Half a dozen of Macuto&rsquo;s representative social and official
+<i>caballeros</i> were distributed about the room. Señor Villablanca, the
+wealthy rubber concessionist, reposed his fat figure on two chairs, with an
+emollient smile beaming upon his chocolate-coloured face. Guilbert, the French
+mining engineer, leered through his polished nose-glasses. Colonel Mendez, of
+the regular army, in gold-laced uniform and fatuous grin, was busily extracting
+corks from champagne bottles. Other patterns of Macutian gallantry and fashion
+pranced and posed. The air was hazy with cigarette smoke. Wine dripped upon the
+floor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perched upon a table in the centre of the room in an attitude of easy
+preëminence was Mlle. Giraud. A chic costume of white lawn and cherry ribbons
+supplanted her travelling garb. There was a suggestion of lace, and a frill or
+two, with a discreet, small implication of hand-embroidered pink hosiery. Upon
+her lap rested a guitar. In her face was the light of resurrection, the peace
+of elysium attained through fire and suffering. She was singing to a lively
+accompaniment a little song:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;When you see de big round moon<br>
+Comin&rsquo; up like a balloon,<br>
+Dis nigger skips fur to kiss de lips<br>
+Ob his stylish, black-faced coon.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The singer caught sight of Armstrong.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hi! there, Johnny,&rdquo; she called; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been expecting
+you for an hour. What kept you? Gee! but these smoked guys are the slowest you
+ever saw. They ain&rsquo;t on, at all. Come along in, and I&rsquo;ll make this
+coffee-coloured old sport with the gold epaulettes open one for you right off
+the ice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; said Armstrong; &ldquo;not just now, I believe.
+I&rsquo;ve several things to attend to.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He walked out and down the street, and met Rucker coming up from the Consulate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Play you a game of billiards,&rdquo; said Armstrong. &ldquo;I want
+something to take the taste of the sea level out of my mouth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap06"></a>VI<br>
+&ldquo;GIRL&rdquo;</h2>
+
+<p>
+In gilt letters on the ground glass of the door of room No. 962 were the words:
+&ldquo;Robbins &amp; Hartley, Brokers.&rdquo; The clerks had gone. It was past
+five, and with the solid tramp of a drove of prize Percherons, scrub-women were
+invading the cloud-capped twenty-story office building. A puff of red-hot air
+flavoured with lemon peelings, soft-coal smoke and train oil came in through
+the half-open windows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Robbins, fifty, something of an overweight beau, and addicted to first nights
+and hotel palm-rooms, pretended to be envious of his partner&rsquo;s
+commuter&rsquo;s joys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Going to be something doing in the humidity line to-night,&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;You out-of-town chaps will be the people, with your katydids and
+moonlight and long drinks and things out on the front porch.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hartley, twenty-nine, serious, thin, good-looking, nervous, sighed and frowned
+a little.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;we always have cool nights in Floralhurst,
+especially in the winter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A man with an air of mystery came in the door and went up to Hartley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve found where she lives,&rdquo; he announced in the portentous
+half-whisper that makes the detective at work a marked being to his fellow men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hartley scowled him into a state of dramatic silence and quietude. But by that
+time Robbins had got his cane and set his tie pin to his liking, and with a
+debonair nod went out to his metropolitan amusements.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here is the address,&rdquo; said the detective in a natural tone, being
+deprived of an audience to foil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hartley took the leaf torn out of the sleuth&rsquo;s dingy memorandum book. On
+it were pencilled the words &ldquo;Vivienne Arlington, No. 341 East
+&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;th Street, care of Mrs. McComus.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Moved there a week ago,&rdquo; said the detective. &ldquo;Now, if you
+want any shadowing done, Mr. Hartley, I can do you as fine a job in that line
+as anybody in the city. It will be only $7 a day and expenses. Can send in a
+daily typewritten report, covering&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You needn&rsquo;t go on,&rdquo; interrupted the broker. &ldquo;It
+isn&rsquo;t a case of that kind. I merely wanted the address. How much shall I
+pay you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One day&rsquo;s work,&rdquo; said the sleuth. &ldquo;A tenner will cover
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hartley paid the man and dismissed him. Then he left the office and boarded a
+Broadway car. At the first large crosstown artery of travel he took an
+eastbound car that deposited him in a decaying avenue, whose ancient structures
+once sheltered the pride and glory of the town.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Walking a few squares, he came to the building that he sought. It was a new
+flathouse, bearing carved upon its cheap stone portal its sonorous name,
+&ldquo;The Vallambrosa.&rdquo; Fire-escapes zigzagged down its
+front&mdash;these laden with household goods, drying clothes, and squalling
+children evicted by the midsummer heat. Here and there a pale rubber plant
+peeped from the miscellaneous mass, as if wondering to what kingdom it
+belonged&mdash;vegetable, animal or artificial.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hartley pressed the &ldquo;McComus&rdquo; button. The door latch clicked
+spasmodically&mdash;now hospitably, now doubtfully, as though in anxiety
+whether it might be admitting friends or duns. Hartley entered and began to
+climb the stairs after the manner of those who seek their friends in city
+flat-houses&mdash;which is the manner of a boy who climbs an apple-tree,
+stopping when he comes upon what he wants.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the fourth floor he saw Vivienne standing in an open door. She invited him
+inside, with a nod and a bright, genuine smile. She placed a chair for him near
+a window, and poised herself gracefully upon the edge of one of those
+Jekyll-and-Hyde pieces of furniture that are masked and mysteriously hooded,
+unguessable bulks by day and inquisitorial racks of torture by night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hartley cast a quick, critical, appreciative glance at her before speaking, and
+told himself that his taste in choosing had been flawless.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vivienne was about twenty-one. She was of the purest Saxon type. Her hair was a
+ruddy golden, each filament of the neatly gathered mass shining with its own
+lustre and delicate graduation of colour. In perfect harmony were her
+ivory-clear complexion and deep sea-blue eyes that looked upon the world with
+the ingenuous calmness of a mermaid or the pixie of an undiscovered mountain
+stream. Her frame was strong and yet possessed the grace of absolute
+naturalness. And yet with all her Northern clearness and frankness of line and
+colouring, there seemed to be something of the tropics in her&mdash;something
+of languor in the droop of her pose, of love of ease in her ingenious
+complacency of satisfaction and comfort in the mere act of
+breathing&mdash;something that seemed to claim for her a right as a perfect
+work of nature to exist and be admired equally with a rare flower or some
+beautiful, milk-white dove among its sober-hued companions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was dressed in a white waist and dark skirt&mdash;that discreet masquerade
+of goose-girl and duchess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Vivienne,&rdquo; said Hartley, looking at her pleadingly, &ldquo;you did
+not answer my last letter. It was only by nearly a week&rsquo;s search that I
+found where you had moved to. Why have you kept me in suspense when you knew
+how anxiously I was waiting to see you and hear from you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl looked out the window dreamily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Hartley,&rdquo; she said hesitatingly, &ldquo;I hardly know what to
+say to you. I realize all the advantages of your offer, and sometimes I feel
+sure that I could be contented with you. But, again, I am doubtful. I was born
+a city girl, and I am afraid to bind myself to a quiet suburban life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear girl,&rdquo; said Hartley, ardently, &ldquo;have I not told you
+that you shall have everything that your heart can desire that is in my power
+to give you? You shall come to the city for the theatres, for shopping and to
+visit your friends as often as you care to. You can trust me, can you
+not?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To the fullest,&rdquo; she said, turning her frank eyes upon him with a
+smile. &ldquo;I know you are the kindest of men, and that the girl you get will
+be a lucky one. I learned all about you when I was at the
+Montgomerys&rsquo;.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; exclaimed Hartley, with a tender, reminiscent light in his
+eye; &ldquo;I remember well the evening I first saw you at the
+Montgomerys&rsquo;. Mrs. Montgomery was sounding your praises to me all the
+evening. And she hardly did you justice. I shall never forget that supper.
+Come, Vivienne, promise me. I want you. You&rsquo;ll never regret coming with
+me. No one else will ever give you as pleasant a home.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl sighed and looked down at her folded hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sudden jealous suspicion seized Hartley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell me, Vivienne,&rdquo; he asked, regarding her keenly, &ldquo;is
+there another&mdash;is there some one else?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A rosy flush crept slowly over her fair cheeks and neck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shouldn&rsquo;t ask that, Mr. Hartley,&rdquo; she said, in some
+confusion. &ldquo;But I will tell you. There is one other&mdash;but he has no
+right&mdash;I have promised him nothing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;His name?&rdquo; demanded Hartley, sternly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Townsend.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Rafford Townsend!&rdquo; exclaimed Hartley, with a grim tightening of
+his jaw. &ldquo;How did that man come to know you? After all I&rsquo;ve done
+for him&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;His auto has just stopped below,&rdquo; said Vivienne, bending over the
+window-sill. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s coming for his answer. Oh I don&rsquo;t know
+what to do!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bell in the flat kitchen whirred. Vivienne hurried to press the latch
+button.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stay here,&rdquo; said Hartley. &ldquo;I will meet him in the
+hall.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Townsend, looking like a Spanish grandee in his light tweeds, Panama hat and
+curling black mustache, came up the stairs three at a time. He stopped at sight
+of Hartley and looked foolish.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go back,&rdquo; said Hartley, firmly, pointing downstairs with his
+forefinger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hullo!&rdquo; said Townsend, feigning surprise. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s up?
+What are you doing here, old man?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go back,&rdquo; repeated Hartley, inflexibly. &ldquo;The Law of the
+Jungle. Do you want the Pack to tear you in pieces? The kill is mine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I came here to see a plumber about the bathroom connections,&rdquo; said
+Townsend, bravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said Hartley. &ldquo;You shall have that lying plaster
+to stick upon your traitorous soul. But, go back.&rdquo; Townsend went
+downstairs, leaving a bitter word to be wafted up the draught of the staircase.
+Hartley went back to his wooing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Vivienne,&rdquo; said he, masterfully. &ldquo;I have got to have you. I
+will take no more refusals or dilly-dallying.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When do you want me?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now. As soon as you can get ready.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood calmly before him and looked him in the eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you think for one moment,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that I would enter
+your home while Héloise is there?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hartley cringed as if from an unexpected blow. He folded his arms and paced the
+carpet once or twice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She shall go,&rdquo; he declared grimly. Drops stood upon his brow.
+&ldquo;Why should I let that woman make my life miserable? Never have I seen
+one day of freedom from trouble since I have known her. You are right,
+Vivienne. Héloise must be sent away before I can take you home. But she shall
+go. I have decided. I will turn her from my doors.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When will you do this?&rdquo; asked the girl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hartley clinched his teeth and bent his brows together.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To-night,&rdquo; he said, resolutely. &ldquo;I will send her away
+to-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Vivienne, &ldquo;my answer is &lsquo;yes.&rsquo; Come
+for me when you will.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked into his eyes with a sweet, sincere light in her own. Hartley could
+scarcely believe that her surrender was true, it was so swift and complete.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Promise me,&rdquo; he said feelingly, &ldquo;on your word and
+honour.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;On my word and honour,&rdquo; repeated Vivienne, softly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the door he turned and gazed at her happily, but yet as one who scarcely
+trusts the foundations of his joy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To-morrow,&rdquo; he said, with a forefinger of reminder uplifted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To-morrow,&rdquo; she repeated with a smile of truth and candour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In an hour and forty minutes Hartley stepped off the train at Floralhurst. A
+brisk walk of ten minutes brought him to the gate of a handsome two-story
+cottage set upon a wide and well-tended lawn. Halfway to the house he was met
+by a woman with jet-black braided hair and flowing white summer gown, who half
+strangled him without apparent cause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they stepped into the hall she said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mamma&rsquo;s here. The auto is coming for her in half an hour. She came
+to dinner, but there&rsquo;s no dinner.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve something to tell you,&rdquo; said Hartley. &ldquo;I thought
+to break it to you gently, but since your mother is here we may as well out
+with it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stooped and whispered something at her ear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His wife screamed. Her mother came running into the hall. The dark-haired woman
+screamed again&mdash;the joyful scream of a well-beloved and petted woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, mamma!&rdquo; she cried ecstatically, &ldquo;what do you think?
+Vivienne is coming to cook for us! She is the one that stayed with the
+Montgomerys a whole year. And now, Billy, dear,&rdquo; she concluded,
+&ldquo;you must go right down into the kitchen and discharge Héloise. She has
+been drunk again the whole day long.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap07"></a>VII<br>
+SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW</h2>
+
+<p>
+The season of irresponsibility is at hand. Come, let us twine round our brows
+wreaths of poison ivy (that is for idiocy), and wander hand in hand with
+sociology in the summer fields.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Likely as not the world is flat. The wise men have tried to prove that it is
+round, with indifferent success. They pointed out to us a ship going to sea,
+and bade us observe that, at length, the convexity of the earth hid from our
+view all but the vessel&rsquo;s topmast. But we picked up a telescope and
+looked, and saw the decks and hull again. Then the wise men said: &ldquo;Oh,
+pshaw! anyhow, the variation of the intersection of the equator and the
+ecliptic proves it.&rdquo; We could not see this through our telescope, so we
+remained silent. But it stands to reason that, if the world were round, the
+queues of Chinamen would stand straight up from their heads instead of hanging
+down their backs, as travellers assure us they do.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another hot-weather corroboration of the flat theory is the fact that all of
+life, as we know it, moves in little, unavailing circles. More justly than to
+anything else, it can be likened to the game of baseball. Crack! we hit the
+ball, and away we go. If we earn a run (in life we call it success) we get back
+to the home plate and sit upon a bench. If we are thrown out, we walk back to
+the home plate&mdash;and sit upon a bench.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The circumnavigators of the alleged globe may have sailed the rim of a watery
+circle back to the same port again. The truly great return at the high tide of
+their attainments to the simplicity of a child. The billionaire sits down at
+his mahogany to his bowl of bread and milk. When you reach the end of your
+career, just take down the sign &ldquo;Goal&rdquo; and look at the other side
+of it. You will find &ldquo;Beginning Point&rdquo; there. It has been reversed
+while you were going around the track.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this is humour, and must be stopped. Let us get back to the serious
+questions that arise whenever Sociology turns summer boarder. You are invited
+to consider the scene of the story&mdash;wild, Atlantic waves, thundering
+against a wooded and rock-bound shore&mdash;in the Greater City of New York.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The town of Fishampton, on the south shore of Long Island, is noted for its
+clam fritters and the summer residence of the Van Plushvelts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Van Plushvelts have a hundred million dollars, and their name is a
+household word with tradesmen and photographers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the fifteenth of June the Van Plushvelts boarded up the front door of their
+city house, carefully deposited their cat on the sidewalk, instructed the
+caretaker not to allow it to eat any of the ivy on the walls, and whizzed away
+in a 40-horse-power to Fishampton to stray alone in the shade&mdash;Amaryllis
+not being in their class. If you are a subscriber to the <i>Toadies&rsquo;
+Magazine</i>, you have often&mdash;You say you are not? Well, you buy it at a
+news-stand, thinking that the newsdealer is not wise to you. But he knows about
+it all. HE knows&mdash;HE knows! I say that you have often seen in the
+<i>Toadies&rsquo; Magazine</i> pictures of the Van Plushvelts&rsquo; summer
+home; so it will not be described here. Our business is with young Haywood Van
+Plushvelt, sixteen years old, heir to the century of millions, darling of the
+financial gods and great grandson of Peter Van Plushvelt, former owner of a
+particularly fine cabbage patch that has been ruined by an intrusive lot of
+downtown skyscrapers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One afternoon young Haywood Van Plushvelt strolled out between the granite gate
+posts of &ldquo;Dolce far Niente&rdquo;&mdash;that&rsquo;s what they called the
+place; and it was an improvement on dolce Far Rockaway, I can tell you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Haywood walked down into the village. He was human, after all, and his
+prospective millions weighed upon him. Wealth had wreaked upon him its
+direfullest. He was the product of private tutors. Even under his first
+hobby-horse had tan bark been strewn. He had been born with a gold spoon,
+lobster fork and fish-set in his mouth. For which I hope, later, to submit
+justification, I must ask your consideration of his haberdashery and tailoring.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Young Fortunatus was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a neat, white
+straw hat, neat low-cut tan shoes, of the well-known &ldquo;immaculate&rdquo;
+trade mark, a neat, narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried a slender, neat,
+bamboo cane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Down Persimmon Street (there&rsquo;s never tree north of Hagerstown, Md.) came
+from the village &ldquo;Smoky&rdquo; Dodson, fifteen and a half, worst boy in
+Fishampton. &ldquo;Smoky&rdquo; was dressed in a ragged red sweater, wrecked
+and weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and trousers of the
+&ldquo;serviceable&rdquo; brand. Dust, clinging to the moisture induced by free
+exercise, darkened wide areas of his face. &ldquo;Smoky&rdquo; carried a
+baseball bat, and a league ball that advertised itself in the rotundity of his
+trousers pocket. Haywood stopped and passed the time of day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Going to play ball?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Smoky&rsquo;s&rdquo; eyes and countenance confronted him with a frank
+blue-and-freckled scrutiny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Me?&rdquo; he said, with deadly mildness; &ldquo;sure not. Can&rsquo;t
+you see I&rsquo;ve got a divin&rsquo; suit on? I&rsquo;m goin&rsquo; up in a
+submarine balloon to catch butterflies with a two-inch auger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Excuse me,&rdquo; said Haywood, with the insulting politeness of his
+caste, &ldquo;for mistaking you for a gentleman. I might have known
+better.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How might you have known better if you thought I was one?&rdquo; said
+&ldquo;Smoky,&rdquo; unconsciously a logician.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By your appearance,&rdquo; said Haywood. &ldquo;No gentleman is dirty,
+ragged and a liar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Smoky&rdquo; hooted once like a ferry-boat, spat on his hand, got a firm
+grip on his baseball bat and then dropped it against the fence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I knows you. You&rsquo;re the pup that
+belongs in that swell private summer sanitarium for city-guys over there. I
+seen you come out of the gate. You can&rsquo;t bluff nobody because
+you&rsquo;re rich. And because you got on swell clothes. Arabella! Yah!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ragamuffin!&rdquo; said Haywood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Smoky&rdquo; picked up a fence-rail splinter and laid it on his
+shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dare you to knock it off,&rdquo; he challenged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t soil my hands with you,&rdquo; said the aristocrat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Fraid,&rdquo; said &ldquo;Smoky&rdquo; concisely. &ldquo;Youse
+city-ducks ain&rsquo;t got the sand. I kin lick you with one-hand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t wish to have any trouble with you,&rdquo; said Haywood.
+&ldquo;I asked you a civil question; and you replied, like a&mdash;like
+a&mdash;a cad.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wot&rsquo;s a cad?&rdquo; asked &ldquo;Smoky.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A cad is a disagreeable person,&rdquo; answered Haywood, &ldquo;who
+lacks manners and doesn&rsquo;t know his place. They sometimes play
+baseball.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can tell you what a mollycoddle is,&rdquo; said &ldquo;Smoky.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a monkey dressed up by its mother and sent out to pick
+daisies on the lawn.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When you have the honour to refer to the members of my family,&rdquo;
+said Haywood, with some dim ideas of a code in his mind, &ldquo;you&rsquo;d
+better leave the ladies out of your remarks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ho! ladies!&rdquo; mocked the rude one. &ldquo;I say ladies! I know what
+them rich women in the city does. They drink cocktails and swear and give
+parties to gorillas. The papers say so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Haywood knew that it must be. He took off his coat, folded it neatly and
+laid it on the roadside grass, placed his hat upon it and began to unknot his
+blue silk tie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hadn&rsquo;t yer better ring fer yer maid, Arabella?&rdquo; taunted
+&ldquo;Smoky.&rdquo; &ldquo;Wot yer going to do&mdash;go to bed?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to give you a good trouncing,&rdquo; said the hero. He
+did not hesitate, although the enemy was far beneath him socially. He
+remembered that his father once thrashed a cabman, and the papers gave it two
+columns, first page. And the <i>Toadies&rsquo; Magazine</i> had a special
+article on Upper Cuts by the Upper Classes, and ran new pictures of the Van
+Plushvelt country seat, at Fishampton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wot&rsquo;s trouncing?&rdquo; asked &ldquo;Smoky,&rdquo; suspiciously.
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want your old clothes. I&rsquo;m no&mdash;oh, you mean to
+scrap! My, my! I won&rsquo;t do a thing to mamma&rsquo;s pet. Criminy!
+I&rsquo;d hate to be a hand-laundered thing like you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Smoky&rdquo; waited with some awkwardness for his adversary to prepare
+for battle. His own decks were always clear for action. When he should spit
+upon the palm of his terrible right it was equivalent to &ldquo;You may fire
+now, Gridley.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hated patrician advanced, with his shirt sleeves neatly rolled up.
+&ldquo;Smoky&rdquo; waited, in an attitude of ease, expecting the affair to be
+conducted according to Fishampton&rsquo;s rules of war. These allowed combat to
+be prefaced by stigma, recrimination, epithet, abuse and insult gradually
+increasing in emphasis and degree. After a round of these &ldquo;you&rsquo;re
+anothers&rdquo; would come the chip knocked from the shoulder, or the advance
+across the &ldquo;dare&rdquo; line drawn with a toe on the ground. Next light
+taps given and taken, these also increasing in force until finally the blood
+was up and fists going at their best.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Haywood did not know Fishampton&rsquo;s rules. Noblesse oblige kept a faint
+smile on his face as he walked slowly up to &ldquo;Smoky&rdquo; and said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Going to play ball?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Smoky&rdquo; quickly understood this to be a putting of the previous
+question, giving him the chance to make practical apology by answering it with
+civility and relevance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Listen this time,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m goin&rsquo;
+skatin&rsquo; on the river. Don&rsquo;t you see me automobile with Chinese
+lanterns on it standin&rsquo; and waitin&rsquo; for me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Haywood knocked him down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Smoky&rdquo; felt wronged. To thus deprive him of preliminary wrangle
+and objurgation was to send an armoured knight full tilt against a crashing
+lance without permitting him first to caracole around the list to the flourish
+of trumpets. But he scrambled up and fell upon his foe, head, feet and fists.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fight lasted one round of an hour and ten minutes. It was lengthened until
+it was more like a war or a family feud than a fight. Haywood had learned some
+of the science of boxing and wrestling from his tutors, but these he discarded
+for the more instinctive methods of battle handed down by the cave-dwelling Van
+Plushvelts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, when he found himself, during the mêlée, seated upon the kicking and
+roaring &ldquo;Smoky&rsquo;s&rdquo; chest, he improved the opportunity by
+vigorously kneading handfuls of sand and soil into his adversary&rsquo;s ears,
+eyes and mouth, and when &ldquo;Smoky&rdquo; got the proper leg hold and
+&ldquo;turned&rdquo; him, he fastened both hands in the Plushvelt hair and
+pounded the Plushvelt head against the lap of mother earth. Of course, the
+strife was not incessantly active. There were seasons when one sat upon the
+other, holding him down, while each blew like a grampus, spat out the more
+inconveniently large sections of gravel and earth, and strove to subdue the
+spirit of his opponent with a frightful and soul-paralyzing glare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, it seemed that in the language of the ring, their efforts lacked
+steam. They broke away, and each disappeared in a cloud as he brushed away the
+dust of the conflict. As soon as his breath permitted, Haywood walked close to
+&ldquo;Smoky&rdquo; and said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Going to play ball?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Smoky&rdquo; looked pensively at the sky, at his bat lying on the
+ground, and at the &ldquo;leaguer&rdquo; rounding his pocket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sure,&rdquo; he said, offhandedly. &ldquo;The
+&lsquo;Yellowjackets&rsquo; plays the &lsquo;Long Islands.&rsquo; I&rsquo;m
+cap&rsquo;n of the &lsquo;Long Islands.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I guess I didn&rsquo;t mean to say you were ragged,&rdquo; said Haywood.
+&ldquo;But you are dirty, you know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sure,&rdquo; said &ldquo;Smoky.&rdquo; &ldquo;Yer get that way
+knockin&rsquo; around. Say, I don&rsquo;t believe them New York papers about
+ladies drinkin&rsquo; and havin&rsquo; monkeys dinin&rsquo; at the table with
+&rsquo;em. I guess they&rsquo;re lies, like they print about people
+eatin&rsquo; out of silver plates, and ownin&rsquo; dogs that cost $100.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said Haywood. &ldquo;What do you play on your
+team?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ketcher. Ever play any?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never in my life,&rdquo; said Haywood. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve never known any
+fellows except one or two of my cousins.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Jer like to learn? We&rsquo;re goin&rsquo; to have a practice-game
+before the match. Wanter come along? I&rsquo;ll put yer in left-field, and yer
+won&rsquo;t be long ketchin&rsquo; on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like it bully,&rdquo; said Haywood. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve always
+wanted to play baseball.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ladies&rsquo; maids of New York and the families of Western mine owners
+with social ambitions will remember well the sensation that was created by the
+report that the young multi-millionaire, Haywood Van Plushvelt, was playing
+ball with the village youths of Fishampton. It was conceded that the millennium
+of democracy had come. Reporters and photographers swarmed to the island. The
+papers printed half-page pictures of him as short-stop stopping a hot grounder.
+The <i>Toadies&rsquo; Magazine</i> got out a Bat and Ball number that covered
+the subject historically, beginning with the vampire bat and ending with the
+Patriarchs&rsquo; ball&mdash;illustrated with interior views of the Van
+Plushvelt country seat. Ministers, educators and sociologists everywhere hailed
+the event as the tocsin call that proclaimed the universal brotherhood of man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One afternoon I was reclining under the trees near the shore at Fishampton in
+the esteemed company of an eminent, bald-headed young sociologist. By way of
+note it may be inserted that all sociologists are more or less bald, and
+exactly thirty-two. Look &rsquo;em over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sociologist was citing the Van Plushvelt case as the most important
+&ldquo;uplift&rdquo; symptom of a generation, and as an excuse for his own
+existence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Immediately before us were the village baseball grounds. And now came the
+sportive youth of Fishampton and distributed themselves, shouting, about the
+diamond.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There,&rdquo; said the sociologist, pointing, &ldquo;there is young Van
+Plushvelt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I raised myself (so far a cosycophant with Mary Ann) and gazed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Young Van Plushvelt sat upon the ground. He was dressed in a ragged red
+sweater, wrecked and weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and trousers of the
+&ldquo;serviceable&rdquo; brand. Dust clinging to the moisture induced by free
+exercise, darkened wide areas of his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is he,&rdquo; repeated the sociologist. If he had said
+&ldquo;him&rdquo; I could have been less vindictive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On a bench, with an air, sat the young millionaire&rsquo;s chum.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a neat white straw hat, neat
+low-cut tan shoes, linen of the well-known &ldquo;immaculate&rdquo; trade mark,
+a neat, narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried a slender, neat bamboo cane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I laughed loudly and vulgarly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What you want to do,&rdquo; said I to the sociologist, &ldquo;is to
+establish a reformatory for the Logical Vicious Circle. Or else I&rsquo;ve got
+wheels. It looks to me as if things are running round and round in circles
+instead of getting anywhere.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo; asked the man of progress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, look what he has done to &lsquo;Smoky&rsquo;,&rdquo; I replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will always be a fool,&rdquo; said my friend, the sociologist,
+getting up and walking away.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap08"></a>VIII<br>
+THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF</h2>
+
+<p>
+It looked like a good thing: but wait till I tell you. We were down South, in
+Alabama&mdash;Bill Driscoll and myself&mdash;when this kidnapping idea struck
+us. It was, as Bill afterward expressed it, &ldquo;during a moment of temporary
+mental apparition&rdquo;; but we didn&rsquo;t find that out till later.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a town down there, as flat as a flannel-cake, and called Summit, of
+course. It contained inhabitants of as undeleterious and self-satisfied a class
+of peasantry as ever clustered around a Maypole.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bill and me had a joint capital of about six hundred dollars, and we needed
+just two thousand dollars more to pull off a fraudulent town-lot scheme in
+Western Illinois with. We talked it over on the front steps of the hotel.
+Philoprogenitiveness, says we, is strong in semi-rural communities; therefore
+and for other reasons, a kidnapping project ought to do better there than in
+the radius of newspapers that send reporters out in plain clothes to stir up
+talk about such things. We knew that Summit couldn&rsquo;t get after us with
+anything stronger than constables and maybe some lackadaisical bloodhounds and
+a diatribe or two in the <i>Weekly Farmers&rsquo; Budget</i>. So, it looked
+good.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We selected for our victim the only child of a prominent citizen named Ebenezer
+Dorset. The father was respectable and tight, a mortgage fancier and a stern,
+upright collection-plate passer and forecloser. The kid was a boy of ten, with
+bas-relief freckles, and hair the colour of the cover of the magazine you buy
+at the news-stand when you want to catch a train. Bill and me figured that
+Ebenezer would melt down for a ransom of two thousand dollars to a cent. But
+wait till I tell you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+About two miles from Summit was a little mountain, covered with a dense cedar
+brake. On the rear elevation of this mountain was a cave. There we stored
+provisions. One evening after sundown, we drove in a buggy past old
+Dorset&rsquo;s house. The kid was in the street, throwing rocks at a kitten on
+the opposite fence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hey, little boy!&rdquo; says Bill, &ldquo;would you like to have a bag
+of candy and a nice ride?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy catches Bill neatly in the eye with a piece of brick.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That will cost the old man an extra five hundred dollars,&rdquo; says
+Bill, climbing over the wheel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That boy put up a fight like a welter-weight cinnamon bear; but, at last, we
+got him down in the bottom of the buggy and drove away. We took him up to the
+cave and I hitched the horse in the cedar brake. After dark I drove the buggy
+to the little village, three miles away, where we had hired it, and walked back
+to the mountain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bill was pasting court-plaster over the scratches and bruises on his features.
+There was a fire burning behind the big rock at the entrance of the cave, and
+the boy was watching a pot of boiling coffee, with two buzzard tail-feathers
+stuck in his red hair. He points a stick at me when I come up, and says:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ha! cursed paleface, do you dare to enter the camp of Red Chief, the
+terror of the plains?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s all right now,&rdquo; says Bill, rolling up his trousers and
+examining some bruises on his shins. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re playing Indian.
+We&rsquo;re making Buffalo Bill&rsquo;s show look like magic-lantern views of
+Palestine in the town hall. I&rsquo;m Old Hank, the Trapper, Red Chief&rsquo;s
+captive, and I&rsquo;m to be scalped at daybreak. By Geronimo! that kid can
+kick hard.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, sir, that boy seemed to be having the time of his life. The fun of camping
+out in a cave had made him forget that he was a captive himself. He immediately
+christened me Snake-eye, the Spy, and announced that, when his braves returned
+from the warpath, I was to be broiled at the stake at the rising of the sun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then we had supper; and he filled his mouth full of bacon and bread and gravy,
+and began to talk. He made a during-dinner speech something like this:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I like this fine. I never camped out before; but I had a pet
+&rsquo;possum once, and I was nine last birthday. I hate to go to school. Rats
+ate up sixteen of Jimmy Talbot&rsquo;s aunt&rsquo;s speckled hen&rsquo;s eggs.
+Are there any real Indians in these woods? I want some more gravy. Does the
+trees moving make the wind blow? We had five puppies. What makes your nose so
+red, Hank? My father has lots of money. Are the stars hot? I whipped Ed Walker
+twice, Saturday. I don&rsquo;t like girls. You dassent catch toads unless with
+a string. Do oxen make any noise? Why are oranges round? Have you got beds to
+sleep on in this cave? Amos Murray has got six toes. A parrot can talk, but a
+monkey or a fish can&rsquo;t. How many does it take to make twelve?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every few minutes he would remember that he was a pesky redskin, and pick up
+his stick rifle and tiptoe to the mouth of the cave to rubber for the scouts of
+the hated paleface. Now and then he would let out a war-whoop that made Old
+Hank the Trapper shiver. That boy had Bill terrorized from the start.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Red Chief,&rdquo; says I to the kid, &ldquo;would you like to go
+home?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aw, what for?&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t have any fun at home.
+I hate to go to school. I like to camp out. You won&rsquo;t take me back home
+again, Snake-eye, will you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not right away,&rdquo; says I. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll stay here in the cave
+a while.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right!&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;That&rsquo;ll be fine. I never had
+such fun in all my life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We went to bed about eleven o&rsquo;clock. We spread down some wide blankets
+and quilts and put Red Chief between us. We weren&rsquo;t afraid he&rsquo;d run
+away. He kept us awake for three hours, jumping up and reaching for his rifle
+and screeching: &ldquo;Hist! pard,&rdquo; in mine and Bill&rsquo;s ears, as the
+fancied crackle of a twig or the rustle of a leaf revealed to his young
+imagination the stealthy approach of the outlaw band. At last, I fell into a
+troubled sleep, and dreamed that I had been kidnapped and chained to a tree by
+a ferocious pirate with red hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just at daybreak, I was awakened by a series of awful screams from Bill. They
+weren&rsquo;t yells, or howls, or shouts, or whoops, or yawps, such as
+you&rsquo;d expect from a manly set of vocal organs&mdash;they were simply
+indecent, terrifying, humiliating screams, such as women emit when they see
+ghosts or caterpillars. It&rsquo;s an awful thing to hear a strong, desperate,
+fat man scream incontinently in a cave at daybreak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I jumped up to see what the matter was. Red Chief was sitting on Bill&rsquo;s
+chest, with one hand twined in Bill&rsquo;s hair. In the other he had the sharp
+case-knife we used for slicing bacon; and he was industriously and
+realistically trying to take Bill&rsquo;s scalp, according to the sentence that
+had been pronounced upon him the evening before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I got the knife away from the kid and made him lie down again. But, from that
+moment, Bill&rsquo;s spirit was broken. He laid down on his side of the bed,
+but he never closed an eye again in sleep as long as that boy was with us. I
+dozed off for a while, but along toward sun-up I remembered that Red Chief had
+said I was to be burned at the stake at the rising of the sun. I wasn&rsquo;t
+nervous or afraid; but I sat up and lit my pipe and leaned against a rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What you getting up so soon for, Sam?&rdquo; asked Bill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Me?&rdquo; says I. &ldquo;Oh, I got a kind of a pain in my shoulder. I
+thought sitting up would rest it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a liar!&rdquo; says Bill. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re afraid. You
+was to be burned at sunrise, and you was afraid he&rsquo;d do it. And he would,
+too, if he could find a match. Ain&rsquo;t it awful, Sam? Do you think anybody
+will pay out money to get a little imp like that back home?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sure,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;A rowdy kid like that is just the kind that
+parents dote on. Now, you and the Chief get up and cook breakfast, while I go
+up on the top of this mountain and reconnoitre.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went up on the peak of the little mountain and ran my eye over the contiguous
+vicinity. Over toward Summit I expected to see the sturdy yeomanry of the
+village armed with scythes and pitchforks beating the countryside for the
+dastardly kidnappers. But what I saw was a peaceful landscape dotted with one
+man ploughing with a dun mule. Nobody was dragging the creek; no couriers
+dashed hither and yon, bringing tidings of no news to the distracted parents.
+There was a sylvan attitude of somnolent sleepiness pervading that section of
+the external outward surface of Alabama that lay exposed to my view.
+&ldquo;Perhaps,&rdquo; says I to myself, &ldquo;it has not yet been discovered
+that the wolves have borne away the tender lambkin from the fold. Heaven help
+the wolves!&rdquo; says I, and I went down the mountain to breakfast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I got to the cave I found Bill backed up against the side of it, breathing
+hard, and the boy threatening to smash him with a rock half as big as a
+cocoanut.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He put a red-hot boiled potato down my back,&rdquo; explained Bill,
+&ldquo;and then mashed it with his foot; and I boxed his ears. Have you got a
+gun about you, Sam?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I took the rock away from the boy and kind of patched up the argument.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll fix you,&rdquo; says the kid to Bill. &ldquo;No man ever yet
+struck the Red Chief but what he got paid for it. You better beware!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After breakfast the kid takes a piece of leather with strings wrapped around it
+out of his pocket and goes outside the cave unwinding it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s he up to now?&rdquo; says Bill, anxiously. &ldquo;You
+don&rsquo;t think he&rsquo;ll run away, do you, Sam?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No fear of it,&rdquo; says I. &ldquo;He don&rsquo;t seem to be much of a
+home body. But we&rsquo;ve got to fix up some plan about the ransom. There
+don&rsquo;t seem to be much excitement around Summit on account of his
+disappearance; but maybe they haven&rsquo;t realized yet that he&rsquo;s gone.
+His folks may think he&rsquo;s spending the night with Aunt Jane or one of the
+neighbours. Anyhow, he&rsquo;ll be missed to-day. To-night we must get a
+message to his father demanding the two thousand dollars for his return.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just then we heard a kind Of war-whoop, such as David might have emitted when
+he knocked out the champion Goliath. It was a sling that Red Chief had pulled
+out of his pocket, and he was whirling it around his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I dodged, and heard a heavy thud and a kind of a sigh from Bill, like a horse
+gives out when you take his saddle off. A niggerhead rock the size of an egg
+had caught Bill just behind his left ear. He loosened himself all over and fell
+in the fire across the frying pan of hot water for washing the dishes. I
+dragged him out and poured cold water on his head for half an hour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By and by, Bill sits up and feels behind his ear and says: &ldquo;Sam, do you
+know who my favourite Biblical character is?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take it easy,&rdquo; says I. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll come to your senses
+presently.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;King Herod,&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;You won&rsquo;t go away and leave me
+here alone, will you, Sam?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went out and caught that boy and shook him until his freckles rattled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you don&rsquo;t behave,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll take you
+straight home. Now, are you going to be good, or not?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was only funning,&rdquo; says he sullenly. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t mean
+to hurt Old Hank. But what did he hit me for? I&rsquo;ll behave, Snake-eye, if
+you won&rsquo;t send me home, and if you&rsquo;ll let me play the Black Scout
+to-day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know the game,&rdquo; says I. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s for you
+and Mr. Bill to decide. He&rsquo;s your playmate for the day. I&rsquo;m going
+away for a while, on business. Now, you come in and make friends with him and
+say you are sorry for hurting him, or home you go, at once.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I made him and Bill shake hands, and then I took Bill aside and told him I was
+going to Poplar Cove, a little village three miles from the cave, and find out
+what I could about how the kidnapping had been regarded in Summit. Also, I
+thought it best to send a peremptory letter to old man Dorset that day,
+demanding the ransom and dictating how it should be paid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You know, Sam,&rdquo; says Bill, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve stood by you without
+batting an eye in earthquakes, fire and flood&mdash;in poker games, dynamite
+outrages, police raids, train robberies and cyclones. I never lost my nerve yet
+till we kidnapped that two-legged skyrocket of a kid. He&rsquo;s got me going.
+You won&rsquo;t leave me long with him, will you, Sam?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be back some time this afternoon,&rdquo; says I. &ldquo;You
+must keep the boy amused and quiet till I return. And now we&rsquo;ll write the
+letter to old Dorset.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bill and I got paper and pencil and worked on the letter while Red Chief, with
+a blanket wrapped around him, strutted up and down, guarding the mouth of the
+cave. Bill begged me tearfully to make the ransom fifteen hundred dollars
+instead of two thousand. &ldquo;I ain&rsquo;t attempting,&rdquo; says he,
+&ldquo;to decry the celebrated moral aspect of parental affection, but
+we&rsquo;re dealing with humans, and it ain&rsquo;t human for anybody to give
+up two thousand dollars for that forty-pound chunk of freckled wildcat.
+I&rsquo;m willing to take a chance at fifteen hundred dollars. You can charge
+the difference up to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, to relieve Bill, I acceded, and we collaborated a letter that ran this way:
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+<i>Ebenezer Dorset, Esq.:</i><br>
+<br>
+    We have your boy concealed in a place far from Summit. It is useless for
+you or the most skilful detectives to attempt to find him. Absolutely, the only
+terms on which you can have him restored to you are these: We demand fifteen
+hundred dollars in large bills for his return; the money to be left at midnight
+to-night at the same spot and in the same box as your reply&mdash;as
+hereinafter described. If you agree to these terms, send your answer in writing
+by a solitary messenger to-night at half-past eight o&rsquo;clock. After
+crossing Owl Creek, on the road to Poplar Cove, there are three large trees
+about a hundred yards apart, close to the fence of the wheat field on the
+right-hand side. At the bottom of the fence-post, opposite the third tree, will
+be found a small pasteboard box.<br>
+    The messenger will place the answer in this box and return immediately to
+Summit. <br>
+    If you attempt any treachery or fail to comply with our demand as stated,
+you will never see your boy again.<br>
+    If you pay the money as demanded, he will be returned to you safe and
+well within three hours. These terms are final, and if you do not accede to
+them no further communication will be attempted.
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+T<small>WO</small> D<small>ESPERATE</small> M<small>EN</small>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I addressed this letter to Dorset, and put it in my pocket. As I was about to
+start, the kid comes up to me and says:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aw, Snake-eye, you said I could play the Black Scout while you was
+gone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Play it, of course,&rdquo; says I. &ldquo;Mr. Bill will play with you.
+What kind of a game is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m the Black Scout,&rdquo; says Red Chief, &ldquo;and I have to
+ride to the stockade to warn the settlers that the Indians are coming.
+I&rsquo;m tired of playing Indian myself. I want to be the Black Scout.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; says I. &ldquo;It sounds harmless to me. I guess Mr.
+Bill will help you foil the pesky savages.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What am I to do?&rdquo; asks Bill, looking at the kid suspiciously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are the hoss,&rdquo; says Black Scout. &ldquo;Get down on your hands
+and knees. How can I ride to the stockade without a hoss?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;d better keep him interested,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;till we
+get the scheme going. Loosen up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bill gets down on his all fours, and a look comes in his eye like a
+rabbit&rsquo;s when you catch it in a trap.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How far is it to the stockade, kid?&rdquo; he asks, in a husky manner of
+voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ninety miles,&rdquo; says the Black Scout. &ldquo;And you have to hump
+yourself to get there on time. Whoa, now!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Black Scout jumps on Bill&rsquo;s back and digs his heels in his side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For Heaven&rsquo;s sake,&rdquo; says Bill, &ldquo;hurry back, Sam, as
+soon as you can. I wish we hadn&rsquo;t made the ransom more than a thousand.
+Say, you quit kicking me or I&rsquo;ll get up and warm you good.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I walked over to Poplar Cove and sat around the postoffice and store, talking
+with the chawbacons that came in to trade. One whiskerando says that he hears
+Summit is all upset on account of Elder Ebenezer Dorset&rsquo;s boy having been
+lost or stolen. That was all I wanted to know. I bought some smoking tobacco,
+referred casually to the price of black-eyed peas, posted my letter
+surreptitiously and came away. The postmaster said the mail-carrier would come
+by in an hour to take the mail on to Summit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I got back to the cave Bill and the boy were not to be found. I explored
+the vicinity of the cave, and risked a yodel or two, but there was no response.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So I lighted my pipe and sat down on a mossy bank to await developments.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In about half an hour I heard the bushes rustle, and Bill wabbled out into the
+little glade in front of the cave. Behind him was the kid, stepping softly like
+a scout, with a broad grin on his face. Bill stopped, took off his hat and
+wiped his face with a red handkerchief. The kid stopped about eight feet behind
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sam,&rdquo; says Bill, &ldquo;I suppose you&rsquo;ll think I&rsquo;m a
+renegade, but I couldn&rsquo;t help it. I&rsquo;m a grown person with masculine
+proclivities and habits of self-defense, but there is a time when all systems
+of egotism and predominance fail. The boy is gone. I have sent him home. All is
+off. There was martyrs in old times,&rdquo; goes on Bill, &ldquo;that suffered
+death rather than give up the particular graft they enjoyed. None of &rsquo;em
+ever was subjugated to such supernatural tortures as I have been. I tried to be
+faithful to our articles of depredation; but there came a limit.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the trouble, Bill?&rdquo; I asks him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was rode,&rdquo; says Bill, &ldquo;the ninety miles to the stockade,
+not barring an inch. Then, when the settlers was rescued, I was given oats.
+Sand ain&rsquo;t a palatable substitute. And then, for an hour I had to try to
+explain to him why there was nothin&rsquo; in holes, how a road can run both
+ways and what makes the grass green. I tell you, Sam, a human can only stand so
+much. I takes him by the neck of his clothes and drags him down the mountain.
+On the way he kicks my legs black-and-blue from the knees down; and I&rsquo;ve
+got to have two or three bites on my thumb and hand cauterized.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But he&rsquo;s gone&rdquo;&mdash;continues Bill&mdash;&ldquo;gone home.
+I showed him the road to Summit and kicked him about eight feet nearer there at
+one kick. I&rsquo;m sorry we lose the ransom; but it was either that or Bill
+Driscoll to the madhouse.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bill is puffing and blowing, but there is a look of ineffable peace and growing
+content on his rose-pink features.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bill,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;there isn&rsquo;t any heart disease in your
+family, is there?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; says Bill, &ldquo;nothing chronic except malaria and
+accidents. Why?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then you might turn around,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;and have a took behind
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bill turns and sees the boy, and loses his complexion and sits down plump on
+the round and begins to pluck aimlessly at grass and little sticks. For an hour
+I was afraid for his mind. And then I told him that my scheme was to put the
+whole job through immediately and that we would get the ransom and be off with
+it by midnight if old Dorset fell in with our proposition. So Bill braced up
+enough to give the kid a weak sort of a smile and a promise to play the Russian
+in a Japanese war with him is soon as he felt a little better.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had a scheme for collecting that ransom without danger of being caught by
+counterplots that ought to commend itself to professional kidnappers. The tree
+under which the answer was to be left&mdash;and the money later on&mdash;was
+close to the road fence with big, bare fields on all sides. If a gang of
+constables should be watching for any one to come for the note they could see
+him a long way off crossing the fields or in the road. But no, sirree! At
+half-past eight I was up in that tree as well hidden as a tree toad, waiting
+for the messenger to arrive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Exactly on time, a half-grown boy rides up the road on a bicycle, locates the
+pasteboard box at the foot of the fence-post, slips a folded piece of paper
+into it and pedals away again back toward Summit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I waited an hour and then concluded the thing was square. I slid down the tree,
+got the note, slipped along the fence till I struck the woods, and was back at
+the cave in another half an hour. I opened the note, got near the lantern and
+read it to Bill. It was written with a pen in a crabbed hand, and the sum and
+substance of it was this:
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+<i>Two Desperate Men.<br>
+<br>
+    Gentlemen:</i> I received your letter to-day by post, in regard to the
+ransom you ask for the return of my son. I think you are a little high in your
+demands, and I hereby make you a counter-proposition, which I am inclined to
+believe you will accept. You bring Johnny home and pay me two hundred and fifty
+dollars in cash, and I agree to take him off your hands. You had better come at
+night, for the neighbours believe he is lost, and I couldn&rsquo;t be
+responsible for what they would do to anybody they saw bringing him back.
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+Very respectfully,<br>
+E<small>BENEZER</small> D<small>ORSET</small>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Great pirates of Penzance!&rdquo; says I; &ldquo;of all the
+impudent&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I glanced at Bill, and hesitated. He had the most appealing look in his
+eyes I ever saw on the face of a dumb or a talking brute.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sam,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;what&rsquo;s two hundred and fifty dollars,
+after all? We&rsquo;ve got the money. One more night of this kid will send me
+to a bed in Bedlam. Besides being a thorough gentleman, I think Mr. Dorset is a
+spendthrift for making us such a liberal offer. You ain&rsquo;t going to let
+the chance go, are you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell you the truth, Bill,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;this little he ewe lamb
+has somewhat got on my nerves too. We&rsquo;ll take him home, pay the ransom
+and make our get-away.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We took him home that night. We got him to go by telling him that his father
+had bought a silver-mounted rifle and a pair of moccasins for him, and we were
+going to hunt bears the next day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was just twelve o&rsquo;clock when we knocked at Ebenezer&rsquo;s front
+door. Just at the moment when I should have been abstracting the fifteen
+hundred dollars from the box under the tree, according to the original
+proposition, Bill was counting out two hundred and fifty dollars into
+Dorset&rsquo;s hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the kid found out we were going to leave him at home he started up a howl
+like a calliope and fastened himself as tight as a leech to Bill&rsquo;s leg.
+His father peeled him away gradually, like a porous plaster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How long can you hold him?&rdquo; asks Bill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not as strong as I used to be,&rdquo; says old Dorset,
+&ldquo;but I think I can promise you ten minutes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Enough,&rdquo; says Bill. &ldquo;In ten minutes I shall cross the
+Central, Southern and Middle Western States, and be legging it trippingly for
+the Canadian border.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And, as dark as it was, and as fat as Bill was, and as good a runner as I am,
+he was a good mile and a half out of Summit before I could catch up with him.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap09"></a>IX<br>
+THE MARRY MONTH OF MAY</h2>
+
+<p>
+Prithee, smite the poet in the eye when he would sing to you praises of the
+month of May. It is a month presided over by the spirits of mischief and
+madness. Pixies and flibbertigibbets haunt the budding woods: Puck and his
+train of midgets are busy in town and country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In May nature holds up at us a chiding finger, bidding us remember that we are
+not gods, but overconceited members of her own great family. She reminds us
+that we are brothers to the chowder-doomed clam and the donkey; lineal scions
+of the pansy and the chimpanzee, and but cousins-german to the cooing doves,
+the quacking ducks and the housemaids and policemen in the parks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In May Cupid shoots blindfolded&mdash;millionaires marry stenographers; wise
+professors woo white-aproned gum-chewers behind quick-lunch counters;
+schoolma&rsquo;ams make big bad boys remain after school; lads with ladders
+steal lightly over lawns where Juliet waits in her trellissed window with her
+telescope packed; young couples out for a walk come home married; old chaps put
+on white spats and promenade near the Normal School; even married men, grown
+unwontedly tender and sentimental, whack their spouses on the back and growl:
+&ldquo;How goes it, old girl:&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This May, who is no goddess, but Circe, masquerading at the dance given in
+honour of the fair débutante, Summer, puts the kibosh on us all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Old Mr. Coulson groaned a little, and then sat up straight in his
+invalid&rsquo;s chair. He had the gout very bad in one foot, a house near
+Gramercy Park, half a million dollars and a daughter. And he had a housekeeper,
+Mrs. Widdup. The fact and the name deserve a sentence each. They have it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When May poked Mr. Coulson he became elder brother to the turtle-dove. In the
+window near which he sat were boxes of jonquils, of hyacinths, geraniums and
+pansies. The breeze brought their odour into the room. Immediately there was a
+well-contested round between the breath of the flowers and the able and active
+effluvium from gout liniment. The liniment won easily; but not before the
+flowers got an uppercut to old Mr. Coulson&rsquo;s nose. The deadly work of the
+implacable, false enchantress May was done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Across the park to the olfactories of Mr. Coulson came other unmistakable,
+characteristic, copyrighted smells of spring that belong to
+the-big-city-above-the-Subway, alone. The smells of hot asphalt, underground
+caverns, gasoline, patchouli, orange peel, sewer gas, Albany grabs, Egyptian
+cigarettes, mortar and the undried ink on newspapers. The inblowing air was
+sweet and mild. Sparrows wrangled happily everywhere outdoors. Never trust May.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Coulson twisted the ends of his white mustache, cursed his foot, and
+pounded a bell on the table by his side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In came Mrs. Widdup. She was comely to the eye, fair, flustered, forty and
+foxy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Higgins is out, sir,&rdquo; she said, with a smile suggestive of
+vibratory massage. &ldquo;He went to post a letter. Can I do anything for you,
+sir?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s time for my aconite,&rdquo; said old Mr. Coulson. &ldquo;Drop
+it for me. The bottle&rsquo;s there. Three drops. In water.
+D&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash; that is, confound Higgins! There&rsquo;s nobody
+in this house cares if I die here in this chair for want of attention.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Widdup sighed deeply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be saying that, sir,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s
+them that would care more than any one knows. Thirteen drops, you said,
+sir?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Three,&rdquo; said old man Coulson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took his dose and then Mrs. Widdup&rsquo;s hand. She blushed. Oh, yes, it
+can be done. Just hold your breath and compress the diaphragm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mrs. Widdup,&rdquo; said Mr. Coulson, &ldquo;the springtime&rsquo;s full
+upon us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ain&rsquo;t that right?&rdquo; said Mrs. Widdup. &ldquo;The air&rsquo;s
+real warm. And there&rsquo;s bock-beer signs on every corner. And the
+park&rsquo;s all yaller and pink and blue with flowers; and I have such
+shooting pains up my legs and body.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;In the spring,&rsquo;&rdquo; quoted Mr. Coulson, curling his
+mustache, &ldquo;&lsquo;a y&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash; that is, a
+man&rsquo;s&mdash;fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lawsy, now!&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs. Widdup; &ldquo;ain&rsquo;t that right?
+Seems like it&rsquo;s in the air.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;In the spring,&rsquo;&rdquo; continued old Mr. Coulson,
+&ldquo;&lsquo;a livelier iris shines upon the burnished dove.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They do be lively, the Irish,&rdquo; sighed Mrs. Widdup pensively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mrs. Widdup,&rdquo; said Mr. Coulson, making a face at a twinge of his
+gouty foot, &ldquo;this would be a lonesome house without you. I&rsquo;m
+an&mdash;that is, I&rsquo;m an elderly man&mdash;but I&rsquo;m worth a
+comfortable lot of money. If half a million dollars&rsquo; worth of Government
+bonds and the true affection of a heart that, though no longer beating with the
+first ardour of youth, can still throb with genuine&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The loud noise of an overturned chair near the portières of the adjoining room
+interrupted the venerable and scarcely suspecting victim of May.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In stalked Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson, bony, durable, tall, high-nosed,
+frigid, well-bred, thirty-five, in-the-neighbourhood-of-Gramercy-Parkish. She
+put up a lorgnette. Mrs. Widdup hastily stooped and arranged the bandages on
+Mr. Coulson&rsquo;s gouty foot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought Higgins was with you,&rdquo; said Miss Van Meeker Constantia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Higgins went out,&rdquo; explained her father, &ldquo;and Mrs. Widdup
+answered the bell. That is better now, Mrs. Widdup, thank you. No; there is
+nothing else I require.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The housekeeper retired, pink under the cool, inquiring stare of Miss Coulson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This spring weather is lovely, isn&rsquo;t it, daughter?&rdquo; said the
+old man, consciously conscious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s just it,&rdquo; replied Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson,
+somewhat obscurely. &ldquo;When does Mrs. Widdup start on her vacation,
+papa?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe she said a week from to-day,&rdquo; said Mr. Coulson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Van Meeker Constantia stood for a minute at the window gazing, toward the
+little park, flooded with the mellow afternoon sunlight. With the eye of a
+botanist she viewed the flowers&mdash;most potent weapons of insidious May.
+With the cool pulses of a virgin of Cologne she withstood the attack of the
+ethereal mildness. The arrows of the pleasant sunshine fell back, frostbitten,
+from the cold panoply of her unthrilled bosom. The odour of the flowers waked
+no soft sentiments in the unexplored recesses of her dormant heart. The chirp
+of the sparrows gave her a pain. She mocked at May.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But although Miss Coulson was proof against the season, she was keen enough to
+estimate its power. She knew that elderly men and thick-waisted women jumped as
+educated fleas in the ridiculous train of May, the merry mocker of the months.
+She had heard of foolish old gentlemen marrying their housekeepers before. What
+a humiliating thing, after all, was this feeling called love!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next morning at 8 o&rsquo;clock, when the iceman called, the cook told him
+that Miss Coulson wanted to see him in the basement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, ain&rsquo;t I the Olcott and Depew; not mentioning the first name
+at all?&rdquo; said the iceman, admiringly, of himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As a concession he rolled his sleeves down, dropped his icehooks on a syringa
+and went back. When Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson addressed him he took
+off his hat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is a rear entrance to this basement,&rdquo; said Miss Coulson,
+&ldquo;which can be reached by driving into the vacant lot next door, where
+they are excavating for a building. I want you to bring in that way within two
+hours 1,000 pounds of ice. You may have to bring another man or two to help
+you. I will show you where I want it placed. I also want 1,000 pounds a day
+delivered the same way for the next four days. Your company may charge the ice
+on our regular bill. This is for your extra trouble.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Coulson tendered a ten-dollar bill. The iceman bowed, and held his hat in
+his two hands behind him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not if you&rsquo;ll excuse me, lady. It&rsquo;ll be a pleasure to fix
+things up for you any way you please.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alas for May!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+About noon Mr. Coulson knocked two glasses off his table, broke the spring of
+his bell and yelled for Higgins at the same time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bring an axe,&rdquo; commanded Mr. Coulson, sardonically, &ldquo;or send
+out for a quart of prussic acid, or have a policeman come in and shoot me.
+I&rsquo;d rather that than be frozen to death.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It does seem to be getting cool, Sir,&rdquo; said Higgins. &ldquo;I
+hadn&rsquo;t noticed it before. I&rsquo;ll close the window, Sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do,&rdquo; said Mr. Coulson. &ldquo;They call this spring, do they? If
+it keeps up long I&rsquo;ll go back to Palm Beach. House feels like a
+morgue.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Later Miss Coulson dutifully came in to inquire how the gout was progressing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Stantia,&rdquo; said the old man, &ldquo;how is the weather
+outdoors?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bright,&rdquo; answered Miss Coulson, &ldquo;but chilly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Feels like the dead of winter to me,&rdquo; said Mr. Coulson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;An instance,&rdquo; said Constantia, gazing abstractedly out the window,
+&ldquo;of &lsquo;winter lingering in the lap of spring,&rsquo; though the
+metaphor is not in the most refined taste.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A little later she walked down by the side of the little park and on westward
+to Broadway to accomplish a little shopping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A little later than that Mrs. Widdup entered the invalid&rsquo;s room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did you ring, Sir?&rdquo; she asked, dimpling in many places. &ldquo;I
+asked Higgins to go to the drug store, and I thought I heard your bell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I did not,&rdquo; said Mr. Coulson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid,&rdquo; said Mrs. Widdup, &ldquo;I interrupted you sir,
+yesterday when you were about to say something.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How comes it, Mrs. Widdup,&rdquo; said old man Coulson sternly,
+&ldquo;that I find it so cold in this house?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cold, Sir?&rdquo; said the housekeeper, &ldquo;why, now, since you speak
+of it it do seem cold in this room. But, outdoors it&rsquo;s as warm and fine
+as June, sir. And how this weather do seem to make one&rsquo;s heart jump out
+of one&rsquo;s shirt waist, sir. And the ivy all leaved out on the side of the
+house, and the hand-organs playing, and the children dancing on the
+sidewalk&mdash;&rsquo;tis a great time for speaking out what&rsquo;s in the
+heart. You were saying yesterday, sir&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Woman!&rdquo; roared Mr. Coulson; &ldquo;you are a fool. I pay you to
+take care of this house. I am freezing to death in my own room, and you come in
+and drivel to me about ivy and hand-organs. Get me an overcoat at once. See
+that all doors and windows are closed below. An old, fat, irresponsible,
+one-sided object like you prating about springtime and flowers in the middle of
+winter! When Higgins comes back, tell him to bring me a hot rum punch. And now
+get out!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But who shall shame the bright face of May? Rogue though she be and disturber
+of sane men&rsquo;s peace, no wise virgins cunning nor cold storage shall make
+her bow her head in the bright galaxy of months.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Oh, yes, the story was not quite finished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A night passed, and Higgins helped old man Coulson in the morning to his chair
+by the window. The cold of the room was gone. Heavenly odours and fragrant
+mildness entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In hurried Mrs. Widdup, and stood by his chair. Mr. Coulson reached his bony
+hand and grasped her plump one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mrs. Widdup,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;this house would be no home without
+you. I have half a million dollars. If that and the true affection of a heart
+no longer in its youthful prime, but still not cold, could&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I found out what made it cold,&rdquo; said Mrs. Widdup, leaning against
+his chair. &ldquo;&rsquo;Twas ice&mdash;tons of it&mdash;in the basement and in
+the furnace room, everywhere. I shut off the registers that it was coming
+through into your room, Mr. Coulson, poor soul! And now it&rsquo;s Maytime
+again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A true heart,&rdquo; went on old man Coulson, a little wanderingly,
+&ldquo;that the springtime has brought to life again, and&mdash;but what will
+my daughter say, Mrs. Widdup?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never fear, sir,&rdquo; said Mrs. Widdup, cheerfully. &ldquo;Miss
+Coulson, she ran away with the iceman last night, sir!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap10"></a>X<br>
+A TECHNICAL ERROR</h2>
+
+<p>
+I never cared especially for feuds, believing them to be even more overrated
+products of our country than grapefruit, scrapple, or honeymoons. Nevertheless,
+if I may be allowed, I will tell you of an Indian Territory feud of which I was
+press-agent, camp-follower, and inaccessory during the fact.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was on a visit to Sam Durkee&rsquo;s ranch, where I had a great time falling
+off unmanicured ponies and waving my bare hand at the lower jaws of wolves
+about two miles away. Sam was a hardened person of about twenty-five, with a
+reputation for going home in the dark with perfect equanimity, though often
+with reluctance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Over in the Creek Nation was a family bearing the name of Tatum. I was told
+that the Durkees and Tatums had been feuding for years. Several of each family
+had bitten the grass, and it was expected that more Nebuchadnezzars would
+follow. A younger generation of each family was growing up, and the grass was
+keeping pace with them. But I gathered that they had fought fairly; that they
+had not lain in cornfields and aimed at the division of their enemies&rsquo;
+suspenders in the back&mdash;partly, perhaps, because there were no cornfields,
+and nobody wore more than one suspender. Nor had any woman or child of either
+house ever been harmed. In those days&mdash;and you will find it so
+yet&mdash;their women were safe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sam Durkee had a girl. (If it were an all-fiction magazine that I expect to
+sell this story to, I should say, &ldquo;Mr. Durkee rejoiced in a
+fiancée.&rdquo;) Her name was Ella Baynes. They appeared to be devoted to each
+other, and to have perfect confidence in each other, as all couples do who are
+and have or aren&rsquo;t and haven&rsquo;t. She was tolerably pretty, with a
+heavy mass of brown hair that helped her along. He introduced me to her, which
+seemed not to lessen her preference for him; so I reasoned that they were
+surely soul-mates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Baynes lived in Kingfisher, twenty miles from the ranch. Sam lived on a
+gallop between the two places.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day there came to Kingfisher a courageous young man, rather small, with
+smooth face and regular features. He made many inquiries about the business of
+the town, and especially of the inhabitants cognominally. He said he was from
+Muscogee, and he looked it, with his yellow shoes and crocheted four-in-hand. I
+met him once when I rode in for the mail. He said his name was Beverly Travers,
+which seemed rather improbable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were active times on the ranch, just then, and Sam was too busy to go to
+town often. As an incompetent and generally worthless guest, it devolved upon
+me to ride in for little things such as post cards, barrels of flour,
+baking-powder, smoking-tobacco, and&mdash;letters from Ella.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day, when I was messenger for half a gross of cigarette papers and a couple
+of wagon tires, I saw the alleged Beverly Travers in a yellow-wheeled buggy
+with Ella Baynes, driving about town as ostentatiously as the black, waxy mud
+would permit. I knew that this information would bring no balm of Gilead to
+Sam&rsquo;s soul, so I refrained from including it in the news of the city that
+I retailed on my return. But on the next afternoon an elongated ex-cowboy of
+the name of Simmons, an old-time pal of Sam&rsquo;s, who kept a feed store in
+Kingfisher, rode out to the ranch and rolled and burned many cigarettes before
+he would talk. When he did make oration, his words were these:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say, Sam, there&rsquo;s been a description of a galoot miscallin&rsquo;
+himself Bevel-edged Travels impairing the atmospheric air of Kingfisher for the
+past two weeks. You know who he was? He was not otherwise than Ben Tatum, from
+the Creek Nation, son of old Gopher Tatum that your Uncle Newt shot last
+February. You know what he done this morning? He killed your brother
+Lester&mdash;shot him in the co&rsquo;t-house yard.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wondered if Sam had heard. He pulled a twig from a mesquite bush, chewed it
+gravely, and said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He did, did he? He killed Lester?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The same,&rdquo; said Simmons. &ldquo;And he did more. He run away with
+your girl, the same as to say Miss Ella Baynes. I thought you might like to
+know, so I rode out to impart the information.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am much obliged, Jim,&rdquo; said Sam, taking the chewed twig from his
+mouth. &ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;m glad you rode Out. Yes, I&rsquo;m right
+glad.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ll be ridin&rsquo; back, I reckon. That boy I left in the
+feed store don&rsquo;t know hay from oats. He shot Lester in the back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shot him in the back?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, while he was hitchin&rsquo; his hoss.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m much obliged, Jim.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I kind of thought you&rsquo;d like to know as soon as you could.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come in and have some coffee before you ride back, Jim?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, no, I reckon not; I must get back to the store.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you say&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, Sam. Everybody seen &rsquo;em drive away together in a buckboard,
+with a big bundle, like clothes, tied up in the back of it. He was
+drivin&rsquo; the team he brought over with him from Muscogee. They&rsquo;ll be
+hard to overtake right away.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And which&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was goin&rsquo; on to tell you. They left on the Guthrie road; but
+there&rsquo;s no tellin&rsquo; which forks they&rsquo;ll take&mdash;you know
+that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right, Jim; much obliged.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re welcome, Sam.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Simmons rolled a cigarette and stabbed his pony with both heels. Twenty yards
+away he reined up and called back:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t want no&mdash;assistance, as you might say?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not any, thanks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t think you would. Well, so long!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Sam took out and opened a bone-handled pocket-knife and scraped a dried piece
+of mud from his left boot. I thought at first he was going to swear a vendetta
+on the blade of it, or recite &ldquo;The Gipsy&rsquo;s Curse.&rdquo; The few
+feuds I had ever seen or read about usually opened that way. This one seemed to
+be presented with a new treatment. Thus offered on the stage, it would have
+been hissed off, and one of Belasco&rsquo;s thrilling melodramas demanded
+instead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wonder,&rdquo; said Sam, with a profoundly thoughtful expression,
+&ldquo;if the cook has any cold beans left over!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He called Wash, the Negro cook, and finding that he had some, ordered him to
+heat up the pot and make some strong coffee. Then we went into Sam&rsquo;s
+private room, where he slept, and kept his armoury, dogs, and the saddles of
+his favourite mounts. He took three or four six-shooters out of a bookcase and
+began to look them over, whistling &ldquo;The Cowboy&rsquo;s Lament&rdquo;
+abstractedly. Afterward he ordered the two best horses on the ranch saddled and
+tied to the hitching-post.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, in the feud business, in all sections of the country, I have observed that
+in one particular there is a delicate but strict etiquette belonging. You must
+not mention the word or refer to the subject in the presence of a feudist. It
+would be more reprehensible than commenting upon the mole on the chin of your
+rich aunt. I found, later on, that there is another unwritten rule, but I think
+that belongs solely to the West.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It yet lacked two hours to supper-time; but in twenty minutes Sam and I were
+plunging deep into the reheated beans, hot coffee, and cold beef.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing like a good meal before a long ride,&rdquo; said Sam. &ldquo;Eat
+hearty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had a sudden suspicion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why did you have two horses saddled?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One, two&mdash;one, two,&rdquo; said Sam. &ldquo;You can count,
+can&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His mathematics carried with it a momentary qualm and a lesson. The thought had
+not occurred to him that the thought could possibly occur to me not to ride at
+his side on that red road to revenge and justice. It was the higher calculus. I
+was booked for the trail. I began to eat more beans.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In an hour we set forth at a steady gallop eastward. Our horses were
+Kentucky-bred, strengthened by the mesquite grass of the west. Ben
+Tatum&rsquo;s steeds may have been swifter, and he had a good lead; but if he
+had heard the punctual thuds of the hoofs of those trailers of ours, born in
+the heart of feudland, he might have felt that retribution was creeping up on
+the hoof-prints of his dapper nags.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I knew that Ben Tatum&rsquo;s card to play was flight&mdash;flight until he
+came within the safer territory of his own henchmen and supporters. He knew
+that the man pursuing him would follow the trail to any end where it might
+lead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the ride Sam talked of the prospect for rain, of the price of beef, and
+of the musical glasses. You would have thought he had never had a brother or a
+sweetheart or an enemy on earth. There are some subjects too big even for the
+words in the &ldquo;Unabridged.&rdquo; Knowing this phase of the feud code, but
+not having practised it sufficiently, I overdid the thing by telling some
+slightly funny anecdotes. Sam laughed at exactly the right place&mdash;laughed
+with his mouth. When I caught sight of his mouth, I wished I had been blessed
+with enough sense of humour to have suppressed those anecdotes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our first sight of them we had in Guthrie. Tired and hungry, we stumbled,
+unwashed, into a little yellow-pine hotel and sat at a table. In the opposite
+corner we saw the fugitives. They were bent upon their meal, but looked around
+at times uneasily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl was dressed in brown&mdash;one of these smooth, half-shiny,
+silky-looking affairs with lace collar and cuffs, and what I believe they call
+an accordion-plaited skirt. She wore a thick brown veil down to her nose, and a
+broad-brimmed straw hat with some kind of feathers adorning it. The man wore
+plain, dark clothes, and his hair was trimmed very short. He was such a man as
+you might see anywhere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There they were&mdash;the murderer and the woman he had stolen. There we
+were&mdash;the rightful avenger, according to the code, and the supernumerary
+who writes these words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For one time, at least, in the heart of the supernumerary there rose the
+killing instinct. For one moment he joined the force of
+combatants&mdash;orally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What are you waiting for, Sam?&rdquo; I said in a whisper. &ldquo;Let
+him have it now!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sam gave a melancholy sigh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t understand; but <i>he</i> does,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;<i>He</i> knows. Mr. Tenderfoot, there&rsquo;s a rule out here among
+white men in the Nation that you can&rsquo;t shoot a man when he&rsquo;s with a
+woman. I never knew it to be broke yet. You <i>can&rsquo;t</i> do it.
+You&rsquo;ve got to get him in a gang of men or by himself. That&rsquo;s why.
+He knows it, too. We all know. So, that&rsquo;s Mr. Ben Tatum! One of the
+&lsquo;pretty men&rsquo;! I&rsquo;ll cut him out of the herd before they leave
+the hotel, and regulate his account!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After supper the flying pair disappeared quickly. Although Sam haunted lobby
+and stairway and halls half the night, in some mysterious way the fugitives
+eluded him; and in the morning the veiled lady in the brown dress with the
+accordion-plaited skirt and the dapper young man with the close-clipped hair,
+and the buckboard with the prancing nags, were gone.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+It is a monotonous story, that of the ride; so it shall be curtailed. Once
+again we overtook them on a road. We were about fifty yards behind. They turned
+in the buckboard and looked at us; then drove on without whipping up their
+horses. Their safety no longer lay in speed. Ben Tatum knew. He knew that the
+only rock of safety left to him was the code. There is no doubt that, had he
+been alone, the matter would have been settled quickly with Sam Durkee in the
+usual way; but he had something at his side that kept still the trigger-finger
+of both. It seemed likely that he was no coward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, you may perceive that woman, on occasions, may postpone instead of
+precipitating conflict between man and man. But not willingly or consciously.
+She is oblivious of codes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Five miles farther, we came upon the future great Western city of Chandler. The
+horses of pursuers and pursued were starved and weary. There was one hotel that
+offered danger to man and entertainment to beast; so the four of us met again
+in the dining room at the ringing of a bell so resonant and large that it had
+cracked the welkin long ago. The dining room was not as large as the one at
+Guthrie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just as we were eating apple pie&mdash;how Ben Davises and tragedy impinge upon
+each other!&mdash;I noticed Sam looking with keen intentness at our quarry
+where they were seated at a table across the room. The girl still wore the
+brown dress with lace collar and cuffs, and the veil drawn down to her nose.
+The man bent over his plate, with his close cropped head held low.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a code,&rdquo; I heard Sam say, either to me or to
+himself, &ldquo;that won&rsquo;t let you shoot a man in the company of a woman;
+but, by thunder, there ain&rsquo;t one to keep you from killing a woman in the
+company of a man!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And, quicker than my mind could follow his argument, he whipped a Colt&rsquo;s
+automatic from under his left arm and pumped six bullets into the body that the
+brown dress covered&mdash;the brown dress with the lace collar and cuffs and
+the accordion-plaited skirt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young person in the dark sack suit, from whose head and from whose life a
+woman&rsquo;s glory had been clipped, laid her head on her arms stretched upon
+the table; while people came running to raise Ben Tatum from the floor in his
+feminine masquerade that had given Sam the opportunity to set aside,
+technically, the obligations of the code.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap11"></a>XI<br>
+SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Few young couples in the Big-City-of-Bluff began their married existence with
+greater promise of happiness than did Mr. and Mrs. Claude Turpin. They felt no
+especial animosity toward each other; they were comfortably established in a
+handsome apartment house that had a name and accommodations like those of a
+sleeping-car; they were living as expensively as the couple on the next floor
+above who had twice their income; and their marriage had occurred on a wager, a
+ferry-boat and first acquaintance, thus securing a sensational newspaper notice
+with their names attached to pictures of the Queen of Roumania and M.
+Santos-Dumont.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Turpin&rsquo;s income was $200 per month. On pay day, after calculating the
+amounts due for rent, instalments on furniture and piano, gas, and bills owed
+to the florist, confectioner, milliner, tailor, wine merchant and cab company,
+the Turpins would find that they still had $200 left to spend. How to do this
+is one of the secrets of metropolitan life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The domestic life of the Turpins was a beautiful picture to see. But you
+couldn&rsquo;t gaze upon it as you could at an oleograph of &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t
+Wake Grandma,&rdquo; or &ldquo;Brooklyn by Moonlight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You had to blink when looked at it; and you heard a fizzing sound just like the
+machine with a &ldquo;scope&rdquo; at the end of it. Yes; there wasn&rsquo;t
+much repose about the picture of the Turpins&rsquo; domestic life. It was
+something like &ldquo;Spearing Salmon in the Columbia River,&rdquo; or
+&ldquo;Japanese Artillery in Action.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every day was just like another; as the days are in New York. In the morning
+Turpin would take bromo-seltzer, his pocket change from under the clock, his
+hat, no breakfast and his departure for the office. At noon Mrs. Turpin would
+get out of bed and humour, put on a kimono, airs, and the water to boil for
+coffee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Turpin lunched downtown. He came home at 6 to dress for dinner. They always
+dined out. They strayed from the chop-house to chop-sueydom, from terrace to
+table d&rsquo;hôte, from rathskeller to roadhouse, from café to casino, from
+Maria&rsquo;s to the Martha Washington. Such is domestic life in the great
+city. Your vine is the mistletoe; your fig tree bears dates. Your household
+gods are Mercury and John Howard Payne. For the wedding march you now hear only
+&ldquo;Come with the Gypsy Bride.&rdquo; You rarely dine at the same place
+twice in succession. You tire of the food; and, besides, you want to give them
+time for the question of that souvenir silver sugar bowl to blow over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Turpins were therefore happy. They made many warm and delightful friends,
+some of whom they remembered the next day. Their home life was an ideal one,
+according to the rules and regulations of the Book of Bluff.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There came a time when it dawned upon Turpin that his wife was getting away
+with too much money. If you belong to the near-swell class in the Big City, and
+your income is $200 per month, and you find at the end of the month, after
+looking over the bills for current expenses, that you, yourself, have spent
+$150, you very naturally wonder what has become of the other $50. So you
+suspect your wife. And perhaps you give her a hint that something needs
+explanation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I say, Vivien,&rdquo; said Turpin, one afternoon when they were enjoying
+in rapt silence the peace and quiet of their cozy apartment,
+&ldquo;you&rsquo;ve been creating a hiatus big enough for a dog to crawl
+through in this month&rsquo;s honorarium. You haven&rsquo;t been paying your
+dressmaker anything on account, have you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a moment&rsquo;s silence. No sounds could be heard except the
+breathing of the fox terrier, and the subdued, monotonous sizzling of
+Vivien&rsquo;s fulvous locks against the insensate curling irons. Claude
+Turpin, sitting upon a pillow that he had thoughtfully placed upon the
+convolutions of the apartment sofa, narrowly watched the riante, lovely face of
+his wife.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Claudie, dear,&rdquo; said she, touching her finger to her ruby tongue
+and testing the unresponsive curling irons, &ldquo;you do me an injustice. Mme.
+Toinette has not seen a cent of mine since the day you paid your tailor ten
+dollars on account.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Turpin&rsquo;s suspicions were allayed for the time. But one day soon there
+came an anonymous letter to him that read:
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+Watch your wife. She is blowing in your money secretly. I was a sufferer just
+as you are. The place is No. 345 Blank Street. A word to the wise, etc.
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+A M<small>AN</small> W<small>HO</small> K<small>NOWS</small>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Turpin took this letter to the captain of police of the precinct that he lived
+in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My precinct is as clean as a hound&rsquo;s tooth,&rdquo; said the
+captain. &ldquo;The lid&rsquo;s shut down as close there as it is over the eye
+of a Williamsburg girl when she&rsquo;s kissed at a party. But if you think
+there&rsquo;s anything queer at the address, I&rsquo;ll go there with
+ye.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the next afternoon at 3, Turpin and the captain crept softly up the stairs
+of No. 345 Blank Street. A dozen plain-clothes men, dressed in full police
+uniforms, so as to allay suspicion, waited in the hall below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the top of the stairs was a door, which was found to be locked. The captain
+took a key from his pocket and unlocked it. The two men entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They found themselves in a large room, occupied by twenty or twenty-five
+elegantly clothed ladies. Racing charts hung against the walls, a ticker
+clicked in one corner; with a telephone receiver to his ear a man was calling
+out the various positions of the horses in a very exciting race. The occupants
+of the room looked up at the intruders; but, as if reassured by the sight of
+the captain&rsquo;s uniform, they reverted their attention to the man at the
+telephone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You see,&rdquo; said the captain to Turpin, &ldquo;the value of an
+anonymous letter! No high-minded and self-respecting gentleman should consider
+one worthy of notice. Is your wife among this assembly, Mr. Turpin?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She is not,&rdquo; said Turpin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if she was,&rdquo; continued the captain, &ldquo;would she be within
+the reach of the tongue of slander? These ladies constitute a Browning Society.
+They meet to discuss the meaning of the great poet. The telephone is connected
+with Boston, whence the parent society transmits frequently its interpretations
+of the poems. Be ashamed of yer suspicions, Mr. Turpin.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go soak your shield,&rdquo; said Turpin. &ldquo;Vivien knows how to take
+care of herself in a pool-room. She&rsquo;s not dropping anything on the
+ponies. There must be something queer going on here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing but Browning,&rdquo; said the captain. &ldquo;Hear that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thanatopsis by a nose,&rdquo; drawled the man at the telephone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s not Browning; that&rsquo;s Longfellow,&rdquo; said Turpin,
+who sometimes read books.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Back to the pasture!&rdquo; exclaimed the captain. &ldquo;Longfellow
+made the pacing-to-wagon record of 7.53 &rsquo;way back in 1868.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe there&rsquo;s something queer about this joint,&rdquo;
+repeated Turpin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see it,&rdquo; said the captain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know it looks like a pool-room, all right,&rdquo; persisted Turpin,
+&ldquo;but that&rsquo;s all a blind. Vivien has been dropping a lot of coin
+somewhere. I believe there&rsquo;s some under-handed work going on here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A number of racing sheets were tacked close together, covering a large space on
+one of the walls. Turpin, suspicious, tore several of them down. A door,
+previously hidden, was revealed. Turpin placed an ear to the crack and listened
+intently. He heard the soft hum of many voices, low and guarded laughter, and a
+sharp, metallic clicking and scraping as if from a multitude of tiny but busy
+objects.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My God! It is as I feared!&rdquo; whispered Turpin to himself.
+&ldquo;Summon your men at once!&rdquo; he called to the captain. &ldquo;She is
+in there, I know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the blowing of the captain&rsquo;s whistle the uniformed plain-clothes men
+rushed up the stairs into the pool-room. When they saw the betting
+paraphernalia distributed around they halted, surprised and puzzled to know why
+they had been summoned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the captain pointed to the locked door and bade them break it down. In a
+few moments they demolished it with the axes they carried. Into the other room
+sprang Claude Turpin, with the captain at his heels.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The scene was one that lingered long in Turpin&rsquo;s mind. Nearly a score of
+women&mdash;women expensively and fashionably clothed, many beautiful and of
+refined appearance&mdash;had been seated at little marble-topped tables. When
+the police burst open the door they shrieked and ran here and there like gayly
+plumed birds that had been disturbed in a tropical grove. Some became
+hysterical; one or two fainted; several knelt at the feet of the officers and
+besought them for mercy on account of their families and social position.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A man who had been seated behind a desk had seized a roll of currency as large
+as the ankle of a Paradise Roof Gardens chorus girl and jumped out of the
+window. Half a dozen attendants huddled at one end of the room, breathless from
+fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon the tables remained the damning and incontrovertible evidences of the
+guilt of the habituées of that sinister room&mdash;dish after dish heaped high
+with ice cream, and surrounded by stacks of empty ones, scraped to the last
+spoonful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ladies,&rdquo; said the captain to his weeping circle of prisoners,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not hold any of yez. Some of yez I recognize as having fine
+houses and good standing in the community, with hard-working husbands and
+childer at home. But I&rsquo;ll read ye a bit of a lecture before ye go. In the
+next room there&rsquo;s a 20-to-1 shot just dropped in under the wire three
+lengths ahead of the field. Is this the way ye waste your husbands&rsquo; money
+instead of helping earn it? Home wid yez! The lid&rsquo;s on the ice-cream
+freezer in this precinct.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Claude Turpin&rsquo;s wife was among the patrons of the raided room. He led her
+to their apartment in stern silence. There she wept so remorsefully and
+besought his forgiveness so pleadingly that he forgot his just anger, and soon
+he gathered his penitent golden-haired Vivien in his arms and forgave her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Darling,&rdquo; she murmured, half sobbingly, as the moonlight drifted
+through the open window, glorifying her sweet, upturned face, &ldquo;I know I
+done wrong. I will never touch ice cream again. I forgot you were not a
+millionaire. I used to go there every day. But to-day I felt some strange, sad
+presentiment of evil, and I was not myself. I ate only eleven saucers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say no more,&rdquo; said Claude, gently as he fondly caressed her waving
+curls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you are sure that you fully forgive me?&rdquo; asked Vivien, gazing
+at him entreatingly with dewy eyes of heavenly blue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Almost sure, little one,&rdquo; answered Claude, stooping and lightly
+touching her snowy forehead with his lips. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll let you know later
+on. I&rsquo;ve got a month&rsquo;s salary down on Vanilla to win the
+three-year-old steeplechase to-morrow; and if the ice-cream hunch is to the
+good you are It again&mdash;see?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap12"></a>XII<br>
+THE WHIRLIGIG OF LIFE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Justice-of-the-Peace Benaja Widdup sat in the door of his office smoking his
+elder-stem pipe. Half-way to the zenith the Cumberland range rose blue-gray in
+the afternoon haze. A speckled hen swaggered down the main street of the
+&ldquo;settlement,&rdquo; cackling foolishly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Up the road came a sound of creaking axles, and then a slow cloud of dust, and
+then a bull-cart bearing Ransie Bilbro and his wife. The cart stopped at the
+Justice&rsquo;s door, and the two climbed down. Ransie was a narrow six feet of
+sallow brown skin and yellow hair. The imperturbability of the mountains hung
+upon him like a suit of armour. The woman was calicoed, angled, snuff-brushed,
+and weary with unknown desires. Through it all gleamed a faint protest of
+cheated youth unconscious of its loss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Justice of the Peace slipped his feet into his shoes, for the sake of
+dignity, and moved to let them enter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We-all,&rdquo; said the woman, in a voice like the wind blowing through
+pine boughs, &ldquo;wants a divo&rsquo;ce.&rdquo; She looked at Ransie to see
+if he noted any flaw or ambiguity or evasion or partiality or self-partisanship
+in her statement of their business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A divo&rsquo;ce,&rdquo; repeated Ransie, with a solemn nod.
+&ldquo;We-all can&rsquo;t git along together nohow. It&rsquo;s lonesome enough
+fur to live in the mount&rsquo;ins when a man and a woman keers fur one
+another. But when she&rsquo;s a-spittin&rsquo; like a wildcat or
+a-sullenin&rsquo; like a hoot-owl in the cabin, a man ain&rsquo;t got no call
+to live with her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When he&rsquo;s a no-&rsquo;count varmint,&rdquo; said the woman,
+&ldquo;without any especial warmth, a-traipsin&rsquo; along of scalawags and
+moonshiners and a-layin&rsquo; on his back pizen &rsquo;ith co&rsquo;n whiskey,
+and a-pesterin&rsquo; folks with a pack o&rsquo; hungry, triflin&rsquo;
+houn&rsquo;s to feed!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When she keeps a-throwin&rsquo; skillet lids,&rdquo; came Ransie&rsquo;s
+antiphony, &ldquo;and slings b&rsquo;ilin&rsquo; water on the best coon-dog in
+the Cumberlands, and sets herself agin&rsquo; cookin&rsquo; a man&rsquo;s
+victuals, and keeps him awake o&rsquo; nights accusin&rsquo; him of a sight of
+doin&rsquo;s!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When he&rsquo;s al&rsquo;ays a-fightin&rsquo; the revenues, and gits a
+hard name in the mount&rsquo;ins fur a mean man, who&rsquo;s gwine to be able
+fur to sleep o&rsquo; nights?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Justice of the Peace stirred deliberately to his duties. He placed his one
+chair and a wooden stool for his petitioners. He opened his book of statutes on
+the table and scanned the index. Presently he wiped his spectacles and shifted
+his inkstand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The law and the statutes,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;air silent on the
+subjeck of divo&rsquo;ce as fur as the jurisdiction of this co&rsquo;t air
+concerned. But, accordin&rsquo; to equity and the Constitution and the golden
+rule, it&rsquo;s a bad barg&rsquo;in that can&rsquo;t run both ways. If a
+justice of the peace can marry a couple, it&rsquo;s plain that he is bound to
+be able to divo&rsquo;ce &rsquo;em. This here office will issue a decree of
+divo&rsquo;ce and abide by the decision of the Supreme Co&rsquo;t to hold it
+good.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ransie Bilbro drew a small tobacco-bag from his trousers pocket. Out of this he
+shook upon the table a five-dollar note. &ldquo;Sold a b&rsquo;arskin and two
+foxes fur that,&rdquo; he remarked. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all the money we
+got.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The regular price of a divo&rsquo;ce in this co&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said the
+Justice, &ldquo;air five dollars.&rdquo; He stuffed the bill into the pocket of
+his homespun vest with a deceptive air of indifference. With much bodily toil
+and mental travail he wrote the decree upon half a sheet of foolscap, and then
+copied it upon the other. Ransie Bilbro and his wife listened to his reading of
+the document that was to give them freedom:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Know all men by these presents that Ransie Bilbro and his wife, Ariela
+Bilbro, this day personally appeared before me and promises that hereinafter
+they will neither love, honour, nor obey each other, neither for better nor
+worse, being of sound mind and body, and accept summons for divorce according
+to the peace and dignity of the State. Herein fail not, so help you God. Benaja
+Widdup, justice of the peace in and for the county of Piedmont, State of
+Tennessee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Justice was about to hand one of the documents to Ransie. The voice of
+Ariela delayed the transfer. Both men looked at her. Their dull masculinity was
+confronted by something sudden and unexpected in the woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Judge, don&rsquo;t you give him that air paper yit. &rsquo;Tain&rsquo;t
+all settled, nohow. I got to have my rights first. I got to have my ali-money.
+&rsquo;Tain&rsquo;t no kind of a way to do fur a man to divo&rsquo;ce his wife
+&rsquo;thout her havin&rsquo; a cent fur to do with. I&rsquo;m a-layin&rsquo;
+off to be a-goin&rsquo; up to brother Ed&rsquo;s up on Hogback Mount&rsquo;in.
+I&rsquo;m bound fur to hev a pa&rsquo;r of shoes and some snuff and things
+besides. Ef Rance kin affo&rsquo;d a divo&rsquo;ce, let him pay me
+ali-money.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ransie Bilbro was stricken to dumb perplexity. There had been no previous hint
+of alimony. Women were always bringing up startling and unlooked-for issues.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Justice Benaja Widdup felt that the point demanded judicial decision. The
+authorities were also silent on the subject of alimony. But the woman&rsquo;s
+feet were bare. The trail to Hogback Mountain was steep and flinty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ariela Bilbro,&rdquo; he asked, in official tones, &ldquo;how much did
+you &rsquo;low would be good and sufficient ali-money in the case befo&rsquo;
+the co&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I &rsquo;lowed,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;fur the shoes and all, to
+say five dollars. That ain&rsquo;t much fur ali-money, but I reckon
+that&rsquo;ll git me to up brother Ed&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The amount,&rdquo; said the Justice, &ldquo;air not onreasonable. Ransie
+Bilbro, you air ordered by the co&rsquo;t to pay the plaintiff the sum of five
+dollars befo&rsquo; the decree of divo&rsquo;ce air issued.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hain&rsquo;t no mo&rsquo; money,&rdquo; breathed Ransie, heavily.
+&ldquo;I done paid you all I had.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Otherwise,&rdquo; said the Justice, looking severely over his
+spectacles, &ldquo;you air in contempt of co&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I reckon if you gimme till to-morrow,&rdquo; pleaded the husband,
+&ldquo;I mout be able to rake or scrape it up somewhars. I never looked for to
+be a-payin&rsquo; no ali-money.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The case air adjourned,&rdquo; said Benaja Widdup, &ldquo;till
+to-morrow, when you-all will present yo&rsquo;selves and obey the order of the
+co&rsquo;t. Followin&rsquo; of which the decrees of divo&rsquo;ce will be
+delivered.&rdquo; He sat down in the door and began to loosen a shoestring.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We mout as well go down to Uncle Ziah&rsquo;s,&rdquo; decided Ransie,
+&ldquo;and spend the night.&rdquo; He climbed into the cart on one side, and
+Ariela climbed in on the other. Obeying the flap of his rope, the little red
+bull slowly came around on a tack, and the cart crawled away in the nimbus
+arising from its wheels.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup smoked his elder-stem pipe. Late in the
+afternoon he got his weekly paper, and read it until the twilight dimmed its
+lines. Then he lit the tallow candle on his table, and read until the moon
+rose, marking the time for supper. He lived in the double log cabin on the
+slope near the girdled poplar. Going home to supper he crossed a little branch
+darkened by a laurel thicket. The dark figure of a man stepped from the laurels
+and pointed a rifle at his breast. His hat was pulled down low, and something
+covered most of his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want yo&rsquo; money,&rdquo; said the figure, &ldquo;&rsquo;thout any
+talk. I&rsquo;m gettin&rsquo; nervous, and my finger&rsquo;s a-wabblin&rsquo;
+on this here trigger.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve only got f-f-five dollars,&rdquo; said the Justice, producing
+it from his vest pocket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Roll it up,&rdquo; came the order, &ldquo;and stick it in the end of
+this here gun-bar&rsquo;l.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bill was crisp and new. Even fingers that were clumsy and trembling found
+little difficulty in making a spill of it and inserting it (this with less
+ease) into the muzzle of the rifle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I reckon you kin be goin&rsquo; along,&rdquo; said the robber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Justice lingered not on his way.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+The next day came the little red bull, drawing the cart to the office door.
+Justice Benaja Widdup had his shoes on, for he was expecting the visit. In his
+presence Ransie Bilbro handed to his wife a five-dollar bill. The
+official&rsquo;s eye sharply viewed it. It seemed to curl up as though it had
+been rolled and inserted into the end of a gun-barrel. But the Justice
+refrained from comment. It is true that other bills might be inclined to curl.
+He handed each one a decree of divorce. Each stood awkwardly silent, slowly
+folding the guarantee of freedom. The woman cast a shy glance full of
+constraint at Ransie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I reckon you&rsquo;ll be goin&rsquo; back up to the cabin,&rdquo; she
+said, along &rsquo;ith the bull-cart. There&rsquo;s bread in the tin box
+settin&rsquo; on the shelf. I put the bacon in the b&rsquo;ilin&rsquo;-pot to
+keep the hounds from gittin&rsquo; it. Don&rsquo;t forget to wind the clock
+to-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You air a-goin&rsquo; to your brother Ed&rsquo;s?&rdquo; asked Ransie,
+with fine unconcern.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was &rsquo;lowin&rsquo; to get along up thar afore night. I
+ain&rsquo;t sayin&rsquo; as they&rsquo;ll pester theyselves any to make me
+welcome, but I hain&rsquo;t nowhar else fur to go. It&rsquo;s a right smart
+ways, and I reckon I better be goin&rsquo;. I&rsquo;ll be a-sayin&rsquo;
+good-bye, Ranse&mdash;that is, if you keer fur to say so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know as anybody&rsquo;s a hound dog,&rdquo; said Ransie,
+in a martyr&rsquo;s voice, &ldquo;fur to not want to say
+good-bye&mdash;&rsquo;less you air so anxious to git away that you don&rsquo;t
+want me to say it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ariela was silent. She folded the five-dollar bill and her decree carefully,
+and placed them in the bosom of her dress. Benaja Widdup watched the money
+disappear with mournful eyes behind his spectacles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then with his next words he achieved rank (as his thoughts ran) with either
+the great crowd of the world&rsquo;s sympathizers or the little crowd of its
+great financiers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be kind o&rsquo; lonesome in the old cabin to-night, Ranse,&rdquo; he
+said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ransie Bilbro stared out at the Cumberlands, clear blue now in the sunlight. He
+did not look at Ariela.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I &rsquo;low it might be lonesome,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but when folks
+gits mad and wants a divo&rsquo;ce, you can&rsquo;t make folks stay.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s others wanted a divo&rsquo;ce,&rdquo; said Ariela,
+speaking to the wooden stool. &ldquo;Besides, nobody don&rsquo;t want nobody to
+stay.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nobody never said they didn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nobody never said they did. I reckon I better start on now to brother
+Ed&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nobody can&rsquo;t wind that old clock.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Want me to go back along &rsquo;ith you in the cart and wind it fur you,
+Ranse?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mountaineer&rsquo;s countenance was proof against emotion. But he reached
+out a big hand and enclosed Ariela&rsquo;s thin brown one. Her soul peeped out
+once through her impassive face, hallowing it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Them hounds shan&rsquo;t pester you no more,&rdquo; said Ransie.
+&ldquo;I reckon I been mean and low down. You wind that clock, Ariela.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My heart hit&rsquo;s in that cabin, Ranse,&rdquo; she whispered,
+&ldquo;along &rsquo;ith you. I ai&rsquo;nt a-goin&rsquo; to git mad no more.
+Le&rsquo;s be startin&rsquo;, Ranse, so&rsquo;s we kin git home by
+sundown.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup interposed as they started for the door,
+forgetting his presence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In the name of the State of Tennessee,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I forbid
+you-all to be a-defyin&rsquo; of its laws and statutes. This co&rsquo;t is
+mo&rsquo; than willin&rsquo; and full of joy to see the clouds of discord and
+misunderstandin&rsquo; rollin&rsquo; away from two lovin&rsquo; hearts, but it
+air the duty of the co&rsquo;t to p&rsquo;eserve the morals and integrity of
+the State. The co&rsquo;t reminds you that you air no longer man and wife, but
+air divo&rsquo;ced by regular decree, and as such air not entitled to the
+benefits and &rsquo;purtenances of the mattermonal estate.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ariela caught Ransie&rsquo;s arm. Did those words mean that she must lose him
+now when they had just learned the lesson of life?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But the co&rsquo;t air prepared,&rdquo; went on the Justice, &ldquo;fur
+to remove the disabilities set up by the decree of divo&rsquo;ce. The
+co&rsquo;t air on hand to perform the solemn ceremony of marri&rsquo;ge, thus
+fixin&rsquo; things up and enablin&rsquo; the parties in the case to resume the
+honour&rsquo;ble and elevatin&rsquo; state of mattermony which they desires.
+The fee fur performin&rsquo; said ceremony will be, in this case, to wit, five
+dollars.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ariela caught the gleam of promise in his words. Swiftly her hand went to her
+bosom. Freely as an alighting dove the bill fluttered to the Justice&rsquo;s
+table. Her sallow cheek coloured as she stood hand in hand with Ransie and
+listened to the reuniting words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ransie helped her into the cart, and climbed in beside her. The little red bull
+turned once more, and they set out, hand-clasped, for the mountains.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup sat in his door and took off his shoes. Once
+again he fingered the bill tucked down in his vest pocket. Once again he smoked
+his elder-stem pipe. Once again the speckled hen swaggered down the main street
+of the &ldquo;settlement,&rdquo; cackling foolishly.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap13"></a>XIII<br>
+A SACRIFICE HIT</h2>
+
+<p>
+The editor of the <i>Hearthstone Magazine</i> has his own ideas about the
+selection of manuscript for his publication. His theory is no secret; in fact,
+he will expound it to you willingly sitting at his mahogany desk, smiling
+benignantly and tapping his knee gently with his gold-rimmed eye-glasses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The <i>Hearthstone</i>,&rdquo; he will say, &ldquo;does not employ a
+staff of readers. We obtain opinions of the manuscripts submitted to us
+directly from types of the various classes of our readers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That is the editor&rsquo;s theory; and this is the way he carries it out:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When a batch of MSS. is received the editor stuffs every one of his pockets
+full of them and distributes them as he goes about during the day. The office
+employees, the hall porter, the janitor, the elevator man, messenger boys, the
+waiters at the café where the editor has luncheon, the man at the news-stand
+where he buys his evening paper, the grocer and milkman, the guard on the 5.30
+uptown elevated train, the ticket-chopper at Sixty
+&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;th street, the cook and maid at his
+home&mdash;these are the readers who pass upon MSS. sent in to the
+<i>Hearthstone Magazine</i>. If his pockets are not entirely emptied by the
+time he reaches the bosom of his family the remaining ones are handed over to
+his wife to read after the baby goes to sleep. A few days later the editor
+gathers in the MSS. during his regular rounds and considers the verdict of his
+assorted readers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This system of making up a magazine has been very successful; and the
+circulation, paced by the advertising rates, is making a wonderful record of
+speed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <i>Hearthstone</i> Company also publishes books, and its imprint is to be
+found on several successful works&mdash;all recommended, says the editor, by
+the <i>Hearthstone&rsquo;s</i> army of volunteer readers. Now and then
+(according to talkative members of the editorial staff) the <i>Hearthstone</i>
+has allowed manuscripts to slip through its fingers on the advice of its
+heterogeneous readers, that afterward proved to be famous sellers when brought
+out by other houses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For instance (the gossips say), &ldquo;The Rise and Fall of Silas Latham&rdquo;
+was unfavourably passed upon by the elevator-man; the office-boy unanimously
+rejected &ldquo;The Boss&rdquo;; &ldquo;In the Bishop&rsquo;s Carriage&rdquo;
+was contemptuously looked upon by the street-car conductor; &ldquo;The
+Deliverance&rdquo; was turned down by a clerk in the subscription department
+whose wife&rsquo;s mother had just begun a two-months&rsquo; visit at his home;
+&ldquo;The Queen&rsquo;s Quair&rdquo; came back from the janitor with the
+comment: &ldquo;So is the book.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But nevertheless the <i>Hearthstone</i> adheres to its theory and system, and
+it will never lack volunteer readers; for each one of the widely scattered
+staff, from the young lady stenographer in the editorial office to the man who
+shovels in coal (whose adverse decision lost to the <i>Hearthstone</i> Company
+the manuscript of &ldquo;The Under World&rdquo;), has expectations of becoming
+editor of the magazine some day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This method of the <i>Hearthstone</i> was well known to Allen Slayton when he
+wrote his novelette entitled &ldquo;Love Is All.&rdquo; Slayton had hung about
+the editorial offices of all the magazines so persistently that he was
+acquainted with the inner workings of every one in Gotham.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He knew not only that the editor of the Hearthstone handed his MSS. around
+among different types of people for reading, but that the stories of
+sentimental love-interest went to Miss Puffkin, the editor&rsquo;s
+stenographer. Another of the editor&rsquo;s peculiar customs was to conceal
+invariably the name of the writer from his readers of MSS. so that a glittering
+name might not influence the sincerity of their reports.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slayton made &ldquo;Love Is All&rdquo; the effort of his life. He gave it six
+months of the best work of his heart and brain. It was a pure love-story, fine,
+elevated, romantic, passionate&mdash;a prose poem that set the divine blessing
+of love (I am transposing from the manuscript) high above all earthly gifts and
+honours, and listed it in the catalogue of heaven&rsquo;s choicest rewards.
+Slayton&rsquo;s literary ambition was intense. He would have sacrificed all
+other worldly possessions to have gained fame in his chosen art. He would
+almost have cut off his right hand, or have offered himself to the knife of the
+appendicitis fancier to have realized his dream of seeing one of his efforts
+published in the <i>Hearthstone</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slayton finished &ldquo;Love Is All,&rdquo; and took it to the
+<i>Hearthstone</i> in person. The office of the magazine was in a large,
+conglomerate building, presided under by a janitor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the writer stepped inside the door on his way to the elevator a potato
+masher flew through the hall, wrecking Slayton&rsquo;s hat, and smashing the
+glass of the door. Closely following in the wake of the utensil flew the
+janitor, a bulky, unwholesome man, suspenderless and sordid, panic-stricken and
+breathless. A frowsy, fat woman with flying hair followed the missile. The
+janitor&rsquo;s foot slipped on the tiled floor, he fell in a heap with an
+exclamation of despair. The woman pounced upon him and seized his hair. The man
+bellowed lustily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her vengeance wreaked, the virago rose and stalked triumphant as Minerva, back
+to some cryptic domestic retreat at the rear. The janitor got to his feet,
+blown and humiliated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is married life,&rdquo; he said to Slayton, with a certain bruised
+humour. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s the girl I used to lay awake of nights thinking
+about. Sorry about your hat, mister. Say, don&rsquo;t snitch to the tenants
+about this, will yer? I don&rsquo;t want to lose me job.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slayton took the elevator at the end of the hall and went up to the offices of
+the <i>Hearthstone</i>. He left the MS. of &ldquo;Love Is All&rdquo; with the
+editor, who agreed to give him an answer as to its availability at the end of a
+week.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slayton formulated his great winning scheme on his way down. It struck him with
+one brilliant flash, and he could not refrain from admiring his own genius in
+conceiving the idea. That very night he set about carrying it into execution.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Puffkin, the <i>Hearthstone</i> stenographer, boarded in the same house
+with the author. She was an oldish, thin, exclusive, languishing, sentimental
+maid; and Slayton had been introduced to her some time before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The writer&rsquo;s daring and self-sacrificing project was this: He knew that
+the editor of the <i>Hearthstone</i> relied strongly upon Miss Puffkin&rsquo;s
+judgment in the manuscript of romantic and sentimental fiction. Her taste
+represented the immense average of mediocre women who devour novels and stories
+of that type. The central idea and keynote of &ldquo;Love Is All&rdquo; was
+love at first sight&mdash;the enrapturing, irresistible, soul-thrilling feeling
+that compels a man or a woman to recognize his or her spirit-mate as soon as
+heart speaks to heart. Suppose he should impress this divine truth upon Miss
+Puffkin personally!&mdash;would she not surely indorse her new and rapturous
+sensations by recommending highly to the editor of the <i>Hearthstone</i> the
+novelette &ldquo;Love Is All&rdquo;?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slayton thought so. And that night he took Miss Puffkin to the theatre. The
+next night he made vehement love to her in the dim parlour of the
+boarding-house. He quoted freely from &ldquo;Love Is All&rdquo;; and he wound
+up with Miss Puffkin&rsquo;s head on his shoulder, and visions of literary fame
+dancing in his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Slayton did not stop at love-making. This, he said to himself, was the
+turning point of his life; and, like a true sportsman, he &ldquo;went the
+limit.&rdquo; On Thursday night he and Miss Puffkin walked over to the Big
+Church in the Middle of the Block and were married.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Brave Slayton! Châteaubriand died in a garret, Byron courted a widow, Keats
+starved to death, Poe mixed his drinks, De Quincey hit the pipe, Ade lived in
+Chicago, James kept on doing it, Dickens wore white socks, De Maupassant wore a
+strait-jacket, Tom Watson became a Populist, Jeremiah wept, all these authors
+did these things for the sake of literature, but thou didst cap them all; thou
+marriedst a wife for to carve for thyself a niche in the temple of fame!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On Friday morning Mrs. Slayton said she would go over to the <i>Hearthstone</i>
+office, hand in one or two manuscripts that the editor had given to her to
+read, and resign her position as stenographer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Was there anything&mdash;er&mdash;that&mdash;er&mdash;you particularly
+fancied in the stories you are going to turn in?&rdquo; asked Slayton with a
+thumping heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There was one&mdash;a novelette, that I liked so much,&rdquo; said his
+wife. &ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t read anything in years that I thought was half as
+nice and true to life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That afternoon Slayton hurried down to the <i>Hearthstone</i> office. He felt
+that his reward was close at hand. With a novelette in the <i>Hearthstone</i>,
+literary reputation would soon be his.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The office boy met him at the railing in the outer office. It was not for
+unsuccessful authors to hold personal colloquy with the editor except at rare
+intervals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slayton, hugging himself internally, was nursing in his heart the exquisite
+hope of being able to crush the office boy with his forthcoming success.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He inquired concerning his novelette. The office boy went into the sacred
+precincts and brought forth a large envelope, thick with more than the bulk of
+a thousand checks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The boss told me to tell you he&rsquo;s sorry,&rdquo; said the boy,
+&ldquo;but your manuscript ain&rsquo;t available for the magazine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slayton stood, dazed. &ldquo;Can you tell me,&rdquo; he stammered,
+&ldquo;whether or no Miss Puff&mdash;that is my&mdash;I mean Miss
+Puffkin&mdash;handed in a novelette this morning that she had been asked to
+read?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sure she did,&rdquo; answered the office boy wisely. &ldquo;I heard the
+old man say that Miss Puffkin said it was a daisy. The name of it was,
+&lsquo;Married for the Mazuma, or a Working Girl&rsquo;s Triumph.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say, you!&rdquo; said the office boy confidentially, &ldquo;your
+name&rsquo;s Slayton, ain&rsquo;t it? I guess I mixed cases on you without
+meanin&rsquo; to do it. The boss give me some manuscript to hand around the
+other day and I got the ones for Miss Puffkin and the janitor mixed. I guess
+it&rsquo;s all right, though.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then Slayton looked closer and saw on the cover of his manuscript, under
+the title &ldquo;Love Is All,&rdquo; the janitor&rsquo;s comment scribbled with
+a piece of charcoal:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The &ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash; you say!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap14"></a>XIV<br>
+THE ROADS WE TAKE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Twenty miles west of Tucson, the &ldquo;Sunset Express&rdquo; stopped at a tank
+to take on water. Besides the aqueous addition the engine of that famous flyer
+acquired some other things that were not good for it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While the fireman was lowering the feeding hose, Bob Tidball,
+&ldquo;Shark&rdquo; Dodson and a quarter-bred Creek Indian called John Big Dog
+climbed on the engine and showed the engineer three round orifices in pieces of
+ordnance that they carried. These orifices so impressed the engineer with their
+possibilities that he raised both hands in a gesture such as accompanies the
+ejaculation &ldquo;Do tell!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the crisp command of Shark Dodson, who was leader of the attacking force the
+engineer descended to the ground and uncoupled the engine and tender. Then John
+Big Dog, perched upon the coal, sportively held two guns upon the engine driver
+and the fireman, and suggested that they run the engine fifty yards away and
+there await further orders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shark Dodson and Bob Tidball, scorning to put such low-grade ore as the
+passengers through the mill, struck out for the rich pocket of the express car.
+They found the messenger serene in the belief that the &ldquo;Sunset
+Express&rdquo; was taking on nothing more stimulating and dangerous than aqua
+pura. While Bob was knocking this idea out of his head with the butt-end of his
+six-shooter Shark Dodson was already dosing the express-car safe with dynamite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The safe exploded to the tune of $30,000, all gold and currency. The passengers
+thrust their heads casually out of the windows to look for the thunder-cloud.
+The conductor jerked at the bell-rope, which sagged down loose and unresisting,
+at his tug. Shark Dodson and Bob Tidball, with their booty in a stout canvas
+bag, tumbled out of the express car and ran awkwardly in their high-heeled
+boots to the engine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The engineer, sullenly angry but wise, ran the engine, according to orders,
+rapidly away from the inert train. But before this was accomplished the express
+messenger, recovered from Bob Tidball&rsquo;s persuader to neutrality, jumped
+out of his car with a Winchester rifle and took a trick in the game. Mr. John
+Big Dog, sitting on the coal tender, unwittingly made a wrong lead by giving an
+imitation of a target, and the messenger trumped him. With a ball exactly
+between his shoulder blades the Creek chevalier of industry rolled off to the
+ground, thus increasing the share of his comrades in the loot by one-sixth
+each.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two miles from the tank the engineer was ordered to stop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The robbers waved a defiant adieu and plunged down the steep slope into the
+thick woods that lined the track. Five minutes of crashing through a thicket of
+chaparral brought them to open woods, where three horses were tied to
+low-hanging branches. One was waiting for John Big Dog, who would never ride by
+night or day again. This animal the robbers divested of saddle and bridle and
+set free. They mounted the other two with the bag across one pommel, and rode
+fast and with discretion through the forest and up a primeval, lonely gorge.
+Here the animal that bore Bob Tidball slipped on a mossy boulder and broke a
+foreleg. They shot him through the head at once and sat down to hold a council
+of flight. Made secure for the present by the tortuous trail they had
+travelled, the question of time was no longer so big. Many miles and hours lay
+between them and the spryest posse that could follow. Shark Dodson&rsquo;s
+horse, with trailing rope and dropped bridle, panted and cropped thankfully of
+the grass along the stream in the gorge. Bob Tidball opened the sack, drew out
+double handfuls of the neat packages of currency and the one sack of gold and
+chuckled with the glee of a child.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say, you old double-decked pirate,&rdquo; he called joyfully to Dodson,
+&ldquo;you said we could do it&mdash;you got a head for financing that knocks
+the horns off of anything in Arizona.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What are we going to do about a hoss for you, Bob? We ain&rsquo;t got
+long to wait here. They&rsquo;ll be on our trail before daylight in the
+mornin&rsquo;.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I guess that cayuse of yourn&rsquo;ll carry double for a
+while,&rdquo; answered the sanguine Bob. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll annex the first
+animal we come across. By jingoes, we made a haul, didn&rsquo;t we?
+Accordin&rsquo; to the marks on this money there&rsquo;s $30,000&mdash;$15,000
+apiece!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s short of what I expected,&rdquo; said Shark Dodson, kicking
+softly at the packages with the toe of his boot. And then he looked pensively
+at the wet sides of his tired horse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Old Bolivar&rsquo;s mighty nigh played out,&rdquo; he said, slowly.
+&ldquo;I wish that sorrel of yours hadn&rsquo;t got hurt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So do I,&rdquo; said Bob, heartily, &ldquo;but it can&rsquo;t be helped.
+Bolivar&rsquo;s got plenty of bottom&mdash;he&rsquo;ll get us both far enough
+to get fresh mounts. Dang it, Shark, I can&rsquo;t help thinkin&rsquo; how
+funny it is that an Easterner like you can come out here and give us Western
+fellows cards and spades in the desperado business. What part of the East was
+you from, anyway?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;New York State,&rdquo; said Shark Dodson, sitting down on a boulder and
+chewing a twig. &ldquo;I was born on a farm in Ulster County. I ran away from
+home when I was seventeen. It was an accident my coming West. I was
+walkin&rsquo; along the road with my clothes in a bundle, makin&rsquo; for New
+York City. I had an idea of goin&rsquo; there and makin&rsquo; lots of money. I
+always felt like I could do it. I came to a place one evenin&rsquo; where the
+road forked and I didn&rsquo;t know which fork to take. I studied about it for
+half an hour, and then I took the left-hand. That night I run into the camp of
+a Wild West show that was travellin&rsquo; among the little towns, and I went
+West with it. I&rsquo;ve often wondered if I wouldn&rsquo;t have turned out
+different if I&rsquo;d took the other road.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I reckon you&rsquo;d have ended up about the same,&rdquo; said Bob
+Tidball, cheerfully philosophical. &ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t the roads we take;
+it&rsquo;s what&rsquo;s inside of us that makes us turn out the way we
+do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shark Dodson got up and leaned against a tree.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;d a good deal rather that sorrel of yourn hadn&rsquo;t hurt
+himself, Bob,&rdquo; he said again, almost pathetically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Same here,&rdquo; agreed Bob; &ldquo;he was sure a first-rate kind of a
+crowbait. But Bolivar, he&rsquo;ll pull us through all right. Reckon we&rsquo;d
+better be movin&rsquo; on, hadn&rsquo;t we, Shark? I&rsquo;ll bag this boodle
+ag&rsquo;in and we&rsquo;ll hit the trail for higher timber.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bob Tidball replaced the spoil in the bag and tied the mouth of it tightly with
+a cord. When he looked up the most prominent object that he saw was the muzzle
+of Shark Dodson&rsquo;s .45 held upon him without a waver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stop your funnin&rsquo;,&rdquo; said Bob, with a grin. &ldquo;We got to
+be hittin&rsquo; the breeze.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Set still,&rdquo; said Shark. &ldquo;You ain&rsquo;t goin&rsquo; to hit
+no breeze, Bob. I hate to tell you, but there ain&rsquo;t any chance for but
+one of us. Bolivar, he&rsquo;s plenty tired, and he can&rsquo;t carry
+double.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We been pards, me and you, Shark Dodson, for three year,&rdquo; Bob said
+quietly. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve risked our lives together time and again.
+I&rsquo;ve always give you a square deal, and I thought you was a man.
+I&rsquo;ve heard some queer stories about you shootin&rsquo; one or two men in
+a peculiar way, but I never believed &rsquo;em. Now if you&rsquo;re just
+havin&rsquo; a little fun with me, Shark, put your gun up, and we&rsquo;ll get
+on Bolivar and vamose. If you mean to shoot&mdash;shoot, you blackhearted son
+of a tarantula!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shark Dodson&rsquo;s face bore a deeply sorrowful look. &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t
+know how bad I feel,&rdquo; he sighed, &ldquo;about that sorrel of yourn
+breakin&rsquo; his leg, Bob.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The expression on Dodson&rsquo;s face changed in an instant to one of cold
+ferocity mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed itself
+for a moment like an evil face in the window of a reputable house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Truly Bob Tidball was never to &ldquo;hit the breeze&rdquo; again. The deadly
+.45 of the false friend cracked and filled the gorge with a roar that the walls
+hurled back with indignant echoes. And Bolivar, unconscious accomplice, swiftly
+bore away the last of the holders-up of the &ldquo;Sunset Express,&rdquo; not
+put to the stress of &ldquo;carrying double.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But as &ldquo;Shark&rdquo; Dodson galloped away the woods seemed to fade from
+his view; the revolver in his right hand turned to the curved arm of a mahogany
+chair; his saddle was strangely upholstered, and he opened his eyes and saw his
+feet, not in stirrups, but resting quietly on the edge of a quartered-oak desk.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+I am telling you that Dodson, of the firm of Dodson &amp; Decker, Wall Street
+brokers, opened his eyes. Peabody, the confidential clerk, was standing by his
+chair, hesitating to speak. There was a confused hum of wheels below, and the
+sedative buzz of an electric fan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ahem! Peabody,&rdquo; said Dodson, blinking. &ldquo;I must have fallen
+asleep. I had a most remarkable dream. What is it, Peabody?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Williams, sir, of Tracy &amp; Williams, is outside. He has come to
+settle his deal in X. Y. Z. The market caught him short, sir, if you
+remember.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I remember. What is X. Y. Z. quoted at to-day, Peabody?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One eighty-five, sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then that&rsquo;s his price.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Excuse me,&rdquo; said Peabody, rather nervously &ldquo;for speaking of
+it, but I&rsquo;ve been talking to Williams. He&rsquo;s an old friend of yours,
+Mr. Dodson, and you practically have a corner in X. Y. Z. I thought you
+might&mdash;that is, I thought you might not remember that he sold you the
+stock at 98. If he settles at the market price it will take every cent he has
+in the world and his home too to deliver the shares.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The expression on Dodson&rsquo;s face changed in an instant to one of cold
+ferocity mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed itself
+for a moment like an evil face in the window of a reputable house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He will settle at one eighty-five,&rdquo; said Dodson. &ldquo;Bolivar
+cannot carry double.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap15"></a> XV<br>
+A BLACKJACK BARGAINER</h2>
+
+<p>
+The most disreputable thing in Yancey Goree&rsquo;s law office was Goree
+himself, sprawled in his creaky old arm-chair. The rickety little office, built
+of red brick, was set flush with the street&mdash;the main street of the town
+of Bethel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bethel rested upon the foot-hills of the Blue Ridge. Above it the mountains
+were piled to the sky. Far below it the turbid Catawba gleamed yellow along its
+disconsolate valley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The June day was at its sultriest hour. Bethel dozed in the tepid shade. Trade
+was not. It was so still that Goree, reclining in his chair, distinctly heard
+the clicking of the chips in the grand-jury room, where the &ldquo;court-house
+gang&rdquo; was playing poker. From the open back door of the office a
+well-worn path meandered across the grassy lot to the court-house. The treading
+out of that path had cost Goree all he ever had&mdash;first inheritance of a
+few thousand dollars, next the old family home, and, latterly the last shreds
+of his self-respect and manhood. The &ldquo;gang&rdquo; had cleaned him out.
+The broken gambler had turned drunkard and parasite; he had lived to see this
+day come when the men who had stripped him denied him a seat at the game. His
+word was no longer to be taken. The daily bouts at cards had arranged itself
+accordingly, and to him was assigned the ignoble part of the onlooker. The
+sheriff, the county clerk, a sportive deputy, a gay attorney, and a chalk-faced
+man hailing &ldquo;from the valley,&rdquo; sat at table, and the sheared one
+was thus tacitly advised to go and grow more wool.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soon wearying of his ostracism, Goree had departed for his office, muttering to
+himself as he unsteadily traversed the unlucky pathway. After a drink of corn
+whiskey from a demijohn under the table, he had flung himself into the chair,
+staring, in a sort of maudlin apathy, out at the mountains immersed in the
+summer haze. The little white patch he saw away up on the side of Blackjack was
+Laurel, the village near which he had been born and bred. There, also, was the
+birthplace of the feud between the Gorees and the Coltranes. Now no direct heir
+of the Gorees survived except this plucked and singed bird of misfortune. To
+the Coltranes, also, but one male supporter was left&mdash;Colonel Abner
+Coltrane, a man of substance and standing, a member of the State Legislature,
+and a contemporary with Goree&rsquo;s father. The feud had been a typical one
+of the region; it had left a red record of hate, wrong and slaughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Yancey Goree was not thinking of feuds. His befuddled brain was hopelessly
+attacking the problem of the future maintenance of himself and his favourite
+follies. Of late, old friends of the family had seen to it that he had whereof
+to eat and a place to sleep&mdash;but whiskey they would not buy for him, and
+he must have whiskey. His law business was extinct; no case had been intrusted
+to him in two years. He had been a borrower and a sponge, and it seemed that if
+he fell no lower it would be from lack of opportunity. One more chance&mdash;he
+was saying to himself&mdash;if he had one more stake at the game, he thought he
+could win; but he had nothing left to sell, and his credit was more than
+exhausted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He could not help smiling, even in his misery, as he thought of the man to
+whom, six months before, he had sold the old Goree homestead. There had come
+from &ldquo;back yan&rsquo;&rdquo; in the mountains two of the strangest
+creatures, a man named Pike Garvey and his wife. &ldquo;Back yan&rsquo;,&rdquo;
+with a wave of the hand toward the hills, was understood among the mountaineers
+to designate the remotest fastnesses, the unplumbed gorges, the haunts of
+lawbreakers, the wolf&rsquo;s den, and the boudoir of the bear. In the cabin
+far up on Blackjack&rsquo;s shoulder, in the wildest part of these retreats,
+this odd couple had lived for twenty years. They had neither dog nor children
+to mitigate the heavy silence of the hills. Pike Garvey was little known in the
+settlements, but all who had dealt with him pronounced him &ldquo;crazy as a
+loon.&rdquo; He acknowledged no occupation save that of a squirrel hunter, but
+he &ldquo;moonshined&rdquo; occasionally by way of diversion. Once the
+&ldquo;revenues&rdquo; had dragged him from his lair, fighting silently and
+desperately like a terrier, and he had been sent to state&rsquo;s prison for
+two years. Released, he popped back into his hole like an angry weasel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fortune, passing over many anxious wooers, made a freakish flight into
+Blackjack&rsquo;s bosky pockets to smile upon Pike and his faithful partner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day a party of spectacled, knickerbockered, and altogether absurd
+prospectors invaded the vicinity of the Garvey&rsquo;s cabin. Pike lifted his
+squirrel rifle off the hooks and took a shot at them at long range on the
+chance of their being revenues. Happily he missed, and the unconscious agents
+of good luck drew nearer, disclosing their innocence of anything resembling law
+or justice. Later on, they offered the Garveys an enormous quantity of ready,
+green, crisp money for their thirty-acre patch of cleared land, mentioning, as
+an excuse for such a mad action, some irrelevant and inadequate nonsense about
+a bed of mica underlying the said property.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the Garveys became possessed of so many dollars that they faltered in
+computing them, the deficiencies of life on Blackjack began to grow prominent.
+Pike began to talk of new shoes, a hogshead of tobacco to set in the corner, a
+new lock to his rifle; and, leading Martella to a certain spot on the
+mountain-side, he pointed out to her how a small cannon&mdash;doubtless a thing
+not beyond the scope of their fortune in price&mdash;might be planted so as to
+command and defend the sole accessible trail to the cabin, to the confusion of
+revenues and meddling strangers forever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Adam reckoned without his Eve. These things represented to him the applied
+power of wealth, but there slumbered in his dingy cabin an ambition that soared
+far above his primitive wants. Somewhere in Mrs. Garvey&rsquo;s bosom still
+survived a spot of femininity unstarved by twenty years of Blackjack. For so
+long a time the sounds in her ears had been the scaly-barks dropping in the
+woods at noon, and the wolves singing among the rocks at night, and it was
+enough to have purged her of vanities. She had grown fat and sad and yellow and
+dull. But when the means came, she felt a rekindled desire to assume the
+perquisites of her sex&mdash;to sit at tea tables; to buy futile things; to
+whitewash the hideous veracity of life with a little form and ceremony. So she
+coldly vetoed Pike&rsquo;s proposed system of fortifications, and announced
+that they would descend upon the world, and gyrate socially.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus, at length, it was decided, and the thing done. The village of Laurel
+was their compromise between Mrs. Garvey&rsquo;s preference for one of the
+large valley towns and Pike&rsquo;s hankering for primeval solitudes. Laurel
+yielded a halting round of feeble social distractions comportable with
+Martella&rsquo;s ambitions, and was not entirely without recommendation to
+Pike, its contiguity to the mountains presenting advantages for sudden retreat
+in case fashionable society should make it advisable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their descent upon Laurel had been coincident with Yancey Goree&rsquo;s
+feverish desire to convert property into cash, and they bought the old Goree
+homestead, paying four thousand dollars ready money into the
+spendthrift&rsquo;s shaking hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus it happened that while the disreputable last of the Gorees sprawled in his
+disreputable office, at the end of his row, spurned by the cronies whom he had
+gorged, strangers dwelt in the halls of his fathers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A cloud of dust was rolling, slowly up the parched street, with something
+travelling in the midst of it. A little breeze wafted the cloud to one side,
+and a new, brightly painted carryall, drawn by a slothful gray horse, became
+visible. The vehicle deflected from the middle of the street as it neared
+Goree&rsquo;s office, and stopped in the gutter directly in front of his door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the front seat sat a gaunt, tall man, dressed in black broadcloth, his rigid
+hands incarcerated in yellow kid gloves. On the back seat was a lady who
+triumphed over the June heat. Her stout form was armoured in a skin-tight silk
+dress of the description known as &ldquo;changeable,&rdquo; being a gorgeous
+combination of shifting hues. She sat erect, waving a much-ornamented fan, with
+her eyes fixed stonily far down the street. However Martella Garvey&rsquo;s
+heart might be rejoicing at the pleasures of her new life, Blackjack had done
+his work with her exterior. He had carved her countenance to the image of
+emptiness and inanity; had imbued her with the stolidity of his crags, and the
+reserve of his hushed interiors. She always seemed to hear, whatever her
+surroundings were, the scaly-barks falling and pattering down the
+mountain-side. She could always hear the awful silence of Blackjack sounding
+through the stillest of nights.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Goree watched this solemn equipage, as it drove to his door, with only faint
+interest; but when the lank driver wrapped the reins about his whip, awkwardly
+descended, and stepped into the office, he rose unsteadily to receive him,
+recognizing Pike Garvey, the new, the transformed, the recently civilized.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mountaineer took the chair Goree offered him. They who cast doubts upon
+Garvey&rsquo;s soundness of mind had a strong witness in the man&rsquo;s
+countenance. His face was too long, a dull saffron in hue, and immobile as a
+statue&rsquo;s. Pale-blue, unwinking round eyes without lashes added to the
+singularity of his gruesome visage. Goree was at a loss to account for the
+visit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Everything all right at Laurel, Mr. Garvey?&rdquo; he inquired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Everything all right, sir, and mighty pleased is Missis Garvey and me
+with the property. Missis Garvey likes yo&rsquo; old place, and she likes the
+neighbourhood. Society is what she &rsquo;lows she wants, and she is
+gettin&rsquo; of it. The Rogerses, the Hapgoods, the Pratts and the Troys hev
+been to see Missis Garvey, and she hev et meals to most of thar houses. The
+best folks hev axed her to differ&rsquo;nt kinds of doin&rsquo;s. I
+cyan&rsquo;t say, Mr. Goree, that sech things suits me&mdash;fur me, give me
+them thar.&rdquo; Garvey&rsquo;s huge, yellow-gloved hand flourished in the
+direction of the mountains. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s whar I b&rsquo;long,
+&rsquo;mongst the wild honey bees and the b&rsquo;ars. But that ain&rsquo;t
+what I come fur to say, Mr. Goree. Thar&rsquo;s somethin&rsquo; you got what me
+and Missis Garvey wants to buy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Buy!&rdquo; echoed Goree. &ldquo;From me?&rdquo; Then he laughed
+harshly. &ldquo;I reckon you are mistaken about that. I reckon you are mistaken
+about that. I sold out to you, as you yourself expressed it, &lsquo;lock, stock
+and barrel.&rsquo; There isn&rsquo;t even a ramrod left to sell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got it; and we &rsquo;uns want it. &lsquo;Take the
+money,&rsquo; says Missis Garvey, &lsquo;and buy it fa&rsquo;r and
+squar&rsquo;.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Goree shook his head. &ldquo;The cupboard&rsquo;s bare,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve riz,&rdquo; pursued the mountaineer, undeflected from his
+object, &ldquo;a heap. We was pore as possums, and now we could hev folks to
+dinner every day. We been recognized, Missis Garvey says, by the best society.
+But there&rsquo;s somethin&rsquo; we need we ain&rsquo;t got. She says it ought
+to been put in the &rsquo;ventory ov the sale, but it tain&rsquo;t thar.
+&lsquo;Take the money, then,&rsquo; says she, &lsquo;and buy it fa&rsquo;r and
+squar&rsquo;.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Out with it,&rdquo; said Goree, his racked nerves growing impatient.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Garvey threw his slouch hat upon the table, and leaned forward, fixing his
+unblinking eyes upon Goree&rsquo;s.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a old feud,&rdquo; he said distinctly and slowly,
+&ldquo;&rsquo;tween you &rsquo;uns and the Coltranes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Goree frowned ominously. To speak of his feud to a feudist is a serious breach
+of the mountain etiquette. The man from &ldquo;back yan&rsquo;&rdquo; knew it
+as well as the lawyer did.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Na offense,&rdquo; he went on &ldquo;but purely in the way of business.
+Missis Garvey hev studied all about feuds. Most of the quality folks in the
+mountains hev &rsquo;em. The Settles and the Goforths, the Rankins and the
+Boyds, the Silers and the Galloways, hev all been cyarin&rsquo; on feuds
+f&rsquo;om twenty to a hundred year. The last man to drap was when yo&rsquo;
+uncle, Jedge Paisley Goree, &rsquo;journed co&rsquo;t and shot Len Coltrane
+f&rsquo;om the bench. Missis Garvey and me, we come f&rsquo;om the po&rsquo;
+white trash. Nobody wouldn&rsquo;t pick a feud with we &rsquo;uns, no
+mo&rsquo;n with a fam&rsquo;ly of tree-toads. Quality people everywhar, says
+Missis Garvey, has feuds. We &rsquo;uns ain&rsquo;t quality, but we&rsquo;re
+buyin&rsquo; into it as fur as we can. &lsquo;Take the money, then,&rsquo; says
+Missis Garvey, &lsquo;and buy Mr. Goree&rsquo;s feud, fa&rsquo;r and
+squar&rsquo;.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The squirrel hunter straightened a leg half across the room, drew a roll of
+bills from his pocket, and threw them on the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thar&rsquo;s two hundred dollars, Mr. Goree; what you would call a
+fa&rsquo;r price for a feud that&rsquo;s been &rsquo;lowed to run down like
+yourn hev. Thar&rsquo;s only you left to cyar&rsquo; on yo&rsquo; side of it,
+and you&rsquo;d make mighty po&rsquo; killin&rsquo;. I&rsquo;ll take it off
+yo&rsquo; hands, and it&rsquo;ll set me and Missis Garvey up among the quality.
+Thar&rsquo;s the money.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The little roll of currency on the table slowly untwisted itself, writhing and
+jumping as its folds relaxed. In the silence that followed Garvey&rsquo;s last
+speech the rattling of the poker chips in the court-house could be plainly
+heard. Goree knew that the sheriff had just won a pot, for the subdued whoop
+with which he always greeted a victory floated across the square upon the
+crinkly heat waves. Beads of moisture stood on Goree&rsquo;s brow. Stooping, he
+drew the wicker-covered demijohn from under the table, and filled a tumbler
+from it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A little corn liquor, Mr. Garvey? Of course you are joking
+about&mdash;what you spoke of? Opens quite a new market, doesn&rsquo;t it?
+Feuds. Prime, two-fifty to three. Feuds, slightly damaged&mdash;two hundred, I
+believe you said, Mr. Garvey?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Goree laughed self-consciously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mountaineer took the glass Goree handed him, and drank the whisky without a
+tremor of the lids of his staring eyes. The lawyer applauded the feat by a look
+of envious admiration. He poured his own drink, and took it like a drunkard, by
+gulps, and with shudders at the smell and taste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Two hundred,&rdquo; repeated Garvey. &ldquo;Thar&rsquo;s the
+money.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sudden passion flared up in Goree&rsquo;s brain. He struck the table with his
+fist. One of the bills flipped over and touched his hand. He flinched as if
+something had stung him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you come to me,&rdquo; he shouted, &ldquo;seriously with such a
+ridiculous, insulting, darned-fool proposition?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s fa&rsquo;r and squar&rsquo;,&rdquo; said the squirrel hunter,
+but he reached out his hand as if to take back the money; and then Goree knew
+that his own flurry of rage had not been from pride or resentment, but from
+anger at himself, knowing that he would set foot in the deeper depths that were
+being opened to him. He turned in an instant from an outraged gentleman to an
+anxious chafferer recommending his goods.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be in a hurry, Garvey,&rdquo; he said, his face crimson and
+his speech thick. &ldquo;I accept your p-p-proposition, though it&rsquo;s dirt
+cheap at two hundred. A t-trade&rsquo;s all right when both p-purchaser and
+b-buyer are s-satisfied. Shall I w-wrap it up for you, Mr. Garvey?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Garvey rose, and shook out his broadcloth. &ldquo;Missis Garvey will be
+pleased. You air out of it, and it stands Coltrane and Garvey. Just a scrap ov
+writin&rsquo;, Mr. Goree, you bein&rsquo; a lawyer, to show we traded.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Goree seized a sheet of paper and a pen. The money was clutched in his moist
+hand. Everything else suddenly seemed to grow trivial and light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bill of sale, by all means. &lsquo;Right, title, and interest in and
+to&rsquo; . . . &lsquo;forever warrant and&mdash;&rsquo; No, Garvey,
+we&rsquo;ll have to leave out that &lsquo;defend,&rsquo;&rdquo; said Goree with
+a loud laugh. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have to defend this title yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mountaineer received the amazing screed that the lawyer handed him, folded
+it with immense labour, and laced it carefully in his pocket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Goree was standing near the window. &ldquo;Step here,&rdquo; he said, raising
+his finger, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll show you your recently purchased enemy. There
+he goes, down the other side of the street.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mountaineer crooked his long frame to look through the window in the
+direction indicated by the other. Colonel Abner Coltrane, an erect, portly
+gentleman of about fifty, wearing the inevitable long, double-breasted frock
+coat of the Southern lawmaker, and an old high silk hat, was passing on the
+opposite sidewalk. As Garvey looked, Goree glanced at his face. If there be
+such a thing as a yellow wolf, here was its counterpart. Garvey snarled as his
+unhuman eyes followed the moving figure, disclosing long, amber-coloured fangs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is that him? Why, that&rsquo;s the man who sent me to the
+pen&rsquo;tentiary once!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He used to be district attorney,&rdquo; said Goree carelessly.
+&ldquo;And, by the way, he&rsquo;s a first-class shot.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I kin hit a squirrel&rsquo;s eye at a hundred yard,&rdquo; said Garvey.
+&ldquo;So that thar&rsquo;s Coltrane! I made a better trade than I was
+thinkin&rsquo;. I&rsquo;ll take keer ov this feud, Mr. Goree, better&rsquo;n
+you ever did!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He moved toward the door, but lingered there, betraying a slight perplexity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Anything else to-day?&rdquo; inquired Goree with frothy sarcasm.
+&ldquo;Any family traditions, ancestral ghosts, or skeletons in the closet?
+Prices as low as the lowest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thar was another thing,&rdquo; replied the unmoved squirrel hunter,
+&ldquo;that Missis Garvey was thinkin&rsquo; of. &rsquo;Tain&rsquo;t so much in
+my line as t&rsquo;other, but she wanted partic&rsquo;lar that I should
+inquire, and ef you was willin&rsquo;, &lsquo;pay fur it,&rsquo; she says,
+&lsquo;fa&rsquo;r and squar&rsquo;.&rsquo; Thar&rsquo;s a buryin&rsquo;
+groun&rsquo;, as you know, Mr. Goree, in the yard of yo&rsquo; old place, under
+the cedars. Them that lies thar is yo&rsquo; folks what was killed by the
+Coltranes. The monyments has the names on &rsquo;em. Missis Garvey says a
+fam&rsquo;ly buryin&rsquo; groun&rsquo; is a sho&rsquo; sign of quality. She
+says ef we git the feud, thar&rsquo;s somethin&rsquo; else ought to go with it.
+The names on them monyments is &lsquo;Goree,&rsquo; but they can be changed to
+ourn by&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go! Go!&rdquo; screamed Goree, his face turning purple. He stretched out
+both hands toward the mountaineer, his fingers hooked and shaking. &ldquo;Go,
+you ghoul! Even a Ch-Chinaman protects the g-graves of his
+ancestors&mdash;go!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The squirrel hunter slouched out of the door to his carryall. While he was
+climbing over the wheel Goree was collecting, with feverish celerity, the money
+that had fallen from his hand to the floor. As the vehicle slowly turned about,
+the sheep, with a coat of newly grown wool, was hurrying, in indecent haste,
+along the path to the court-house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At three o&rsquo;clock in the morning they brought him back to his office,
+shorn and unconscious. The sheriff, the sportive deputy, the county clerk, and
+the gay attorney carried him, the chalk-faced man &ldquo;from the valley&rdquo;
+acting as escort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;On the table,&rdquo; said one of them, and they deposited him there
+among the litter of his unprofitable books and papers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yance thinks a lot of a pair of deuces when he&rsquo;s liquored
+up,&rdquo; sighed the sheriff reflectively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Too much,&rdquo; said the gay attorney. &ldquo;A man has no business to
+play poker who drinks as much as he does. I wonder how much he dropped
+to-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Close to two hundred. What I wonder is whar he got it. Yance ain&rsquo;t
+had a cent fur over a month, I know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Struck a client, maybe. Well, let&rsquo;s get home before daylight.
+He&rsquo;ll be all right when he wakes up, except for a sort of beehive about
+the cranium.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The gang slipped away through the early morning twilight. The next eye to gaze
+upon the miserable Goree was the orb of day. He peered through the uncurtained
+window, first deluging the sleeper in a flood of faint gold, but soon pouring
+upon the mottled red of his flesh a searching, white, summer heat. Goree
+stirred, half unconsciously, among the table&rsquo;s débris, and turned his
+face from the window. His movement dislodged a heavy law book, which crashed
+upon the floor. Opening his eyes, he saw, bending over him, a man in a black
+frock coat. Looking higher, he discovered a well-worn silk hat, and beneath it
+the kindly, smooth face of Colonel Abner Coltrane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A little uncertain of the outcome, the colonel waited for the other to make
+some sign of recognition. Not in twenty years had male members of these two
+families faced each other in peace. Goree&rsquo;s eyelids puckered as he
+strained his blurred sight toward this visitor, and then he smiled serenely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you brought Stella and Lucy over to play?&rdquo; he said calmly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you know me, Yancey?&rdquo; asked Coltrane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course I do. You brought me a whip with a whistle in the end.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So he had&mdash;twenty-four years ago; when Yancey&rsquo;s father was his best
+friend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Goree&rsquo;s eyes wandered about the room. The colonel understood. &ldquo;Lie
+still, and I&rsquo;ll bring you some,&rdquo; said he. There was a pump in the
+yard at the rear, and Goree closed his eyes, listening with rapture to the
+click of its handle, and the bubbling of the falling stream. Coltrane brought a
+pitcher of the cool water, and held it for him to drink. Presently Goree sat
+up&mdash;a most forlorn object, his summer suit of flax soiled and crumpled,
+his discreditable head tousled and unsteady. He tried to wave one of his hands
+toward the colonel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ex-excuse&mdash;everything, will you?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I must have
+drunk too much whiskey last night, and gone to bed on the table.&rdquo; His
+brows knitted into a puzzled frown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Out with the boys awhile?&rdquo; asked Coltrane kindly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I went nowhere. I haven&rsquo;t had a dollar to spend in the last
+two months. Struck the demijohn too often, I reckon, as usual.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Colonel Coltrane touched him on the shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A little while ago, Yancey,&rdquo; he began, &ldquo;you asked me if I
+had brought Stella and Lucy over to play. You weren&rsquo;t quite awake then,
+and must have been dreaming you were a boy again. You are awake now, and I want
+you to listen to me. I have come from Stella and Lucy to their old playmate,
+and to my old friend&rsquo;s son. They know that I am going to bring you home
+with me, and you will find them as ready with a welcome as they were in the old
+days. I want you to come to my house and stay until you are yourself again, and
+as much longer as you will. We heard of your being down in the world, and in
+the midst of temptation, and we agreed that you should come over and play at
+our house once more. Will you come, my boy? Will you drop our old family
+trouble and come with me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Trouble!&rdquo; said Goree, opening his eyes wide. &ldquo;There was
+never any trouble between us that I know of. I&rsquo;m sure we&rsquo;ve always
+been the best friends. But, good Lord, Colonel, how could I go to your home as
+I am&mdash;a drunken wretch, a miserable, degraded spendthrift and
+gambler&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He lurched from the table into his armchair, and began to weep maudlin tears,
+mingled with genuine drops of remorse and shame. Coltrane talked to him
+persistently and reasonably, reminding him of the simple mountain pleasures of
+which he had once been so fond, and insisting upon the genuineness of the
+invitation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Finally he landed Goree by telling him he was counting upon his help in the
+engineering and transportation of a large amount of felled timber from a high
+mountain-side to a waterway. He knew that Goree had once invented a device for
+this purpose&mdash;a series of slides and chutes upon which he had justly
+prided himself. In an instant the poor fellow, delighted at the idea of his
+being of use to any one, had paper spread upon the table, and was drawing rapid
+but pitifully shaky lines in demonstration of what he could and would do.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man was sickened of the husks; his prodigal heart was turning again toward
+the mountains. His mind was yet strangely clogged, and his thoughts and
+memories were returning to his brain one by one, like carrier pigeons over a
+stormy sea. But Coltrane was satisfied with the progress he had made.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bethel received the surprise of its existence that afternoon when a Coltrane
+and a Goree rode amicably together through the town. Side by side they rode,
+out from the dusty streets and gaping townspeople, down across the creek
+bridge, and up toward the mountain. The prodigal had brushed and washed and
+combed himself to a more decent figure, but he was unsteady in the saddle, and
+he seemed to be deep in the contemplation of some vexing problem. Coltrane left
+him in his mood, relying upon the influence of changed surroundings to restore
+his equilibrium.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once Goree was seized with a shaking fit, and almost came to a collapse. He had
+to dismount and rest at the side of the road. The colonel, foreseeing such a
+condition, had provided a small flask of whisky for the journey but when it was
+offered to him Goree refused it almost with violence, declaring he would never
+touch it again. By and by he was recovered, and went quietly enough for a mile
+or two. Then he pulled up his horse suddenly, and said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I lost two hundred dollars last night, playing poker. Now, where did I
+get that money?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take it easy, Yancey. The mountain air will soon clear it up.
+We&rsquo;ll go fishing, first thing, at the Pinnacle Falls. The trout are
+jumping there like bullfrogs. We&rsquo;ll take Stella and Lucy along, and have
+a picnic on Eagle Rock. Have you forgotten how a hickory-cured-ham sandwich
+tastes, Yancey, to a hungry fisherman?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Evidently the colonel did not believe the story of his lost wealth; so Goree
+retired again into brooding silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By late Afternoon they had travelled ten of the twelve miles between Bethel and
+Laurel. Half a mile this side of Laurel lay the old Goree place; a mile or two
+beyond the village lived the Coltranes. The road was now steep and laborious,
+but the compensations were many. The tilted aisles of the forest were opulent
+with leaf and bird and bloom. The tonic air put to shame the
+pharmacop&aelig;ia. The glades were dark with mossy shade, and bright with shy
+rivulets winking from the ferns and laurels. On the lower side they viewed,
+framed in the near foliage, exquisite sketches of the far valley swooning in
+its opal haze.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Coltrane was pleased to see that his companion was yielding to the spell of the
+hills and woods. For now they had but to skirt the base of Painter&rsquo;s
+Cliff; to cross Elder Branch and mount the hill beyond, and Goree would have to
+face the squandered home of his fathers. Every rock he passed, every tree,
+every foot of the rocky way, was familiar to him. Though he had forgotten the
+woods, they thrilled him like the music of &ldquo;Home, Sweet Home.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They rounded the cliff, descended into Elder Branch, and paused there to let
+the horses drink and splash in the swift water. On the right was a rail fence
+that cornered there, and followed the road and stream. Inclosed by it was the
+old apple orchard of the home place; the house was yet concealed by the brow of
+the steep hill. Inside and along the fence, pokeberries, elders, sassafras, and
+sumac grew high and dense. At a rustle of their branches, both Goree and
+Coltrane glanced up, and saw a long, yellow, wolfish face above the fence,
+staring at them with pale, unwinking eyes. The head quickly disappeared; there
+was a violent swaying of the bushes, and an ungainly figure ran up through the
+apple orchard in the direction of the house, zig-zagging among the trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s Garvey,&rdquo; said Coltrane; &ldquo;the man you sold out
+to. There&rsquo;s no doubt but he&rsquo;s considerably cracked. I had to send
+him up for moonshining once, several years ago, in spite of the fact that I
+believed him irresponsible. Why, what&rsquo;s the matter, Yancey?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Goree was wiping his forehead, and his face had lost its colour. &ldquo;Do I
+look queer, too?&rdquo; he asked, trying to smile. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m just
+remembering a few more things.&rdquo; Some of the alcohol had evaporated from
+his brain. &ldquo;I recollect now where I got that two hundred dollars.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t think of it,&rdquo; said Coltrane cheerfully. &ldquo;Later
+on we&rsquo;ll figure it all out together.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They rode out of the branch, and when they reached the foot of the hill Goree
+stopped again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did you ever suspect I was a very vain kind of fellow, Colonel?&rdquo;
+he asked. &ldquo;Sort of foolish proud about appearances?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The colonel&rsquo;s eyes refused to wander to the soiled, sagging suit of flax
+and the faded slouch hat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It seems to me,&rdquo; he replied, mystified, but humouring him,
+&ldquo;I remember a young buck about twenty, with the tightest coat, the
+sleekest hair, and the prancingest saddle horse in the Blue Ridge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Right you are,&rdquo; said Goree eagerly. &ldquo;And it&rsquo;s in me
+yet, though it don&rsquo;t show. Oh, I&rsquo;m as vain as a turkey gobbler, and
+as proud as Lucifer. I&rsquo;m going to ask you to indulge this weakness of
+mine in a little matter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak out, Yancey. We&rsquo;ll create you Duke of Laurel and Baron of
+Blue Ridge, if you choose; and you shall have a feather out of Stella&rsquo;s
+peacock&rsquo;s tail to wear in your hat.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m in earnest. In a few minutes we&rsquo;ll pass the house up
+there on the hill where I was born, and where my people have lived for nearly a
+century. Strangers live there now&mdash;and look at me! I am about to show
+myself to them ragged and poverty-stricken, a wastrel and a beggar. Colonel
+Coltrane, I&rsquo;m ashamed to do it. I want you to let me wear your coat and
+hat until we are out of sight beyond. I know you think it a foolish pride, but
+I want to make as good a showing as I can when I pass the old place.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, what does this mean?&rdquo; said Coltrane to himself, as he
+compared his companion&rsquo;s sane looks and quiet demeanour with his strange
+request. But he was already unbuttoning the coat, assenting readily, as if the
+fancy were in no wise to be considered strange.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The coat and hat fitted Goree well. He buttoned the former about him with a
+look of satisfaction and dignity. He and Coltrane were nearly the same
+size&mdash;rather tall, portly, and erect. Twenty-five years were between them,
+but in appearance they might have been brothers. Goree looked older than his
+age; his face was puffy and lined; the colonel had the smooth, fresh complexion
+of a temperate liver. He put on Goree&rsquo;s disreputable old flax coat and
+faded slouch hat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Goree, taking up the reins, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m all right.
+I want you to ride about ten feet in the rear as we go by, Colonel, so that
+they can get a good look at me. They&rsquo;ll see I&rsquo;m no back number yet,
+by any means. I guess I&rsquo;ll show up pretty well to them once more, anyhow.
+Let&rsquo;s ride on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He set out up the hill at a smart trot, the colonel following, as he had been
+requested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Goree sat straight in the saddle, with head erect, but his eyes were turned to
+the right, sharply scanning every shrub and fence and hiding-place in the old
+homestead yard. Once he muttered to himself, &ldquo;Will the crazy fool try it,
+or did I dream half of it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was when he came opposite the little family burying ground that he saw what
+he had been looking for&mdash;a puff of white smoke, coming from the thick
+cedars in one corner. He toppled so slowly to the left that Coltrane had time
+to urge his horse to that side, and catch him with one arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The squirrel hunter had not overpraised his aim. He had sent the bullet where
+he intended, and where Goree had expected that it would pass&mdash;through the
+breast of Colonel Abner Coltrane&rsquo;s black frock coat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Goree leaned heavily against Coltrane, but he did not fall. The horses kept
+pace, side by side, and the Colonel&rsquo;s arm kept him steady. The little
+white houses of Laurel shone through the trees, half a mile away. Goree reached
+out one hand and groped until it rested upon Coltrane&rsquo;s fingers, which
+held his bridle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good friend,&rdquo; he said, and that was all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus did Yancey Goree, as he rode past his old home, make, considering all
+things, the best showing that was in his power.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap16"></a>XVI<br>
+THE SONG AND THE SERGEANT</h2>
+
+<p>
+Half a dozen people supping at a table in one of the upper-Broadway all-night
+restaurants were making too much noise. Three times the manager walked past
+them with a politely warning glance; but their argument had waxed too warm to
+be quelled by a manager&rsquo;s gaze. It was midnight, and the restaurant was
+filled with patrons from the theatres of that district. Some among the
+dispersed audiences must have recognized among the quarrelsome sextet the faces
+of the players belonging to the Carroll Comedy Company.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Four of the six made up the company. Another was the author of the comedietta,
+&ldquo;A Gay Coquette,&rdquo; which the quartette of players had been
+presenting with fair success at several vaudeville houses in the city. The
+sixth at the table was a person inconsequent in the realm of art, but one at
+whose bidding many lobsters had perished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Loudly the six maintained their clamorous debate. No one of the Party was
+silent except when answers were stormed from him by the excited ones. That was
+the comedian of &ldquo;A Gay Coquette.&rdquo; He was a young man with a face
+even too melancholy for his profession.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The oral warfare of four immoderate tongues was directed at Miss Clarice
+Carroll, the twinkling star of the small aggregation. Excepting the downcast
+comedian, all members of the party united in casting upon her with vehemence
+the blame of some momentous misfortune. Fifty times they told her: &ldquo;It is
+your fault, Clarice&mdash;it is you alone who spoilt the scene. It is only of
+late that you have acted this way. At this rate the sketch will have to be
+taken off.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Carroll was a match for any four. Gallic ancestry gave her a vivacity that
+could easily mount to fury. Her large eyes flashed a scorching denial at her
+accusers. Her slender, eloquent arms constantly menaced the tableware. Her
+high, clear soprano voice rose to what would have been a scream had it not
+possessed so pure a musical quality. She hurled back at the attacking four
+their denunciations in tones sweet, but of too great carrying power for a
+Broadway restaurant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Finally they exhausted her patience both as a woman and an artist. She sprang
+up like a panther, managed to smash half a dozen plates and glasses with one
+royal sweep of her arm, and defied her critics. They rose and wrangled more
+loudly. The comedian sighed and looked a trifle sadder and disinterested. The
+manager came tripping and suggested peace. He was told to go to the popular
+synonym for war so promptly that the affair might have happened at The Hague.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus was the manager angered. He made a sign with his hand and a waiter slipped
+out of the door. In twenty minutes the party of six was in a police station
+facing a grizzled and philosophical desk sergeant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Disorderly conduct in a restaurant,&rdquo; said the policeman who had
+brought the party in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The author of &ldquo;A Gay Coquette&rdquo; stepped to the front. He wore
+nose-glasses and evening clothes, even if his shoes had been tans before they
+met the patent-leather-polish bottle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Sergeant,&rdquo; said he, out of his throat, like Actor Irving,
+&ldquo;I would like to protest against this arrest. The company of actors who
+are performing in a little play that I have written, in company with a friend
+and myself were having a little supper. We became deeply interested in the
+discussion as to which one of the cast is responsible for a scene in the sketch
+that lately has fallen so flat that the piece is about to become a failure. We
+may have been rather noisy and intolerant of interruption by the restaurant
+people; but the matter was of considerable importance to all of us. You see
+that we are sober and are not the kind of people who desire to raise
+disturbances. I hope that the case will not be pressed and that we may be
+allowed to go.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who makes the charge?&rdquo; asked the sergeant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Me,&rdquo; said a white-aproned voice in the rear. &ldquo;De restaurant
+sent me to. De gang was raisin&rsquo; a rough-house and breakin&rsquo;
+dishes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The dishes were paid for,&rdquo; said the playwright. &ldquo;They were
+not broken purposely. In her anger, because we remonstrated with her for
+spoiling the scene, Miss&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not true, sergeant,&rdquo; cried the clear voice of Miss
+Clarice Carroll. In a long coat of tan silk and a red-plumed hat, she bounded
+before the desk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not my fault,&rdquo; she cried indignantly. &ldquo;How dare
+they say such a thing! I&rsquo;ve played the title rôle ever since it was
+staged, and if you want to know who made it a success, ask the
+public&mdash;that&rsquo;s all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What Miss Carroll says is true in part,&rdquo; said the author.
+&ldquo;For five months the comedietta was a drawing-card in the best houses.
+But during the last two weeks it has lost favour. There is one scene in it in
+which Miss Carroll made a big hit. Now she hardly gets a hand out of it. She
+spoils it by acting it entirely different from her old way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not my fault,&rdquo; reiterated the actress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There are only two of you on in the scene,&rdquo; argued the playwright
+hotly, &ldquo;you and Delmars, here&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then it&rsquo;s his fault,&rdquo; declared Miss Carroll, with a
+lightning glance of scorn from her dark eyes. The comedian caught it, and gazed
+with increased melancholy at the panels of the sergeant&rsquo;s desk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The night was a dull one in that particular police station.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sergeant&rsquo;s long-blunted curiosity awoke a little.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard you,&rdquo; he said to the author. And then he
+addressed the thin-faced and ascetic-looking lady of the company who played
+&ldquo;Aunt Turnip-top&rdquo; in the little comedy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who do you think spoils the scene you are fussing about?&rdquo; he
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m no knocker,&rdquo; said that lady, &ldquo;and everybody knows
+it. So, when I say that Clarice falls down every time in that scene I&rsquo;m
+judging her art and not herself. She was great in it once. She does it
+something fierce now. It&rsquo;ll dope the show if she keeps it up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sergeant looked at the comedian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You and the lady have this scene together, I understand. I suppose
+there&rsquo;s no use asking you which one of you queers it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The comedian avoided the direct rays from the two fixed stars of Miss
+Carroll&rsquo;s eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; he said, looking down at his patent-leather
+toes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you one of the actors?&rdquo; asked the sergeant of a dwarfish youth
+with a middle-aged face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, say!&rdquo; replied the last Thespian witness, &ldquo;you
+don&rsquo;t notice any tin spear in my hands, do you? You haven&rsquo;t heard
+me shout: &lsquo;See, the Emperor comes!&rsquo; since I&rsquo;ve been in here,
+have you? I guess I&rsquo;m on the stage long enough for &rsquo;em not to start
+a panic by mistaking me for a thin curl of smoke rising above the
+footlights.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In your opinion, if you&rsquo;ve got one,&rdquo; said the sergeant,
+&ldquo;is the frost that gathers on the scene in question the work of the lady
+or the gentleman who takes part in it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The middle-aged youth looked pained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I regret to say,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;that Miss Carroll seems to
+have lost her grip on that scene. She&rsquo;s all right in the rest of the
+play, but&mdash;but I tell you, sergeant, she can do it&mdash;she has done it
+equal to any of &rsquo;em&mdash;and she can do it again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Carroll ran forward, glowing and palpitating.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thank you, Jimmy, for the first good word I&rsquo;ve had in many a
+day,&rdquo; she cried. And then she turned her eager face toward the desk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll show you, sergeant, whether I am to blame. I&rsquo;ll show
+them whether I can do that scene. Come, Mr. Delmars; let us begin. You will let
+us, won&rsquo;t you, sergeant?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How long will it take?&rdquo; asked the sergeant, dubiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eight minutes,&rdquo; said the playwright. &ldquo;The entire play
+consumes but thirty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You may go ahead,&rdquo; said the sergeant. &ldquo;Most of you seem to
+side against the little lady. Maybe she had a right to crack up a saucer or two
+in that restaurant. We&rsquo;ll see how she does the turn before we take that
+up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The matron of the police station had been standing near, listening to the
+singular argument. She came nigher and stood near the sergeant&rsquo;s chair.
+Two or three of the reserves strolled in, big and yawning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Before beginning the scene,&rdquo; said the playwright, &ldquo;and
+assuming that you have not seen a production of &lsquo;A Gay Coquette,&rsquo; I
+will make a brief but necessary explanation. It is a
+musical-farce-comedy&mdash;burlesque-comedietta. As the title implies, Miss
+Carroll&rsquo;s rôle is that of a gay, rollicking, mischievous, heartless
+coquette. She sustains that character throughout the entire comedy part of the
+production. And I have designed the extravaganza features so that she may
+preserve and present the same coquettish idea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, the scene in which we take exception to Miss Carroll&rsquo;s acting
+is called the &lsquo;gorilla dance.&rsquo; She is costumed to represent a wood
+nymph, and there is a great song-and-dance scene with a gorilla&mdash;played by
+Mr. Delmars, the comedian. A tropical-forest stage is set.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That used to get four and five recalls. The main thing was the acting
+and the dance&mdash;it was the funniest thing in New York for five months.
+Delmars&rsquo;s song, &lsquo;I&rsquo;ll Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home,&rsquo;
+while he and Miss Carroll were cutting hide-and-seek capers among the tropical
+plants, was a winner.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the trouble with the scene now?&rdquo; asked the sergeant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Miss Carroll spoils it right in the middle of it,&rdquo; said the
+playwright wrathfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a wide gesture of her ever-moving arms the actress waved back the little
+group of spectators, leaving a space in front of the desk for the scene of her
+vindication or fall. Then she whipped off her long tan cloak and tossed it
+across the arm of the policeman who still stood officially among them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Carroll had gone to supper well cloaked, but in the costume of the tropic
+wood nymph. A skirt of fern leaves touched her knee; she was like a
+humming-bird&mdash;green and golden and purple.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then she danced a fluttering, fantastic dance, so agile and light and mazy
+in her steps that the other three members of the Carroll Comedy Company broke
+into applause at the art of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And at the proper time Delmars leaped out at her side, mimicking the uncouth,
+hideous bounds of the gorilla so funnily that the grizzled sergeant himself
+gave a short laugh like the closing of a padlock. They danced together the
+gorilla dance, and won a hand from all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then began the most fantastic part of the scene&mdash;the wooing of the nymph
+by the gorilla. It was a kind of dance itself&mdash;eccentric and prankish,
+with the nymph in coquettish and seductive retreat, followed by the gorilla as
+he sang &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The song was a lyric of merit. The words were nonsense, as befitted the play,
+but the music was worthy of something better. Delmars struck into it in a rich
+tenor that owned a quality that shamed the flippant words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During one verse of the song the wood nymph performed the grotesque evolutions
+designed for the scene. At the middle of the second verse she stood still, with
+a strange look on her face, seeming to gaze dreamily into the depths of the
+scenic forest. The gorilla&rsquo;s last leap had brought him to her feet, and
+there he knelt, holding her hand, until he had finished the haunting-lyric that
+was set in the absurd comedy like a diamond in a piece of putty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Delmars ceased Miss Carroll started, and covered a sudden flow of tears
+with both hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There!&rdquo; cried the playwright, gesticulating with violence;
+&ldquo;there you have it, sergeant. For two weeks she has spoiled that scene in
+just that manner at every performance. I have begged her to consider that it is
+not Ophelia or Juliet that she is playing. Do you wonder now at our impatience?
+Tears for the gorilla song! The play is lost!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out of her bewitchment, whatever it was, the wood nymph flared suddenly, and
+pointed a desperate finger at Delmars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is you&mdash;you who have done this,&rdquo; she cried wildly.
+&ldquo;You never sang that song that way until lately. It is your doing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I give it up,&rdquo; said the sergeant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then the gray-haired matron of the police station came forward from behind
+the sergeant&rsquo;s chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Must an old woman teach you all?&rdquo; she said. She went up to Miss
+Carroll and took her hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The man&rsquo;s wearing his heart out for you, my dear. Couldn&rsquo;t
+you tell it the first note you heard him sing? All of his monkey flip-flops
+wouldn&rsquo;t have kept it from me. Must you be deaf as well as blind?
+That&rsquo;s why you couldn&rsquo;t act your part, child. Do you love him or
+must he be a gorilla for the rest of his days?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Carroll whirled around and caught Delmars with a lightning glance of her
+eye. He came toward her, melancholy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did you hear, Mr. Delmars?&rdquo; she asked, with a catching breath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I did,&rdquo; said the comedian. &ldquo;It is true. I didn&rsquo;t think
+there was any use. I tried to let you know with the song.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Silly!&rdquo; said the matron; &ldquo;why didn&rsquo;t you speak?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; cried the wood nymph, &ldquo;his way was the best. I
+didn&rsquo;t know, but&mdash;it was just what I wanted, Bobby.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sprang like a green grasshopper; and the comedian opened his arms,
+and&mdash;smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Get out of this,&rdquo; roared the desk sergeant to the waiting waiter
+from the restaurant. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing doing here for you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap17"></a>XVII<br>
+ONE DOLLAR&rsquo;S WORTH</h2>
+
+<p>
+The judge of the United States court of the district lying along the Rio Grande
+border found the following letter one morning in his mail:
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+J<small>UDGE</small>:<br>
+<br>
+When you sent me up for four years you made a talk. Among other hard things,
+you called me a rattlesnake. Maybe I am one&mdash;anyhow, you hear me rattling
+now. One year after I got to the pen, my daughter died of&mdash;well, they said
+it was poverty and the disgrace together. You&rsquo;ve got a daughter, Judge,
+and I&rsquo;m going to make you know how it feels to lose one. And I&rsquo;m
+going to bite that district attorney that spoke against me. I&rsquo;m free now,
+and I guess I&rsquo;ve turned to rattlesnake all right. I feel like one. I
+don&rsquo;t say much, but this is my rattle. Look out when I strike.
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+Yours respectfully,<br>
+R<small>ATTLESNAKE</small>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Judge Derwent threw the letter carelessly aside. It was nothing new to receive
+such epistles from desperate men whom he had been called upon to judge. He felt
+no alarm. Later on he showed the letter to Littlefield, the young district
+attorney, for Littlefield&rsquo;s name was included in the threat, and the
+judge was punctilious in matters between himself and his fellow men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Littlefield honoured the rattle of the writer, as far as it concerned himself,
+with a smile of contempt; but he frowned a little over the reference to the
+Judge&rsquo;s daughter, for he and Nancy Derwent were to be married in the
+fall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Littlefield went to the clerk of the court and looked over the records with
+him. They decided that the letter might have been sent by Mexico Sam, a
+half-breed border desperado who had been imprisoned for manslaughter four years
+before. Then official duties crowded the matter from his mind, and the rattle
+of the revengeful serpent was forgotten.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Court was in session at Brownsville. Most of the cases to be tried were charges
+of smuggling, counterfeiting, post-office robberies, and violations of Federal
+laws along the border. One case was that of a young Mexican, Rafael Ortiz, who
+had been rounded up by a clever deputy marshal in the act of passing a
+counterfeit silver dollar. He had been suspected of many such deviations from
+rectitude, but this was the first time that anything provable had been fixed
+upon him. Ortiz languished cozily in jail, smoking brown cigarettes and waiting
+for trial. Kilpatrick, the deputy, brought the counterfeit dollar and handed it
+to the district attorney in his office in the court-house. The deputy and a
+reputable druggist were prepared to swear that Ortiz paid for a bottle of
+medicine with it. The coin was a poor counterfeit, soft, dull-looking, and made
+principally of lead. It was the day before the morning on which the docket
+would reach the case of Ortiz, and the district attorney was preparing himself
+for trial.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not much need of having in high-priced experts to prove the coin&rsquo;s
+queer, is there, Kil?&rdquo; smiled Littlefield, as he thumped the dollar down
+upon the table, where it fell with no more ring than would have come from a
+lump of putty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I guess the Greaser&rsquo;s as good as behind the bars,&rdquo; said the
+deputy, easing up his holsters. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got him dead. If it had
+been just one time, these Mexicans can&rsquo;t tell good money from bad; but
+this little yaller rascal belongs to a gang of counterfeiters, I know. This is
+the first time I&rsquo;ve been able to catch him doing the trick. He&rsquo;s
+got a girl down there in them Mexican jacals on the river bank. I seen her one
+day when I was watching him. She&rsquo;s as pretty as a red heifer in a flower
+bed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Littlefield shoved the counterfeit dollar into his pocket, and slipped his
+memoranda of the case into an envelope. Just then a bright, winsome face, as
+frank and jolly as a boy&rsquo;s, appeared in the doorway, and in walked Nancy
+Derwent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Bob, didn&rsquo;t court adjourn at twelve to-day until
+to-morrow?&rdquo; she asked of Littlefield.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It did,&rdquo; said the district attorney, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;m very
+glad of it. I&rsquo;ve got a lot of rulings to look up, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, that&rsquo;s just like you. I wonder you and father don&rsquo;t
+turn to law books or rulings or something! I want you to take me out
+plover-shooting this afternoon. Long Prairie is just alive with them.
+Don&rsquo;t say no, please! I want to try my new twelve-bore hammerless.
+I&rsquo;ve sent to the livery stable to engage Fly and Bess for the buckboard;
+they stand fire so nicely. I was sure you would go.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were to be married in the fall. The glamour was at its height. The plovers
+won the day&mdash;or, rather, the afternoon&mdash;over the calf-bound
+authorities. Littlefield began to put his papers away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a knock at the door. Kilpatrick answered it. A beautiful, dark-eyed
+girl with a skin tinged with the faintest lemon colour walked into the room. A
+black shawl was thrown over her head and wound once around her neck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She began to talk in Spanish, a voluble, mournful stream of melancholy music.
+Littlefield did not understand Spanish. The deputy did, and he translated her
+talk by portions, at intervals holding up his hand to check the flow of her
+words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She came to see you, Mr. Littlefield. Her name&rsquo;s Joya Treviñas.
+She wants to see you about&mdash;well, she&rsquo;s mixed up with that Rafael
+Ortiz. She&rsquo;s his&mdash;she&rsquo;s his girl. She says he&rsquo;s
+innocent. She says she made the money and got him to pass it. Don&rsquo;t you
+believe her, Mr. Littlefield. That&rsquo;s the way with these Mexican girls;
+they&rsquo;ll lie, steal, or kill for a fellow when they get stuck on him.
+Never trust a woman that&rsquo;s in love!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Kilpatrick!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nancy Derwent&rsquo;s indignant exclamation caused the deputy to flounder for a
+moment in attempting to explain that he had misquoted his own sentiments, and
+then he went on with the translation:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She says she&rsquo;s willing to take his place in the jail if
+you&rsquo;ll let him out. She says she was down sick with the fever, and the
+doctor said she&rsquo;d die if she didn&rsquo;t have medicine. That&rsquo;s why
+he passed the lead dollar on the drug store. She says it saved her life. This
+Rafael seems to be her honey, all right; there&rsquo;s a lot of stuff in her
+talk about love and such things that you don&rsquo;t want to hear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was an old story to the district attorney.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell her,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that I can do nothing. The case comes
+up in the morning, and he will have to make his fight before the court.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nancy Derwent was not so hardened. She was looking with sympathetic interest at
+Joya Treviñas and at Littlefield alternately. The deputy repeated the district
+attorney&rsquo;s words to the girl. She spoke a sentence or two in a low voice,
+pulled her shawl closely about her face, and left the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What did she say then?&rdquo; asked the district attorney.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing special,&rdquo; said the deputy. &ldquo;She said: &lsquo;If the
+life of the one&rsquo;&mdash;let&rsquo;s see how it went&mdash;&lsquo;<i>Si la
+vida de ella á quien tu amas</i>&mdash;if the life of the girl you love is ever
+in danger, remember Rafael Ortiz.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Kilpatrick strolled out through the corridor in the direction of the
+marshal&rsquo;s office.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t you do anything for them, Bob?&rdquo; asked Nancy.
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s such a little thing&mdash;just one counterfeit
+dollar&mdash;to ruin the happiness of two lives! She was in danger of death,
+and he did it to save her. Doesn&rsquo;t the law know the feeling of
+pity?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It hasn&rsquo;t a place in jurisprudence, Nan,&rdquo; said Littlefield,
+&ldquo;especially <i>in re</i> the district attorney&rsquo;s duty. I&rsquo;ll
+promise you that the prosecution will not be vindictive; but the man is as good
+as convicted when the case is called. Witnesses will swear to his passing the
+bad dollar which I have in my pocket at this moment as &lsquo;Exhibit A.&rsquo;
+There are no Mexicans on the jury, and it will vote Mr. Greaser guilty without
+leaving the box.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+The plover-shooting was fine that afternoon, and in the excitement of the sport
+the case of Rafael and the grief of Joya Treviñas was forgotten. The district
+attorney and Nancy Derwent drove out from the town three miles along a smooth,
+grassy road, and then struck across a rolling prairie toward a heavy line of
+timber on Piedra Creek. Beyond this creek lay Long Prairie, the favourite haunt
+of the plover. As they were nearing the creek they heard the galloping of a
+horse to their right, and saw a man with black hair and a swarthy face riding
+toward the woods at a tangent, as if he had come up behind them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve seen that fellow somewhere,&rdquo; said Littlefield, who had
+a memory for faces, &ldquo;but I can&rsquo;t exactly place him. Some ranchman,
+I suppose, taking a short cut home.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They spent an hour on Long Prairie, shooting from the buckboard. Nancy Derwent,
+an active, outdoor Western girl, was pleased with her twelve-bore. She had
+bagged within two brace of her companion&rsquo;s score.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They started homeward at a gentle trot. When within a hundred yards of Piedra
+Creek a man rode out of the timber directly toward them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It looks like the man we saw coming over,&rdquo; remarked Miss Derwent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the distance between them lessened, the district attorney suddenly pulled up
+his team sharply, with his eyes fixed upon the advancing horseman. That
+individual had drawn a Winchester from its scabbard on his saddle and thrown it
+over his arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I know you, Mexico Sam!&rdquo; muttered Littlefield to himself.
+&ldquo;It was you who shook your rattles in that gentle epistle.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mexico Sam did not leave things long in doubt. He had a nice eye in all matters
+relating to firearms, so when he was within good rifle range, but outside of
+danger from No. 8 shot, he threw up his Winchester and opened fire upon the
+occupants of the buckboard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first shot cracked the back of the seat within the two-inch space between
+the shoulders of Littlefield and Miss Derwent. The next went through the
+dashboard and Littlefield&rsquo;s trouser leg.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The district attorney hustled Nancy out of the buck-board to the ground. She
+was a little pale, but asked no questions. She had the frontier instinct that
+accepts conditions in an emergency without superfluous argument. They kept
+their guns in hand, and Littlefield hastily gathered some handfuls of
+cartridges from the pasteboard box on the seat and crowded them into his
+pockets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Keep behind the horses, Nan,&rdquo; he commanded. &ldquo;That fellow is
+a ruffian I sent to prison once. He&rsquo;s trying to get even. He knows our
+shot won&rsquo;t hurt him at that distance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right, Bob,&rdquo; said Nancy steadily. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not afraid.
+But you come close, too. Whoa, Bess; stand still, now!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stroked Bess&rsquo;s mane. Littlefield stood with his gun ready, praying
+that the desperado would come within range.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Mexico Sam was playing his vendetta along safe lines. He was a bird of
+different feather from the plover. His accurate eye drew an imaginary line of
+circumference around the area of danger from bird-shot, and upon this line he
+rode. His horse wheeled to the right, and as his victims rounded to the safe
+side of their equine breast-work he sent a ball through the district
+attorney&rsquo;s hat. Once he miscalculated in making a détour, and
+over-stepped his margin. Littlefield&rsquo;s gun flashed, and Mexico Sam ducked
+his head to the harmless patter of the shot. A few of them stung his horse,
+which pranced promptly back to the safety line.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The desperado fired again. A little cry came from Nancy Derwent. Littlefield
+whirled, with blazing eyes, and saw the blood trickling down her cheek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not hurt, Bob&mdash;only a splinter struck me. I think he hit
+one of the wheel-spokes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lord!&rdquo; groaned Littlefield. &ldquo;If I only had a charge of
+buckshot!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ruffian got his horse still, and took careful aim. Fly gave a snort and
+fell in the harness, struck in the neck. Bess, now disabused of the idea that
+plover were being fired at, broke her traces and galloped wildly away. Mexican
+Sam sent a ball neatly through the fulness of Nancy Derwent&rsquo;s shooting
+jacket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lie down&mdash;lie down!&rdquo; snapped Littlefield. &ldquo;Close to the
+horse&mdash;flat on the ground&mdash;so.&rdquo; He almost threw her upon the
+grass against the back of the recumbent Fly. Oddly enough, at that moment the
+words of the Mexican girl returned to his mind:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If the life of the girl you love is ever in danger, remember Rafael
+Ortiz.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Littlefield uttered an exclamation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Open fire on him, Nan, across the horse&rsquo;s back. Fire as fast as
+you can! You can&rsquo;t hurt him, but keep him dodging shot for one minute
+while I try to work a little scheme.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nancy gave a quick glance at Littlefield, and saw him take out his pocket-knife
+and open it. Then she turned her face to obey orders, keeping up a rapid fire
+at the enemy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mexico Sam waited patiently until this innocuous fusillade ceased. He had
+plenty of time, and he did not care to risk the chance of a bird-shot in his
+eye when it could be avoided by a little caution. He pulled his heavy Stetson
+low down over his face until the shots ceased. Then he drew a little nearer,
+and fired with careful aim at what he could see of his victims above the fallen
+horse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Neither of them moved. He urged his horse a few steps nearer. He saw the
+district attorney rise to one knee and deliberately level his shotgun. He
+pulled his hat down and awaited the harmless rattle of the tiny pellets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shotgun blazed with a heavy report. Mexico Sam sighed, turned limp all
+over, and slowly fell from his horse&mdash;a dead rattlesnake.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+At ten o&rsquo;clock the next morning court opened, and the case of the United
+States versus Rafael Ortiz was called. The district attorney, with his arm in a
+sling, rose and addressed the court.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;May it please your honour,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I desire to enter a
+<i>nolle pros.</i> in this case. Even though the defendant should be guilty,
+there is not sufficient evidence in the hands of the government to secure a
+conviction. The piece of counterfeit coin upon the identity of which the case
+was built is not now available as evidence. I ask, therefore, that the case be
+stricken off.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the noon recess Kilpatrick strolled into the district attorney&rsquo;s
+office.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve just been down to take a squint at old Mexico Sam,&rdquo;
+said the deputy. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ve got him laid out. Old Mexico was a tough
+outfit, I reckon. The boys was wonderin&rsquo; down there what you shot him
+with. Some said it must have been nails. I never see a gun carry anything to
+make holes like he had.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shot him,&rdquo; said the district attorney, &ldquo;with Exhibit A of
+your counterfeiting case. Lucky thing for me&mdash;and somebody else&mdash;that
+it was as bad money as it was! It sliced up into slugs very nicely. Say, Kil,
+can&rsquo;t you go down to the jacals and find where that Mexican girl lives?
+Miss Derwent wants to know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap18"></a>XVIII<br>
+A NEWSPAPER STORY</h2>
+
+<p>
+At 8 A. M. it lay on Giuseppi&rsquo;s news-stand, still damp from the presses.
+Giuseppi, with the cunning of his ilk, philandered on the opposite corner,
+leaving his patrons to help themselves, no doubt on a theory related to the
+hypothesis of the watched pot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This particular newspaper was, according to its custom and design, an educator,
+a guide, a monitor, a champion and a household counsellor and <i>vade
+mecum</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From its many excellencies might be selected three editorials. One was in
+simple and chaste but illuminating language directed to parents and teachers,
+deprecating corporal punishment for children.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another was an accusive and significant warning addressed to a notorious labour
+leader who was on the point of instigating his clients to a troublesome strike.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The third was an eloquent demand that the police force be sustained and aided
+in everything that tended to increase its efficiency as public guardians and
+servants.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Besides these more important chidings and requisitions upon the store of good
+citizenship was a wise prescription or form of procedure laid out by the editor
+of the heart-to-heart column in the specific case of a young man who had
+complained of the obduracy of his lady love, teaching him how he might win her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again, there was, on the beauty page, a complete answer to a young lady
+inquirer who desired admonition toward the securing of bright eyes, rosy cheeks
+and a beautiful countenance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One other item requiring special cognizance was a brief &ldquo;personal,&rdquo;
+running thus:
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+D<small>EAR</small> J<small>ACK</small>:&mdash;Forgive me. You were right. Meet
+me corner Madison and &mdash;th at 8.30 this morning. We leave at noon.
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+P<small>ENITENT</small>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At 8 o&rsquo;clock a young man with a haggard look and the feverish gleam of
+unrest in his eye dropped a penny and picked up the top paper as he passed
+Giuseppi&rsquo;s stand. A sleepless night had left him a late riser. There was
+an office to be reached by nine, and a shave and a hasty cup of coffee to be
+crowded into the interval.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He visited his barber shop and then hurried on his way. He pocketed his paper,
+meditating a belated perusal of it at the luncheon hour. At the next corner it
+fell from his pocket, carrying with it his pair of new gloves. Three blocks he
+walked, missed the gloves and turned back fuming.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just on the half-hour he reached the corner where lay the gloves and the paper.
+But he strangely ignored that which he had come to seek. He was holding two
+little hands as tightly as ever he could and looking into two penitent brown
+eyes, while joy rioted in his heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dear Jack,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I knew you would be here on
+time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wonder what she means by that,&rdquo; he was saying to himself;
+&ldquo;but it&rsquo;s all right, it&rsquo;s all right.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A big wind puffed out of the west, picked up the paper from the sidewalk,
+opened it out and sent it flying and whirling down a side street. Up that
+street was driving a skittish bay to a spider-wheel buggy, the young man who
+had written to the heart-to-heart editor for a recipe that he might win her for
+whom he sighed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The wind, with a prankish flurry, flapped the flying newspaper against the face
+of the skittish bay. There was a lengthened streak of bay mingled with the red
+of running gear that stretched itself out for four blocks. Then a water-hydrant
+played its part in the cosmogony, the buggy became matchwood as foreordained,
+and the driver rested very quietly where he had been flung on the asphalt in
+front of a certain brownstone mansion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They came out and had him inside very promptly. And there was one who made
+herself a pillow for his head, and cared for no curious eyes, bending over and
+saying, &ldquo;Oh, it was you; it was you all the time, Bobby! Couldn&rsquo;t
+you see it? And if you die, why, so must I, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But in all this wind we must hurry to keep in touch with our paper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Policeman O&rsquo;Brine arrested it as a character dangerous to traffic.
+Straightening its dishevelled leaves with his big, slow fingers, he stood a few
+feet from the family entrance of the Shandon Bells Café. One headline he
+spelled out ponderously: &ldquo;The Papers to the Front in a Move to Help the
+Police.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, whisht! The voice of Danny, the head bartender, through the crack of the
+door: &ldquo;Here&rsquo;s a nip for ye, Mike, ould man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Behind the widespread, amicable columns of the press Policeman O&rsquo;Brine
+receives swiftly his nip of the real stuff. He moves away, stalwart, refreshed,
+fortified, to his duties. Might not the editor man view with pride the early,
+the spiritual, the literal fruit that had blessed his labours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Policeman O&rsquo;Brine folded the paper and poked it playfully under the arm
+of a small boy that was passing. That boy was named Johnny, and he took the
+paper home with him. His sister was named Gladys, and she had written to the
+beauty editor of the paper asking for the practicable touchstone of beauty.
+That was weeks ago, and she had ceased to look for an answer. Gladys was a pale
+girl, with dull eyes and a discontented expression. She was dressing to go up
+to the avenue to get some braid. Beneath her skirt she pinned two leaves of the
+paper Johnny had brought. When she walked the rustling sound was an exact
+imitation of the real thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the street she met the Brown girl from the flat below and stopped to talk.
+The Brown girl turned green. Only silk at $5 a yard could make the sound that
+she heard when Gladys moved. The Brown girl, consumed by jealousy, said
+something spiteful and went her way, with pinched lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gladys proceeded toward the avenue. Her eyes now sparkled like jagerfonteins. A
+rosy bloom visited her cheeks; a triumphant, subtle, vivifying, smile
+transfigured her face. She was beautiful. Could the beauty editor have seen her
+then! There was something in her answer in the paper, I believe, about
+cultivating kind feelings toward others in order to make plain features
+attractive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The labour leader against whom the paper&rsquo;s solemn and weighty editorial
+injunction was laid was the father of Gladys and Johnny. He picked up the
+remains of the journal from which Gladys had ravished a cosmetic of silken
+sounds. The editorial did not come under his eye, but instead it was greeted by
+one of those ingenious and specious puzzle problems that enthrall alike the
+simpleton and the sage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The labour leader tore off half of the page, provided himself with table,
+pencil and paper and glued himself to his puzzle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three hours later, after waiting vainly for him at the appointed place, other
+more conservative leaders declared and ruled in favour of arbitration, and the
+strike with its attendant dangers was averted. Subsequent editions of the paper
+referred, in coloured inks, to the clarion tone of its successful denunciation
+of the labour leader&rsquo;s intended designs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The remaining leaves of the active journal also went loyally to the proving of
+its potency.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Johnny returned from school he sought a secluded spot and removed the
+missing columns from the inside of his clothing, where they had been artfully
+distributed so as to successfully defend such areas as are generally attacked
+during scholastic castigations. Johnny attended a private school and had had
+trouble with his teacher. As has been said, there was an excellent editorial
+against corporal punishment in that morning&rsquo;s issue, and no doubt it had
+its effect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After this can any one doubt the power of the press?
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap19"></a>XIX<br>
+TOMMY&rsquo;S BURGLAR</h2>
+
+<p>
+At ten o&rsquo;clock P. M. Felicia, the maid, left by the basement door with
+the policeman to get a raspberry phosphate around the corner. She detested the
+policeman and objected earnestly to the arrangement. She pointed out, not
+unreasonably, that she might have been allowed to fall asleep over one of St.
+George Rathbone&rsquo;s novels on the third floor, but she was overruled.
+Raspberries and cops were not created for nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The burglar got into the house without much difficulty; because we must have
+action and not too much description in a 2,000-word story.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the dining room he opened the slide of his dark lantern. With a brace and
+centrebit he began to bore into the lock of the silver-closet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly a click was heard. The room was flooded with electric light. The dark
+velvet portières parted to admit a fair-haired boy of eight in pink pajamas,
+bearing a bottle of olive oil in his hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you a burglar?&rdquo; he asked, in a sweet, childish voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Listen to that,&rdquo; exclaimed the man, in a hoarse voice. &ldquo;Am I
+a burglar? Wot do you suppose I have a three-days&rsquo; growth of bristly
+beard on my face for, and a cap with flaps? Give me the oil, quick, and let me
+grease the bit, so I won&rsquo;t wake up your mamma, who is lying down with a
+headache, and left you in charge of Felicia who has been faithless to her
+trust.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, dear,&rdquo; said Tommy, with a sigh. &ldquo;I thought you would be
+more up-to-date. This oil is for the salad when I bring lunch from the pantry
+for you. And mamma and papa have gone to the Metropolitan to hear De Reszke.
+But that isn&rsquo;t my fault. It only shows how long the story has been
+knocking around among the editors. If the author had been wise he&rsquo;d have
+changed it to Caruso in the proofs.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be quiet,&rdquo; hissed the burglar, under his breath. &ldquo;If you
+raise an alarm I&rsquo;ll wring your neck like a rabbit&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Like a chicken&rsquo;s,&rdquo; corrected Tommy. &ldquo;You had that
+wrong. You don&rsquo;t wring rabbits&rsquo; necks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aren&rsquo;t you afraid of me?&rdquo; asked the burglar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You know I&rsquo;m not,&rdquo; answered Tommy. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you
+suppose I know fact from fiction. If this wasn&rsquo;t a story I&rsquo;d yell
+like an Indian when I saw you; and you&rsquo;d probably tumble downstairs and
+get pinched on the sidewalk.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said the burglar, &ldquo;that you&rsquo;re on to your job.
+Go on with the performance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tommy seated himself in an armchair and drew his toes up under him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why do you go around robbing strangers, Mr. Burglar? Have you no
+friends?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see what you&rsquo;re driving at,&rdquo; said the burglar, with a dark
+frown. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s the same old story. Your innocence and childish
+insouciance is going to lead me back into an honest life. Every time I crack a
+crib where there&rsquo;s a kid around, it happens.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would you mind gazing with wolfish eyes at the plate of cold beef that
+the butler has left on the dining table?&rdquo; said Tommy. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
+afraid it&rsquo;s growing late.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The burglar accommodated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor man,&rdquo; said Tommy. &ldquo;You must be hungry. If you will
+please stand in a listless attitude I will get you something to eat.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy brought a roast chicken, a jar of marmalade and a bottle of wine from
+the pantry. The burglar seized a knife and fork sullenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s only been an hour,&rdquo; he grumbled, &ldquo;since I had a
+lobster and a pint of musty ale up on Broadway. I wish these story writers
+would let a fellow have a pepsin tablet, anyhow, between feeds.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My papa writes books,&rdquo; remarked Tommy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The burglar jumped to his feet quickly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You said he had gone to the opera,&rdquo; he hissed, hoarsely and with
+immediate suspicion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I ought to have explained,&rdquo; said Tommy. &ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t buy
+the tickets.&rdquo; The burglar sat again and toyed with the wishbone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why do you burgle houses?&rdquo; asked the boy, wonderingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Because,&rdquo; replied the burglar, with a sudden flow of tears.
+&ldquo;God bless my little brown-haired boy Bessie at home.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Tommy, wrinkling his nose, &ldquo;you got that answer in
+the wrong place. You want to tell your hard-luck story before you pull out the
+child stop.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; said the burglar, &ldquo;I forgot. Well, once I lived in
+Milwaukee, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take the silver,&rdquo; said Tommy, rising from his chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hold on,&rdquo; said the burglar. &ldquo;But I moved away.&rdquo; I
+could find no other employment. For a while I managed to support my wife and
+child by passing confederate money; but, alas! I was forced to give that up
+because it did not belong to the union. I became desperate and a
+burglar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you ever fallen into the hands of the police?&rdquo; asked Tommy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I said &lsquo;burglar,&rsquo; not &lsquo;beggar,&rsquo;&rdquo; answered
+the cracksman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;After you finish your lunch,&rdquo; said Tommy, &ldquo;and experience
+the usual change of heart, how shall we wind up the story?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Suppose,&rdquo; said the burglar, thoughtfully, &ldquo;that Tony Pastor
+turns out earlier than usual to-night, and your father gets in from
+&lsquo;Parsifal&rsquo; at 10.30. I am thoroughly repentant because you have
+made me think of my own little boy Bessie, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say,&rdquo; said Tommy, &ldquo;haven&rsquo;t you got that wrong?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not on your coloured crayon drawings by B. Cory Kilvert,&rdquo; said the
+burglar. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s always a Bessie that I have at home, artlessly
+prattling to the pale-cheeked burglar&rsquo;s bride. As I was saying, your
+father opens the front door just as I am departing with admonitions and
+sandwiches that you have wrapped up for me. Upon recognizing me as an old
+Harvard classmate he starts back in&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not in surprise?&rdquo; interrupted Tommy, with wide, open eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He starts back in the doorway,&rdquo; continued the burglar. And then he
+rose to his feet and began to shout &ldquo;Rah, rah, rah! rah, rah, rah! rah,
+rah, rah!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Tommy, wonderingly, &ldquo;that&rsquo;s, the first
+time I ever knew a burglar to give a college yell when he was burglarizing a
+house, even in a story.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s one on you,&rdquo; said the burglar, with a laugh. &ldquo;I
+was practising the dramatization. If this is put on the stage that college
+touch is about the only thing that will make it go.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tommy looked his admiration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re on, all right,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And there&rsquo;s another mistake you&rsquo;ve made,&rdquo; said the
+burglar. &ldquo;You should have gone some time ago and brought me the $9 gold
+piece your mother gave you on your birthday to take to Bessie.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But she didn&rsquo;t give it to me to take to Bessie,&rdquo; said Tommy,
+pouting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come, come!&rdquo; said the burglar, sternly. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s not nice
+of you to take advantage because the story contains an ambiguous sentence. You
+know what I mean. It&rsquo;s mighty little I get out of these fictional jobs,
+anyhow. I lose all the loot, and I have to reform every time; and all the swag
+I&rsquo;m allowed is the blamed little fol-de-rols and luck-pieces that you
+kids hand over. Why, in one story, all I got was a kiss from a little girl who
+came in on me when I was opening a safe. And it tasted of molasses candy, too.
+I&rsquo;ve a good notion to tie this table cover over your head and keep on
+into the silver-closet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, no, you haven&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Tommy, wrapping his arms around
+his knees. &ldquo;Because if you did no editor would buy the story. You know
+you&rsquo;ve got to preserve the unities.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So&rsquo;ve you,&rdquo; said the burglar, rather glumly. &ldquo;Instead
+of sitting here talking impudence and taking the bread out of a poor
+man&rsquo;s mouth, what you&rsquo;d like to be doing is hiding under the bed
+and screeching at the top of your voice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re right, old man,&rdquo; said Tommy, heartily. &ldquo;I
+wonder what they make us do it for? I think the S. P. C. C. ought to interfere.
+I&rsquo;m sure it&rsquo;s neither agreeable nor usual for a kid of my age to
+butt in when a full-grown burglar is at work and offer him a red sled and a
+pair of skates not to awaken his sick mother. And look how they make the
+burglars act! You&rsquo;d think editors would know&mdash;but what&rsquo;s the
+use?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The burglar wiped his hands on the tablecloth and arose with a yawn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, let&rsquo;s get through with it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;God bless
+you, my little boy! you have saved a man from committing a crime this night.
+Bessie shall pray for you as soon as I get home and give her her orders. I
+shall never burglarize another house&mdash;at least not until the June
+magazines are out. It&rsquo;ll be your little sister&rsquo;s turn then to run
+in on me while I am abstracting the U. S. 4 per cent. from the tea urn and buy
+me off with her coral necklace and a falsetto kiss.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You haven&rsquo;t got all the kicks coming to you,&rdquo; sighed Tommy,
+crawling out of his chair. &ldquo;Think of the sleep I&rsquo;m losing. But
+it&rsquo;s tough on both of us, old man. I wish you could get out of the story
+and really rob somebody. Maybe you&rsquo;ll have the chance if they dramatize
+us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never!&rdquo; said the burglar, gloomily. &ldquo;Between the box office
+and my better impulses that your leading juveniles are supposed to awaken and
+the magazines that pay on publication, I guess I&rsquo;ll always be
+broke.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry,&rdquo; said Tommy, sympathetically. &ldquo;But I
+can&rsquo;t help myself any more than you can. It&rsquo;s one of the canons of
+household fiction that no burglar shall be successful. The burglar must be
+foiled by a kid like me, or by a young lady heroine, or at the last moment by
+his old pal, Red Mike, who recognizes the house as one in which he used to be
+the coachman. You have got the worst end of it in any kind of a story.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I suppose I must be clearing out now,&rdquo; said the burglar,
+taking up his lantern and bracebit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have to take the rest of this chicken and the bottle of wine with
+you for Bessie and her mother,&rdquo; said Tommy, calmly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But confound it,&rdquo; exclaimed the burglar, in an annoyed tone,
+&ldquo;they don&rsquo;t want it. I&rsquo;ve got five cases of Château de
+Beychsvelle at home that was bottled in 1853. That claret of yours is corked.
+And you couldn&rsquo;t get either of them to look at a chicken unless it was
+stewed in champagne. You know, after I get out of the story I don&rsquo;t have
+so many limitations. I make a turn now and then.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, but you must take them,&rdquo; said Tommy, loading his arms with
+the bundles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bless you, young master!&rdquo; recited the burglar, obedient.
+&ldquo;Second-Story Saul will never forget you. And now hurry and let me out,
+kid. Our 2,000 words must be nearly up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tommy led the way through the hall toward the front door. Suddenly the burglar
+stopped and called to him softly: &ldquo;Ain&rsquo;t there a cop out there in
+front somewhere sparking the girl?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Tommy, &ldquo;but what&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid he&rsquo;ll catch me,&rdquo; said the burglar.
+&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t forget that this is fiction.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Great head!&rdquo; said Tommy, turning. &ldquo;Come out by the back
+door.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap20"></a>XX<br>
+A CHAPARRAL CHRISTMAS GIFT</h2>
+
+<p>
+The original cause of the trouble was about twenty years in growing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the end of that time it was worth it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Had you lived anywhere within fifty miles of Sundown Ranch you would have heard
+of it. It possessed a quantity of jet-black hair, a pair of extremely frank,
+deep-brown eyes and a laugh that rippled across the prairie like the sound of a
+hidden brook. The name of it was Rosita McMullen; and she was the daughter of
+old man McMullen of the Sundown Sheep Ranch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There came riding on red roan steeds&mdash;or, to be more explicit, on a paint
+and a flea-bitten sorrel&mdash;two wooers. One was Madison Lane, and the other
+was the Frio Kid. But at that time they did not call him the Frio Kid, for he
+had not earned the honours of special nomenclature. His name was simply Johnny
+McRoy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It must not be supposed that these two were the sum of the agreeable
+Rosita&rsquo;s admirers. The bronchos of a dozen others champed their bits at
+the long hitching rack of the Sundown Ranch. Many were the sheeps&rsquo;-eyes
+that were cast in those savannas that did not belong to the flocks of Dan
+McMullen. But of all the cavaliers, Madison Lane and Johnny McRoy galloped far
+ahead, wherefore they are to be chronicled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Madison Lane, a young cattleman from the Nueces country, won the race. He and
+Rosita were married one Christmas day. Armed, hilarious, vociferous,
+magnanimous, the cowmen and the sheepmen, laying aside their hereditary hatred,
+joined forces to celebrate the occasion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sundown Ranch was sonorous with the cracking of jokes and sixshooters, the
+shine of buckles and bright eyes, the outspoken congratulations of the herders
+of kine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But while the wedding feast was at its liveliest there descended upon it Johnny
+McRoy, bitten by jealousy, like one possessed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll give you a Christmas present,&rdquo; he yelled, shrilly, at
+the door, with his .45 in his hand. Even then he had some reputation as an
+offhand shot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His first bullet cut a neat underbit in Madison Lane&rsquo;s right ear. The
+barrel of his gun moved an inch. The next shot would have been the
+bride&rsquo;s had not Carson, a sheepman, possessed a mind with triggers
+somewhat well oiled and in repair. The guns of the wedding party had been hung,
+in their belts, upon nails in the wall when they sat at table, as a concession
+to good taste. But Carson, with great promptness, hurled his plate of roast
+venison and frijoles at McRoy, spoiling his aim. The second bullet, then, only
+shattered the white petals of a Spanish dagger flower suspended two feet above
+Rosita&rsquo;s head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The guests spurned their chairs and jumped for their weapons. It was considered
+an improper act to shoot the bride and groom at a wedding. In about six seconds
+there were twenty or so bullets due to be whizzing in the direction of Mr.
+McRoy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll shoot better next time,&rdquo; yelled Johnny; &ldquo;and
+there&rsquo;ll be a next time.&rdquo; He backed rapidly out the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carson, the sheepman, spurred on to attempt further exploits by the success of
+his plate-throwing, was first to reach the door. McRoy&rsquo;s bullet from the
+darkness laid him low.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cattlemen then swept out upon him, calling for vengeance, for, while the
+slaughter of a sheepman has not always lacked condonement, it was a decided
+misdemeanour in this instance. Carson was innocent; he was no accomplice at the
+matrimonial proceedings; nor had any one heard him quote the line
+&ldquo;Christmas comes but once a year&rdquo; to the guests.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the sortie failed in its vengeance. McRoy was on his horse and away,
+shouting back curses and threats as he galloped into the concealing chaparral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That night was the birthnight of the Frio Kid. He became the &ldquo;bad
+man&rdquo; of that portion of the State. The rejection of his suit by Miss
+McMullen turned him to a dangerous man. When officers went after him for the
+shooting of Carson, he killed two of them, and entered upon the life of an
+outlaw. He became a marvellous shot with either hand. He would turn up in towns
+and settlements, raise a quarrel at the slightest opportunity, pick off his man
+and laugh at the officers of the law. He was so cool, so deadly, so rapid, so
+inhumanly blood-thirsty that none but faint attempts were ever made to capture
+him. When he was at last shot and killed by a little one-armed Mexican who was
+nearly dead himself from fright, the Frio Kid had the deaths of eighteen men on
+his head. About half of these were killed in fair duels depending upon the
+quickness of the draw. The other half were men whom he assassinated from
+absolute wantonness and cruelty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many tales are told along the border of his impudent courage and daring. But he
+was not one of the breed of desperadoes who have seasons of generosity and even
+of softness. They say he never had mercy on the object of his anger. Yet at
+this and every Christmastide it is well to give each one credit, if it can be
+done, for whatever speck of good he may have possessed. If the Frio Kid ever
+did a kindly act or felt a throb of generosity in his heart it was once at such
+a time and season, and this is the way it happened.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+One who has been crossed in love should never breathe the odour from the
+blossoms of the ratama tree. It stirs the memory to a dangerous degree.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One December in the Frio country there was a ratama tree in full bloom, for the
+winter had been as warm as springtime. That way rode the Frio Kid and his
+satellite and co-murderer, Mexican Frank. The kid reined in his mustang, and
+sat in his saddle, thoughtful and grim, with dangerously narrowing eyes. The
+rich, sweet scent touched him somewhere beneath his ice and iron.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what I&rsquo;ve been thinking about, Mex,&rdquo; he
+remarked in his usual mild drawl, &ldquo;to have forgot all about a Christmas
+present I got to give. I&rsquo;m going to ride over to-morrow night and shoot
+Madison Lane in his own house. He got my girl&mdash;Rosita would have had me if
+he hadn&rsquo;t cut into the game. I wonder why I happened to overlook it up to
+now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, shucks, Kid,&rdquo; said Mexican, &ldquo;don&rsquo;t talk
+foolishness. You know you can&rsquo;t get within a mile of Mad Lane&rsquo;s
+house to-morrow night. I see old man Allen day before yesterday, and he says
+Mad is going to have Christmas doings at his house. You remember how you shot
+up the festivities when Mad was married, and about the threats you made?
+Don&rsquo;t you suppose Mad Lane&rsquo;ll kind of keep his eye open for a
+certain Mr. Kid? You plumb make me tired, Kid, with such remarks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going,&rdquo; repeated the Frio Kid, without heat, &ldquo;to
+go to Madison Lane&rsquo;s Christmas doings, and kill him. I ought to have done
+it a long time ago. Why, Mex, just two weeks ago I dreamed me and Rosita was
+married instead of her and him; and we was living in a house, and I could see
+her smiling at me, and&mdash;oh! h&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;l, Mex, he got
+her; and I&rsquo;ll get him&mdash;yes, sir, on Christmas Eve he got her, and
+then&rsquo;s when I&rsquo;ll get him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s other ways of committing suicide,&rdquo; advised Mexican.
+&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you go and surrender to the sheriff?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll get him,&rdquo; said the Kid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Christmas Eve fell as balmy as April. Perhaps there was a hint of far-away
+frostiness in the air, but it tingles like seltzer, perfumed faintly with late
+prairie blossoms and the mesquite grass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When night came the five or six rooms of the ranch-house were brightly lit. In
+one room was a Christmas tree, for the Lanes had a boy of three, and a dozen or
+more guests were expected from the nearer ranches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At nightfall Madison Lane called aside Jim Belcher and three other cowboys
+employed on his ranch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, boys,&rdquo; said Lane, &ldquo;keep your eyes open. Walk around the
+house and watch the road well. All of you know the &lsquo;Frio Kid,&rsquo; as
+they call him now, and if you see him, open fire on him without asking any
+questions. I&rsquo;m not afraid of his coming around, but Rosita is.
+She&rsquo;s been afraid he&rsquo;d come in on us every Christmas since we were
+married.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The guests had arrived in buckboards and on horseback, and were making
+themselves comfortable inside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The evening went along pleasantly. The guests enjoyed and praised
+Rosita&rsquo;s excellent supper, and afterward the men scattered in groups
+about the rooms or on the broad &ldquo;gallery,&rdquo; smoking and chatting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Christmas tree, of course, delighted the youngsters, and above all were
+they pleased when Santa Claus himself in magnificent white beard and furs
+appeared and began to distribute the toys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s my papa,&rdquo; announced Billy Sampson, aged six.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve seen him wear &rsquo;em before.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Berkly, a sheepman, an old friend of Lane, stopped Rosita as she was passing by
+him on the gallery, where he was sitting smoking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, Mrs. Lane,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I suppose by this Christmas
+you&rsquo;ve gotten over being afraid of that fellow McRoy, haven&rsquo;t you?
+Madison and I have talked about it, you know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very nearly,&rdquo; said Rosita, smiling, &ldquo;but I am still nervous
+sometimes. I shall never forget that awful time when he came so near to killing
+us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s the most cold-hearted villain in the world,&rdquo; said
+Berkly. &ldquo;The citizens all along the border ought to turn out and hunt him
+down like a wolf.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He has committed awful crimes,&rdquo; said Rosita,
+&ldquo;but&mdash;I&mdash;don&rsquo;t&mdash;know. I think there is a spot of
+good somewhere in everybody. He was not always bad&mdash;that I know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rosita turned into the hallway between the rooms. Santa Claus, in muffling
+whiskers and furs, was just coming through.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I heard what you said through the window, Mrs. Lane,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;I was just going down in my pocket for a Christmas present for your
+husband. But I&rsquo;ve left one for you, instead. It&rsquo;s in the room to
+your right.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, thank you, kind Santa Claus,&rdquo; said Rosita, brightly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rosita went into the room, while Santa Claus stepped into the cooler air of the
+yard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She found no one in the room but Madison.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where is my present that Santa said he left for me in here?&rdquo; she
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t seen anything in the way of a present,&rdquo; said her
+husband, laughing, &ldquo;unless he could have meant me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+The next day Gabriel Radd, the foreman of the X O Ranch, dropped into the
+post-office at Loma Alta.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, the Frio Kid&rsquo;s got his dose of lead at last,&rdquo; he
+remarked to the postmaster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That so? How&rsquo;d it happen?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One of old Sanchez&rsquo;s Mexican sheep herders did it!&mdash;think of
+it! the Frio Kid killed by a sheep herder! The Greaser saw him riding along
+past his camp about twelve o&rsquo;clock last night, and was so skeered that he
+up with a Winchester and let him have it. Funniest part of it was that the Kid
+was dressed all up with white Angora-skin whiskers and a regular Santy Claus
+rig-out from head to foot. Think of the Frio Kid playing Santy!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap21"></a>XXI<br>
+A LITTLE LOCAL COLOUR</h2>
+
+<p>
+I mentioned to Rivington that I was in search of characteristic New York scenes
+and incidents&mdash;something typical, I told him, without necessarily having
+to spell the first syllable with an &ldquo;i.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, for your writing business,&rdquo; said Rivington; &ldquo;you
+couldn&rsquo;t have applied to a better shop. What I don&rsquo;t know about
+little old New York wouldn&rsquo;t make a sonnet to a sunbonnet. I&rsquo;ll put
+you right in the middle of so much local colour that you won&rsquo;t know
+whether you are a magazine cover or in the erysipelas ward. When do you want to
+begin?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rivington is a young-man-about-town and a New Yorker by birth, preference and
+incommutability.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I told him that I would be glad to accept his escort and guardianship so that I
+might take notes of Manhattan&rsquo;s grand, gloomy and peculiar
+idiosyncrasies, and that the time of so doing would be at his own convenience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll begin this very evening,&rdquo; said Rivington, himself
+interested, like a good fellow. &ldquo;Dine with me at seven, and then
+I&rsquo;ll steer you up against metropolitan phases so thick you&rsquo;ll have
+to have a kinetoscope to record &rsquo;em.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So I dined with Rivington pleasantly at his club, in Forty-eleventh street, and
+then we set forth in pursuit of the elusive tincture of affairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As we came out of the club there stood two men on the sidewalk near the steps
+in earnest conversation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And by what process of ratiocination,&rdquo; said one of them, &ldquo;do
+you arrive at the conclusion that the division of society into producing and
+non-possessing classes predicates failure when compared with competitive
+systems that are monopolizing in tendency and result inimically to industrial
+evolution?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, come off your perch!&rdquo; said the other man, who wore glasses.
+&ldquo;Your premises won&rsquo;t come out in the wash. You wind-jammers who
+apply bandy-legged theories to concrete categorical syllogisms send logical
+conclusions skallybootin&rsquo; into the infinitesimal ragbag. You can&rsquo;t
+pull my leg with an old sophism with whiskers on it. You quote Marx and Hyndman
+and Kautsky&mdash;what are they?&mdash;shines! Tolstoi?&mdash;his garret is
+full of rats. I put it to you over the home-plate that the idea of a
+cooperative commonwealth and an abolishment of competitive systems simply takes
+the rag off the bush and gives me hyperesthesia of the roopteetoop! The skookum
+house for yours!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stopped a few yards away and took out my little notebook.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, come ahead,&rdquo; said Rivington, somewhat nervously; &ldquo;you
+don&rsquo;t want to listen to that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, man,&rdquo; I whispered, &ldquo;this is just what I do want to
+hear. These slang types are among your city&rsquo;s most distinguishing
+features. Is this the Bowery variety? I really must hear more of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I follow you,&rdquo; said the man who had spoken first, &ldquo;you do
+not believe it possible to reorganize society on the basis of common
+interest?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shinny on your own side!&rdquo; said the man with glasses. &ldquo;You
+never heard any such music from my foghorn. What I said was that I did not
+believe it practicable just now. The guys with wads are not in the frame of
+mind to slack up on the mazuma, and the man with the portable tin banqueting
+canister isn&rsquo;t exactly ready to join the Bible class. You can bet your
+variegated socks that the situation is all spifflicated up from the Battery to
+breakfast! What the country needs is for some bully old bloke like Cobden or
+some wise guy like old Ben Franklin to sashay up to the front and biff the
+nigger&rsquo;s head with the baseball. Do you catch my smoke? What?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rivington pulled me by the arm impatiently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Please come on,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go see something.
+This isn&rsquo;t what you want.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed, it is,&rdquo; I said resisting. &ldquo;This tough talk is the
+very stuff that counts. There is a picturesqueness about the speech of the
+lower order of people that is quite unique. Did you say that this is the Bowery
+variety of slang?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, well,&rdquo; said Rivington, giving it up, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell
+you straight. That&rsquo;s one of our college professors talking. He ran down
+for a day or two at the club. It&rsquo;s a sort of fad with him lately to use
+slang in his conversation. He thinks it improves language. The man he is
+talking to is one of New York&rsquo;s famous social economists. Now will you
+come on. You can&rsquo;t use that, you know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I agreed; &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t use that. Would you call that
+typical of New York?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course not,&rdquo; said Rivington, with a sigh of relief.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad you see the difference. But if you want to hear the real
+old tough Bowery slang I&rsquo;ll take you down where you&rsquo;ll get your
+fill of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would like it,&rdquo; I said; &ldquo;that is, if it&rsquo;s the real
+thing. I&rsquo;ve often read it in books, but I never heard it. Do you think it
+will be dangerous to go unprotected among those characters?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; said Rivington; &ldquo;not at this time of night. To tell
+the truth, I haven&rsquo;t been along the Bowery in a long time, but I know it
+as well as I do Broadway. We&rsquo;ll look up some of the typical Bowery boys
+and get them to talk. It&rsquo;ll be worth your while. They talk a peculiar
+dialect that you won&rsquo;t hear anywhere else on earth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rivington and I went east in a Forty-second street car and then south on the
+Third avenue line.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Houston street we got off and walked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are now on the famous Bowery,&rdquo; said Rivington; &ldquo;the
+Bowery celebrated in song and story.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We passed block after block of &ldquo;gents&rsquo;&rdquo; furnishing
+stores&mdash;the windows full of shirts with prices attached and cuffs inside.
+In other windows were neckties and no shirts. People walked up and down the
+sidewalks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In some ways,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;this reminds me of Kokomono, Ind.,
+during the peach-crating season.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rivington was nettled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Step into one of these saloons or vaudeville shows,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;with a large roll of money, and see how quickly the Bowery will sustain
+its reputation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You make impossible conditions,&rdquo; said I, coldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By and by Rivington stopped and said we were in the heart of the Bowery. There
+was a policeman on the corner whom Rivington knew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hallo, Donahue!&rdquo; said my guide. &ldquo;How goes it? My friend and
+I are down this way looking up a bit of local colour. He&rsquo;s anxious to
+meet one of the Bowery types. Can&rsquo;t you put us on to something genuine in
+that line&mdash;something that&rsquo;s got the colour, you know?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Policeman Donahue turned himself about ponderously, his florid face full of
+good-nature. He pointed with his club down the street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sure!&rdquo; he said huskily. &ldquo;Here comes a lad now that was born
+on the Bowery and knows every inch of it. If he&rsquo;s ever been above
+Bleecker street he&rsquo;s kept it to himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A man about twenty-eight or twenty-nine, with a smooth face, was sauntering
+toward us with his hands in his coat pockets. Policeman Donahue stopped him
+with a courteous wave of his club.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Evening, Kerry,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Here&rsquo;s a couple of gents,
+friends of mine, that want to hear you spiel something about the Bowery. Can
+you reel &rsquo;em off a few yards?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Certainly, Donahue,&rdquo; said the young man, pleasantly. &ldquo;Good
+evening, gentlemen,&rdquo; he said to us, with a pleasant smile. Donahue walked
+off on his beat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is the goods,&rdquo; whispered Rivington, nudging me with his
+elbow. &ldquo;Look at his jaw!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say, cull,&rdquo; said Rivington, pushing back his hat,
+&ldquo;wot&rsquo;s doin&rsquo;? Me and my friend&rsquo;s taking a look down de
+old line&mdash;see? De copper tipped us off dat you was wise to de bowery. Is
+dat right?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could not help admiring Rivington&rsquo;s power of adapting himself to his
+surroundings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Donahue was right,&rdquo; said the young man, frankly; &ldquo;I was
+brought up on the Bowery. I have been news-boy, teamster, pugilist, member of
+an organized band of &lsquo;toughs,&rsquo; bartender, and a &lsquo;sport&rsquo;
+in various meanings of the word. The experience certainly warrants the
+supposition that I have at least a passing acquaintance with a few phases of
+Bowery life. I will be pleased to place whatever knowledge and experience I
+have at the service of my friend Donahue&rsquo;s friends.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rivington seemed ill at ease.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I say,&rdquo; he said&mdash;somewhat entreatingly, &ldquo;I
+thought&mdash;you&rsquo;re not stringing us, are you? It isn&rsquo;t just the
+kind of talk we expected. You haven&rsquo;t even said &lsquo;Hully gee!&rsquo;
+once. Do you really belong on the Bowery?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am afraid,&rdquo; said the Bowery boy, smilingly, &ldquo;that at some
+time you have been enticed into one of the dives of literature and had the
+counterfeit coin of the Bowery passed upon you. The &lsquo;argot&rsquo; to
+which you doubtless refer was the invention of certain of your literary
+&lsquo;discoverers&rsquo; who invaded the unknown wilds below Third avenue and
+put strange sounds into the mouths of the inhabitants. Safe in their homes far
+to the north and west, the credulous readers who were beguiled by this new
+&lsquo;dialect&rsquo; perused and believed. Like Marco Polo and Mungo
+Park&mdash;pioneers indeed, but ambitious souls who could not draw the line of
+demarcation between discovery and invention&mdash;the literary bones of these
+explorers are dotting the trackless wastes of the subway. While it is true that
+after the publication of the mythical language attributed to the dwellers along
+the Bowery certain of its pat phrases and apt metaphors were adopted and, to a
+limited extent, used in this locality, it was because our people are prompt in
+assimilating whatever is to their commercial advantage. To the tourists who
+visited our newly discovered clime, and who expected a realization of their
+literary guide books, they supplied the demands of the market.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But perhaps I am wandering from the question. In what way can I assist
+you, gentlemen? I beg you will believe that the hospitality of the street is
+extended to all. There are, I regret to say, many catchpenny places of
+entertainment, but I cannot conceive that they would entice you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I felt Rivington lean somewhat heavily against me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say!&rdquo; he remarked, with uncertain utterance; &ldquo;come and have
+a drink with us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thank you, but I never drink. I find that alcohol, even in the smallest
+quantities, alters the perspective. And I must preserve my perspective, for I
+am studying the Bowery. I have lived in it nearly thirty years, and I am just
+beginning to understand its heartbeats. It is like a great river fed by a
+hundred alien streams. Each influx brings strange seeds on its flood, strange
+silt and weeds, and now and then a flower of rare promise. To construe this
+river requires a man who can build dykes against the overflow, who is a
+naturalist, a geologist, a humanitarian, a diver and a strong swimmer. I love
+my Bowery. It was my cradle and is my inspiration. I have published one book.
+The critics have been kind. I put my heart in it. I am writing another, into
+which I hope to put both heart and brain. Consider me your guide, gentlemen. Is
+there anything I can take you to see, any place to which I can conduct
+you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was afraid to look at Rivington except with one eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thanks,&rdquo; said Rivington. &ldquo;We were looking up . . . that is .
+. . my friend . . . confound it; it&rsquo;s against all precedent, you know . .
+. awfully obliged . . . just the same.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In case,&rdquo; said our friend, &ldquo;you would like to meet some of
+our Bowery young men I would be pleased to have you visit the quarters of our
+East Side Kappa Delta Phi Society, only two blocks east of here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Awfully sorry,&rdquo; said Rivington, &ldquo;but my friend&rsquo;s got
+me on the jump to-night. He&rsquo;s a terror when he&rsquo;s out after local
+colour. Now, there&rsquo;s nothing I would like better than to drop in at the
+Kappa Delta Phi, but&mdash;some other time!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We said our farewells and boarded a home-bound car. We had a rabbit on upper
+Broadway, and then I parted with Rivington on a street corner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, anyhow,&rdquo; said he, braced and recovered, &ldquo;it
+couldn&rsquo;t have happened anywhere but in little old New York.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Which to say the least, was typical of Rivington.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap22"></a>XXII<br>
+GEORGIA&rsquo;S RULING</h2>
+
+<p>
+If you should chance to visit the General Land Office, step into the
+draughtsmen&rsquo;s room and ask to be shown the map of Salado County. A
+leisurely German&mdash;possibly old Kampfer himself&mdash;will bring it to you.
+It will be four feet square, on heavy drawing-cloth. The lettering and the
+figures will be beautifully clear and distinct. The title will be in splendid,
+undecipherable German text, ornamented with classic Teutonic designs&mdash;very
+likely Ceres or Pomona leaning against the initial letters with cornucopias
+venting grapes and wieners. You must tell him that this is not the map you wish
+to see; that he will kindly bring you its official predecessor. He will then
+say, &ldquo;Ach, so!&rdquo; and bring out a map half the size of the first,
+dim, old, tattered, and faded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By looking carefully near its northwest corner you will presently come upon the
+worn contours of Chiquito River, and, maybe, if your eyes are good, discern the
+silent witness to this story.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+The Commissioner of the Land Office was of the old style; his antique courtesy
+was too formal for his day. He dressed in fine black, and there was a
+suggestion of Roman drapery in his long coat-skirts. His collars were
+&ldquo;undetached&rdquo; (blame haberdashery for the word); his tie was a
+narrow, funereal strip, tied in the same knot as were his shoe-strings. His
+gray hair was a trifle too long behind, but he kept it smooth and orderly. His
+face was clean-shaven, like the old statesmen&rsquo;s. Most people thought it a
+stern face, but when its official expression was off, a few had seen altogether
+a different countenance. Especially tender and gentle it had appeared to those
+who were about him during the last illness of his only child.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Commissioner had been a widower for years, and his life, outside his
+official duties, had been so devoted to little Georgia that people spoke of it
+as a touching and admirable thing. He was a reserved man, and dignified almost
+to austerity, but the child had come below it all and rested upon his very
+heart, so that she scarcely missed the mother&rsquo;s love that had been taken
+away. There was a wonderful companionship between them, for she had many of his
+own ways, being thoughtful and serious beyond her years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day, while she was lying with the fever burning brightly in her checks, she
+said suddenly:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Papa, I wish I could do something good for a whole lot of
+children!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What would you like to do, dear?&rdquo; asked the Commissioner.
+&ldquo;Give them a party?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t mean those kind. I mean poor children who
+haven&rsquo;t homes, and aren&rsquo;t loved and cared for as I am. I tell you
+what, papa!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What, my own child?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I shouldn&rsquo;t get well, I&rsquo;ll leave them you&mdash;not
+<i>give</i> you, but just lend you, for you must come to mamma and me when you
+die too. If you can find time, wouldn&rsquo;t you do something to help them, if
+I ask you, papa?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hush, hush dear, dear child,&rdquo; said the Commissioner, holding her
+hot little hand against his cheek; &ldquo;you&rsquo;ll get well real soon, and
+you and I will see what we can do for them together.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But in whatsoever paths of benevolence, thus vaguely premeditated, the
+Commissioner might tread, he was not to have the company of his beloved. That
+night the little frail body grew suddenly too tired to struggle further, and
+Georgia&rsquo;s exit was made from the great stage when she had scarcely begun
+to speak her little piece before the footlights. But there must be a stage
+manager who understands. She had given the cue to the one who was to speak
+after her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A week after she was laid away, the Commissioner reappeared at the office, a
+little more courteous, a little paler and sterner, with the black frock-coat
+hanging a little more loosely from his tall figure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His desk was piled with work that had accumulated during the four heartbreaking
+weeks of his absence. His chief clerk had done what he could, but there were
+questions of law, of fine judicial decisions to be made concerning the issue of
+patents, the marketing and leasing of school lands, the classification into
+grazing, agricultural, watered, and timbered, of new tracts to be opened to
+settlers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Commissioner went to work silently and obstinately, putting back his grief
+as far as possible, forcing his mind to attack the complicated and important
+business of his office. On the second day after his return he called the
+porter, pointed to a leather-covered chair that stood near his own, and ordered
+it removed to a lumber-room at the top of the building. In that chair Georgia
+would always sit when she came to the office for him of afternoons.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As time passed, the Commissioner seemed to grow more silent, solitary, and
+reserved. A new phase of mind developed in him. He could not endure the
+presence of a child. Often when a clattering youngster belonging to one of the
+clerks would come chattering into the big business-room adjoining his little
+apartment, the Commissioner would steal softly and close the door. He would
+always cross the street to avoid meeting the school-children when they came
+dancing along in happy groups upon the sidewalk, and his firm mouth would close
+into a mere line.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was nearly three months after the rains had washed the last dead
+flower-petals from the mound above little Georgia when the
+&ldquo;land-shark&rdquo; firm of Hamlin and Avery filed papers upon what they
+considered the &ldquo;fattest&rdquo; vacancy of the year.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It should not be supposed that all who were termed &ldquo;land-sharks&rdquo;
+deserved the name. Many of them were reputable men of good business character.
+Some of them could walk into the most august councils of the State and say:
+&ldquo;Gentlemen, we would like to have this, and that, and matters go
+thus.&rdquo; But, next to a three years&rsquo; drought and the boll-worm, the
+Actual Settler hated the Land-shark. The land-shark haunted the Land Office,
+where all the land records were kept, and hunted
+&ldquo;vacancies&rdquo;&mdash;that is, tracts of unappropriated public domain,
+generally invisible upon the official maps, but actually existing &ldquo;upon
+the ground.&rdquo; The law entitled any one possessing certain State scrip to
+file by virtue of same upon any land not previously legally appropriated. Most
+of the scrip was now in the hands of the land-sharks. Thus, at the cost of a
+few hundred dollars, they often secured lands worth as many thousands.
+Naturally, the search for &ldquo;vacancies&rdquo; was lively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But often&mdash;very often&mdash;the land they thus secured, though legally
+&ldquo;unappropriated,&rdquo; would be occupied by happy and contented
+settlers, who had laboured for years to build up their homes, only to discover
+that their titles were worthless, and to receive peremptory notice to quit.
+Thus came about the bitter and not unjustifiable hatred felt by the toiling
+settlers toward the shrewd and seldom merciful speculators who so often turned
+them forth destitute and homeless from their fruitless labours. The history of
+the state teems with their antagonism. Mr. Land-shark seldom showed his face on
+&ldquo;locations&rdquo; from which he should have to eject the unfortunate
+victims of a monstrously tangled land system, but let his emissaries do the
+work. There was lead in every cabin, moulded into balls for him; many of his
+brothers had enriched the grass with their blood. The fault of it all lay far
+back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the state was young, she felt the need of attracting newcomers, and of
+rewarding those pioneers already within her borders. Year after year she issued
+land scrip&mdash;Headrights, Bounties, Veteran Donations, Confederates; and to
+railroads, irrigation companies, colonies, and tillers of the soil galore. All
+required of the grantee was that he or it should have the scrip properly
+surveyed upon the public domain by the county or district surveyor, and the
+land thus appropriated became the property of him or it, or his or its heirs
+and assigns, forever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In those days&mdash;and here is where the trouble began&mdash;the state&rsquo;s
+domain was practically inexhaustible, and the old surveyors, with
+princely&mdash;yea, even Western American&mdash;liberality, gave good measure
+and over-flowing. Often the jovial man of metes and bounds would dispense
+altogether with the tripod and chain. Mounted on a pony that could cover
+something near a &ldquo;vara&rdquo; at a step, with a pocket compass to direct
+his course, he would trot out a survey by counting the beat of his pony&rsquo;s
+hoofs, mark his corners, and write out his field notes with the complacency
+produced by an act of duty well performed. Sometimes&mdash;and who could blame
+the surveyor?&mdash;when the pony was &ldquo;feeling his oats,&rdquo; he might
+step a little higher and farther, and in that case the beneficiary of the scrip
+might get a thousand or two more acres in his survey than the scrip called for.
+But look at the boundless leagues the state had to spare! However, no one ever
+had to complain of the pony under-stepping. Nearly every old survey in the
+state contained an excess of land.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In later years, when the state became more populous, and land values increased,
+this careless work entailed incalculable trouble, endless litigation, a period
+of riotous land-grabbing, and no little bloodshed. The land-sharks voraciously
+attacked these excesses in the old surveys, and filed upon such portions with
+new scrip as unappropriated public domain. Wherever the identifications of the
+old tracts were vague, and the corners were not to be clearly established, the
+Land Office would recognize the newer locations as valid, and issue title to
+the locators. Here was the greatest hardship to be found. These old surveys,
+taken from the pick of the land, were already nearly all occupied by
+unsuspecting and peaceful settlers, and thus their titles were demolished, and
+the choice was placed before them either to buy their land over at a double
+price or to vacate it, with their families and personal belongings,
+immediately. Land locators sprang up by hundreds. The country was held up and
+searched for &ldquo;vacancies&rdquo; at the point of a compass. Hundreds of
+thousands of dollars&rsquo; worth of splendid acres were wrested from their
+innocent purchasers and holders. There began a vast hegira of evicted settlers
+in tattered wagons; going nowhere, cursing injustice, stunned, purposeless,
+homeless, hopeless. Their children began to look up to them for bread, and cry.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+It was in consequence of these conditions that Hamlin and Avery had filed
+upon a strip of land about a mile wide and three miles long, comprising about
+two thousand acres, it being the excess over complement of the Elias Denny
+three-league survey on Chiquito River, in one of the middle-western counties.
+This two-thousand-acre body of land was asserted by them to be vacant land, and
+improperly considered a part of the Denny survey. They based this assertion and
+their claim upon the land upon the demonstrated facts that the beginning corner
+of the Denny survey was plainly identified; that its field notes called to run
+west 5,760 varas, and then called for Chiquito River; thence it ran south, with
+the meanders&mdash;and so on&mdash;and that the Chiquito River was, on the
+ground, fully a mile farther west from the point reached by course and
+distance. To sum up: there were two thousand acres of vacant land between the
+Denny survey proper and Chiquito River.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One sweltering day in July the Commissioner called for the papers in connection
+with this new location. They were brought, and heaped, a foot deep, upon his
+desk&mdash;field notes, statements, sketches, affidavits, connecting
+lines&mdash;documents of every description that shrewdness and money could call
+to the aid of Hamlin and Avery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The firm was pressing the Commissioner to issue a patent upon their location.
+They possesed inside information concerning a new railroad that would probably
+pass somewhere near this land.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The General Land Office was very still while the Commissioner was delving into
+the heart of the mass of evidence. The pigeons could be heard on the roof of
+the old, castle-like building, cooing and fretting. The clerks were droning
+everywhere, scarcely pretending to earn their salaries. Each little sound
+echoed hollow and loud from the bare, stone-flagged floors, the plastered
+walls, and the iron-joisted ceiling. The impalpable, perpetual limestone dust
+that never settled, whitened a long streamer of sunlight that pierced the
+tattered window-awning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed that Hamlin and Avery had builded well. The Denny survey was
+carelessly made, even for a careless period. Its beginning corner was identical
+with that of a well-defined old Spanish grant, but its other calls were
+sinfully vague. The field notes contained no other object that
+survived&mdash;no tree, no natural object save Chiquito River, and it was a
+mile wrong there. According to precedent, the Office would be justified in
+giving it its complement by course and distance, and considering the remainder
+vacant instead of a mere excess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Actual Settler was besieging the office with wild protests <i>in re</i>.
+Having the nose of a pointer and the eye of a hawk for the land-shark, he had
+observed his myrmidons running the lines upon his ground. Making inquiries, he
+learned that the spoiler had attacked his home, and he left the plough in the
+furrow and took his pen in hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the protests the Commissioner read twice. It was from a woman, a widow,
+the granddaughter of Elias Denny himself. She told how her grandfather had sold
+most of the survey years before at a trivial price&mdash;land that was now a
+principality in extent and value. Her mother had also sold a part, and she
+herself had succeeded to this western portion, along Chiquito River. Much of it
+she had been forced to part with in order to live, and now she owned only about
+three hundred acres, on which she had her home. Her letter wound up rather
+pathetically:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got eight children, the oldest fifteen years. I work all day
+and half the night to till what little land I can and keep us in clothes and
+books. I teach my children too. My neighbours is all poor and has big families.
+The drought kills the crops every two or three years and then we has hard times
+to get enough to eat. There is ten families on this land what the land-sharks
+is trying to rob us of, and all of them got titles from me. I sold to them
+cheap, and they aint paid out yet, but part of them is, and if their land
+should be took from them I would die. My grandfather was an honest man, and he
+helped to build up this state, and he taught his children to be honest, and how
+could I make it up to them who bought from me? Mr. Commissioner, if you let
+them land-sharks take the roof from over my children and the little from them
+as they has to live on, whoever again calls this state great or its government
+just will have a lie in their mouths&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Commissioner laid this letter aside with a sigh. Many, many such letters he
+had received. He had never been hurt by them, nor had he ever felt that they
+appealed to him personally. He was but the state&rsquo;s servant, and must
+follow its laws. And yet, somehow, this reflection did not always eliminate a
+certain responsible feeling that hung upon him. Of all the state&rsquo;s
+officers he was supremest in his department, not even excepting the Governor.
+Broad, general land laws he followed, it was true, but he had a wide latitude
+in particular ramifications. Rather than law, what he followed was Rulings:
+Office Rulings and precedents. In the complicated and new questions that were
+being engendered by the state&rsquo;s development the Commissioner&rsquo;s
+ruling was rarely appealed from. Even the courts sustained it when its equity
+was apparent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Commissioner stepped to the door and spoke to a clerk in the other
+room&mdash;spoke as he always did, as if he were addressing a prince of the
+blood:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Weldon, will you be kind enough to ask Mr. Ashe, the state
+school-land appraiser, to please come to my office as soon as
+convenient?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ashe came quickly from the big table where he was arranging his reports.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Ashe,&rdquo; said the Commissioner, &ldquo;you worked along the
+Chiquito River, in Salado County, during your last trip, I believe. Do you
+remember anything of the Elias Denny three-league survey?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, sir, I do,&rdquo; the blunt, breezy, surveyor answered. &ldquo;I
+crossed it on my way to Block H, on the north side of it. The road runs with
+the Chiquito River, along the valley. The Denny survey fronts three miles on
+the Chiquito.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is claimed,&rdquo; continued the commissioner, &ldquo;that it fails
+to reach the river by as much as a mile.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The appraiser shrugged his shoulder. He was by birth and instinct an Actual
+Settler, and the natural foe of the land-shark.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It has always been considered to extend to the river,&rdquo; he said,
+dryly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But that is not the point I desired to discuss,&rdquo; said the
+Commissioner. &ldquo;What kind of country is this valley portion of (let us
+say, then) the Denny tract?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The spirit of the Actual Settler beamed in Ashe&rsquo;s face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Beautiful,&rdquo; he said, with enthusiasm. &ldquo;Valley as level as
+this floor, with just a little swell on, like the sea, and rich as cream. Just
+enough brakes to shelter the cattle in winter. Black loamy soil for six feet,
+and then clay. Holds water. A dozen nice little houses on it, with windmills
+and gardens. People pretty poor, I guess&mdash;too far from market&mdash;but
+comfortable. Never saw so many kids in my life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They raise flocks?&rdquo; inquired the Commissioner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ho, ho! I mean two-legged kids,&rdquo; laughed the surveyor;
+&ldquo;two-legged, and bare-legged, and tow-headed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Children! oh, children!&rdquo; mused the Commissioner, as though a new
+view had opened to him; &ldquo;they raise children!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a lonesome country, Commissioner,&rdquo; said the surveyor.
+&ldquo;Can you blame &rsquo;em?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; continued the Commissioner, slowly, as one carefully
+pursues deductions from a new, stupendous theory, &ldquo;not all of them are
+tow-headed. It would not be unreasonable, Mr. Ashe, I conjecture, to believe
+that a portion of them have brown, or even black, hair.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Brown and black, sure,&rdquo; said Ashe; &ldquo;also red.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No doubt,&rdquo; said the Commissioner. &ldquo;Well, I thank you for
+your courtesy in informing me, Mr. Ashe. I will not detain you any longer from
+your duties.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Later, in the afternoon, came Hamlin and Avery, big, handsome, genial,
+sauntering men, clothed in white duck and low-cut shoes. They permeated the
+whole office with an aura of debonair prosperity. They passed among the clerks
+and left a wake of abbreviated given names and fat brown cigars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These were the aristocracy of the land-sharks, who went in for big things. Full
+of serene confidence in themselves, there was no corporation, no syndicate, no
+railroad company or attorney general too big for them to tackle. The peculiar
+smoke of their rare, fat brown cigars was to be perceived in the sanctum of
+every department of state, in every committee-room of the Legislature, in every
+bank parlour and every private caucus-room in the state Capital. Always
+pleasant, never in a hurry, in seeming to possess unlimited leisure, people
+wondered when they gave their attention to the many audacious enterprises in
+which they were known to be engaged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By and by the two dropped carelessly into the Commissioner&rsquo;s room and
+reclined lazily in the big, leather-upholstered arm-chairs. They drawled a
+good-natured complaint of the weather, and Hamlin told the Commissioner an
+excellent story he had amassed that morning from the Secretary of State.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the Commissioner knew why they were there. He had half promised to render a
+decision that day upon their location.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The chief clerk now brought in a batch of duplicate certificates for the
+Commissioner to sign. As he traced his sprawling signature, &ldquo;Hollis
+Summerfield, Comr. Genl. Land Office,&rdquo; on each one, the chief clerk
+stood, deftly removing them and applying the blotter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I notice,&rdquo; said the chief clerk, &ldquo;you&rsquo;ve been going
+through that Salado County location. Kampfer is making a new map of Salado, and
+I believe is platting in that section of the county now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will see it,&rdquo; said the Commissioner. A few moments later he went
+to the draughtsmen&rsquo;s room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he entered he saw five or six of the draughtsmen grouped about
+Kampfer&rsquo;s desk, gargling away at each other in pectoral German, and
+gazing at something thereupon. At the Commissioner&rsquo;s approach they
+scattered to their several places. Kampfer, a wizened little German, with long,
+frizzled ringlets and a watery eye, began to stammer forth some sort of an
+apology, the Commissioner thought, for the congregation of his fellows about
+his desk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; said the Commissioner, &ldquo;I wish to see the map
+you are making&rdquo;; and, passing around the old German, seated himself upon
+the high draughtsman&rsquo;s stool. Kampfer continued to break English in
+trying to explain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Herr Gommissioner, I assure you blenty sat I haf not it
+bremeditated&mdash;sat it wass&mdash;sat it itself make. Look you! from se
+field notes wass it blatted&mdash;blease to observe se calls: South, 10 degrees
+west 1,050 varas; south, 10 degrees east 300 varas; south, 100; south, 9 west,
+200; south, 40 degrees west 400&mdash;and so on. Herr Gommissioner, nefer would
+I have&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Commissioner raised one white hand, silently, Kampfer dropped his pipe and
+fled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a hand at each side of his face, and his elbows resting upon the desk, the
+Commissioner sat staring at the map which was spread and fastened
+there&mdash;staring at the sweet and living profile of little Georgia drawn
+thereupon&mdash;at her face, pensive, delicate, and infantile, outlined in a
+perfect likeness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When his mind at length came to inquire into the reason of it, he saw that it
+must have been, as Kampfer had said, unpremeditated. The old draughtsman had
+been platting in the Elias Denny survey, and Georgia&rsquo;s likeness, striking
+though it was, was formed by nothing more than the meanders of Chiquito River.
+Indeed, Kampfer&rsquo;s blotter, whereon his preliminary work was done, showed
+the laborious tracings of the calls and the countless pricks of the compasses.
+Then, over his faint pencilling, Kampfer had drawn in India ink with a full,
+firm pen the similitude of Chiquito River, and forth had blossomed mysteriously
+the dainty, pathetic profile of the child.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Commissioner sat for half an hour with his face in his hands, gazing
+downward, and none dared approach him. Then he arose and walked out. In the
+business office he paused long enough to ask that the Denny file be brought to
+his desk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He found Hamlin and Avery still reclining in their chairs, apparently oblivious
+of business. They were lazily discussing summer opera, it being, their
+habit&mdash;perhaps their pride also&mdash;to appear supernaturally indifferent
+whenever they stood with large interests imperilled. And they stood to win more
+on this stake than most people knew. They possessed inside information to the
+effect that a new railroad would, within a year, split this very Chiquito River
+valley and send land values ballooning all along its route. A dollar under
+thirty thousand profit on this location, if it should hold good, would be a
+loss to their expectations. So, while they chatted lightly and waited for the
+Commissioner to open the subject, there was a quick, sidelong sparkle in their
+eyes, evincing a desire to read their title clear to those fair acres on the
+Chiquito.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A clerk brought in the file. The Commissioner seated himself and wrote upon it
+in red ink. Then he rose to his feet and stood for a while looking straight out
+of the window. The Land Office capped the summit of a bold hill. The eyes of
+the Commissioner passed over the roofs of many houses set in a packing of deep
+green, the whole checkered by strips of blinding white streets. The horizon,
+where his gaze was focussed, swelled to a fair wooded eminence flecked with
+faint dots of shining white. There was the cemetery, where lay many who were
+forgotten, and a few who had not lived in vain. And one lay there, occupying
+very small space, whose childish heart had been large enough to desire, while
+near its last beats, good to others. The Commissioner&rsquo;s lips moved
+slightly as he whispered to himself: &ldquo;It was her last will and testament,
+and I have neglected it so long!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The big brown cigars of Hamlin and Avery were fireless, but they still gripped
+them between their teeth and waited, while they marvelled at the absent
+expression upon the Commissioner&rsquo;s face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By and by he spoke suddenly and promptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gentlemen, I have just indorsed the Elias Denny survey for patenting.
+This office will not regard your location upon a part of it as legal.&rdquo; He
+paused a moment, and then, extending his hand as those dear old-time ones used
+to do in debate, he enunciated the spirit of that Ruling that subsequently
+drove the land-sharks to the wall, and placed the seal of peace and security
+over the doors of ten thousand homes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And, furthermore,&rdquo; he continued, with a clear, soft light upon his
+face, &ldquo;it may interest you to know that from this time on this office
+will consider that when a survey of land made by virtue of a certificate
+granted by this state to the men who wrested it from the wilderness and the
+savage&mdash;made in good faith, settled in good faith, and left in good faith
+to their children or innocent purchasers&mdash;when such a survey, although
+overrunning its complement, shall call for any natural object visible to the
+eye of man, to that object it shall hold, and be good and valid. And the
+children of this state shall lie down to sleep at night, and rumours of
+disturbers of title shall not disquiet them. For,&rdquo; concluded the
+Commissioner, &ldquo;of such is the Kingdom of Heaven.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the silence that followed, a laugh floated up from the patent-room below.
+The man who carried down the Denny file was exhibiting it among the clerks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; he said, delightedly, &ldquo;the old man has forgotten
+his name. He&rsquo;s written &lsquo;Patent to original grantee,&rsquo; and
+signed it &lsquo;Georgia Summerfield, Comr.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The speech of the Commissioner rebounded lightly from the impregnable Hamlin
+and Avery. They smiled, rose gracefully, spoke of the baseball team, and argued
+feelingly that quite a perceptible breeze had arisen from the east. They lit
+fresh fat brown cigars, and drifted courteously away. But later they made
+another tiger-spring for their quarry in the courts. But the courts, according
+to reports in the papers, &ldquo;coolly roasted them&rdquo; (a remarkable
+performance, suggestive of liquid-air didoes), and sustained the
+Commissioner&rsquo;s Ruling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And this Ruling itself grew to be a Precedent, and the Actual Settler framed
+it, and taught his children to spell from it, and there was sound sleep
+o&rsquo; nights from the pines to the sage-brush, and from the chaparral to the
+great brown river of the north.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I think, and I am sure the Commissioner never thought otherwise, that
+whether Kampfer was a snuffy old instrument of destiny, or whether the meanders
+of the Chiquito accidentally platted themselves into that memorable sweet
+profile or not, there was brought about &ldquo;something good for a whole lot
+of children,&rdquo; and the result ought to be called &ldquo;Georgia&rsquo;s
+Ruling.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap23"></a>XXIII<br>
+BLIND MAN&rsquo;S HOLIDAY</h2>
+
+<p>
+Alas for the man and for the artist with the shifting point of perspective!
+Life shall be a confusion of ways to the one; the landscape shall rise up and
+confound the other. Take the case of Lorison. At one time he appeared to
+himself to be the feeblest of fools; at another he conceived that he followed
+ideals so fine that the world was not yet ready to accept them. During one mood
+he cursed his folly; possessed by the other, he bore himself with a serene
+grandeur akin to greatness: in neither did he attain the perspective.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Generations before, the name had been &ldquo;Larsen.&rdquo; His race had
+bequeathed him its fine-strung, melancholy temperament, its saving balance of
+thrift and industry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From his point of perspective he saw himself an outcast from society, forever
+to be a shady skulker along the ragged edge of respectability; a denizen <i>des
+trois-quarts de monde</i>, that pathetic spheroid lying between the <i>haut</i>
+and the <i>demi</i>, whose inhabitants envy each of their neighbours, and are
+scorned by both. He was self-condemned to this opinion, as he was self-exiled,
+through it, to this quaint Southern city a thousand miles from his former home.
+Here he had dwelt for longer than a year, knowing but few, keeping in a
+subjective world of shadows which was invaded at times by the perplexing bulks
+of jarring realities. Then he fell in love with a girl whom he met in a cheap
+restaurant, and his story begins.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Rue Chartres, in New Orleans, is a street of ghosts. It lies in the quarter
+where the Frenchman, in his prime, set up his translated pride and glory;
+where, also, the arrogant don had swaggered, and dreamed of gold and grants and
+ladies&rsquo; gloves. Every flagstone has its grooves worn by footsteps going
+royally to the wooing and the fighting. Every house has a princely heartbreak;
+each doorway its untold tale of gallant promise and slow decay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By night the Rue Chartres is now but a murky fissure, from which the groping
+wayfarer sees, flung against the sky, the tangled filigree of Moorish iron
+balconies. The old houses of monsieur stand yet, indomitable against the
+century, but their essence is gone. The street is one of ghosts to whosoever
+can see them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A faint heartbeat of the street&rsquo;s ancient glory still survives in a
+corner occupied by the Café Carabine d&rsquo;Or. Once men gathered there to
+plot against kings, and to warn presidents. They do so yet, but they are not
+the same kind of men. A brass button will scatter these; those would have set
+their faces against an army. Above the door hangs the sign board, upon which
+has been depicted a vast animal of unfamiliar species. In the act of firing
+upon this monster is represented an unobtrusive human levelling an obtrusive
+gun, once the colour of bright gold. Now the legend above the picture is faded
+beyond conjecture; the gun&rsquo;s relation to the title is a matter of faith;
+the menaced animal, wearied of the long aim of the hunter, has resolved itself
+into a shapeless blot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The place is known as &ldquo;Antonio&rsquo;s,&rdquo; as the name, white upon
+the red-lit transparency, and gilt upon the windows, attests. There is a
+promise in &ldquo;Antonio&rdquo;; a justifiable expectancy of savoury things in
+oil and pepper and wine, and perhaps an angel&rsquo;s whisper of garlic. But
+the rest of the name is &ldquo;O&rsquo;Riley.&rdquo; Antonio O&rsquo;Riley!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Carabine d&rsquo;Or is an ignominious ghost of the Rue Chartres. The café
+where Bienville and Conti dined, where a prince has broken bread, is become a
+&ldquo;family ristaurant.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Its customers are working men and women, almost to a unit. Occasionally you
+will see chorus girls from the cheaper theatres, and men who follow avocations
+subject to quick vicissitudes; but at Antonio&rsquo;s&mdash;name rich in
+Bohemian promise, but tame in fulfillment&mdash;manners debonair and gay are
+toned down to the &ldquo;family&rdquo; standard. Should you light a cigarette,
+mine host will touch you on the &ldquo;arrum&rdquo; and remind you that the
+proprieties are menaced. &ldquo;Antonio&rdquo; entices and beguiles from fiery
+legend without, but &ldquo;O&rsquo;Riley&rdquo; teaches decorum within.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was at this restaurant that Lorison first saw the girl. A flashy fellow with
+a predatory eye had followed her in, and had advanced to take the other chair
+at the little table where she stopped, but Lorison slipped into the seat before
+him. Their acquaintance began, and grew, and now for two months they had sat at
+the same table each evening, not meeting by appointment, but as if by a series
+of fortuitous and happy accidents. After dining, they would take a walk
+together in one of the little city parks, or among the panoramic markets where
+exhibits a continuous vaudeville of sights and sounds. Always at eight
+o&rsquo;clock their steps led them to a certain street corner, where she
+prettily but firmly bade him good night and left him. &ldquo;I do not live far
+from here,&rdquo; she frequently said, &ldquo;and you must let me go the rest
+of the way alone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But now Lorison had discovered that he wanted to go the rest of the way with
+her, or happiness would depart, leaving, him on a very lonely corner of life.
+And at the same time that he made the discovery, the secret of his banishment
+from the society of the good laid its finger in his face and told him it must
+not be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Man is too thoroughly an egoist not to be also an egotist; if he love, the
+object shall know it. During a lifetime he may conceal it through stress of
+expediency and honour, but it shall bubble from his dying lips, though it
+disrupt a neighbourhood. It is known, however, that most men do not wait so
+long to disclose their passion. In the case of Lorison, his particular ethics
+positively forbade him to declare his sentiments, but he must needs dally with
+the subject, and woo by innuendo at least.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On this night, after the usual meal at the Carabine d&rsquo;Or, he strolled
+with his companion down the dim old street toward the river.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Rue Chartres perishes in the old Place d&rsquo;Armes. The ancient Cabildo,
+where Spanish justice fell like hail, faces it, and the Cathedral, another
+provincial ghost, overlooks it. Its centre is a little, iron-railed park of
+flowers and immaculate gravelled walks, where citizens take the air of
+evenings. Pedestalled high above it, the general sits his cavorting steed, with
+his face turned stonily down the river toward English Turn, whence come no more
+Britons to bombard his cotton bales.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Often the two sat in this square, but to-night Lorison guided her past the
+stone-stepped gate, and still riverward. As they walked, he smiled to himself
+to think that all he knew of her&mdash;except that he loved her&mdash;was her
+name, Norah Greenway, and that she lived with her brother. They had talked
+about everything except themselves. Perhaps her reticence had been caused by
+his.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They came, at length, upon the levee, and sat upon a great, prostrate beam. The
+air was pungent with the dust of commerce. The great river slipped yellowly
+past. Across it Algiers lay, a longitudinous black bulk against a vibrant
+electric haze sprinkled with exact stars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl was young and of the piquant order. A certain bright melancholy
+pervaded her; she possessed an untarnished, pale prettiness doomed to please.
+Her voice, when she spoke, dwarfed her theme. It was the voice capable of
+investing little subjects with a large interest. She sat at ease, bestowing her
+skirts with the little womanly touch, serene as if the begrimed pier were a
+summer garden. Lorison poked the rotting boards with his cane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He began by telling her that he was in love with some one to whom he durst not
+speak of it. &ldquo;And why not?&rdquo; she asked, accepting swiftly his
+fatuous presentation of a third person of straw. &ldquo;My place in the
+world,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;is none to ask a woman to share. I am an
+outcast from honest people; I am wrongly accused of one crime, and am, I
+believe, guilty of another.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thence he plunged into the story of his abdication from society. The story,
+pruned of his moral philosophy, deserves no more than the slightest touch. It
+is no new tale, that of the gambler&rsquo;s declension. During one
+night&rsquo;s sitting he lost, and then had imperilled a certain amount of his
+employer&rsquo;s money, which, by accident, he carried with him. He continued
+to lose, to the last wager, and then began to gain, leaving the game winner to
+a somewhat formidable sum. The same night his employer&rsquo;s safe was robbed.
+A search was had; the winnings of Lorison were found in his room, their total
+forming an accusative nearness to the sum purloined. He was taken, tried and,
+through incomplete evidence, released, smutched with the sinister
+<i>devoirs</i> of a disagreeing jury.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not in the unjust accusation,&rdquo; he said to the girl,
+&ldquo;that my burden lies, but in the knowledge that from the moment I staked
+the first dollar of the firm&rsquo;s money I was a criminal&mdash;no matter
+whether I lost or won. You see why it is impossible for me to speak of love to
+her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a sad thing,&rdquo; said Norah, after a little pause, &ldquo;to
+think what very good people there are in the world.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good?&rdquo; said Lorison.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was thinking of this superior person whom you say you love. She must
+be a very poor sort of creature.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do not understand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nearly,&rdquo; she continued, &ldquo;as poor a sort of creature as
+yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You do not understand,&rdquo; said Lorison, removing his hat and
+sweeping back his fine, light hair. &ldquo;Suppose she loved me in return, and
+were willing to marry me. Think, if you can, what would follow. Never a day
+would pass but she would be reminded of her sacrifice. I would read a
+condescension in her smile, a pity even in her affection, that would madden me.
+No. The thing would stand between us forever. Only equals should mate. I could
+never ask her to come down upon my lower plane.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An arc light faintly shone upon Lorison&rsquo;s face. An illumination from
+within also pervaded it. The girl saw the rapt, ascetic look; it was the face
+either of Sir Galahad or Sir Fool.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Quite starlike,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;is this unapproachable angel.
+Really too high to be grasped.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By me, yes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She faced him suddenly. &ldquo;My dear friend, would you prefer your star
+fallen?&rdquo; Lorison made a wide gesture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You push me to the bald fact,&rdquo; he declared; &ldquo;you are not in
+sympathy with my argument. But I will answer you so. If I could reach my
+particular star, to drag it down, I would not do it; but if it were fallen, I
+would pick it up, and thank Heaven for the privilege.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were silent for some minutes. Norah shivered, and thrust her hands deep
+into the pockets of her jacket. Lorison uttered a remorseful exclamation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not cold,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I was just thinking. I ought
+to tell you something. You have selected a strange confidante. But you cannot
+expect a chance acquaintance, picked up in a doubtful restaurant, to be an
+angel.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Norah!&rdquo; cried Lorison.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me go on. You have told me about yourself. We have been such good
+friends. I must tell you now what I never wanted you to know. I am&mdash;worse
+than you are. I was on the stage . . . I sang in the chorus . . . I was pretty
+bad, I guess . . . I stole diamonds from the prima donna . . . they arrested me
+. . . I gave most of them up, and they let me go . . . I drank wine every night
+. . . a great deal . . . I was very wicked, but&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lorison knelt quickly by her side and took her hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dear Norah!&rdquo; he said, exultantly. &ldquo;It is you, it is you I
+love! You never guessed it, did you? &rsquo;Tis you I meant all the time. Now I
+can speak. Let me make you forget the past. We have both suffered; let us shut
+out the world, and live for each other. Norah, do you hear me say I love
+you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In spite of&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Rather say because of it. You have come out of your past noble and good.
+Your heart is an angel&rsquo;s. Give it to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A little while ago you feared the future too much to even speak.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But for you; not for myself. Can you love me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She cast herself, wildly sobbing, upon his breast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Better than life&mdash;than truth itself&mdash;than everything.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And my own past,&rdquo; said Lorison, with a note of
+solicitude&mdash;&ldquo;can you forgive and&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I answered you that,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;when I told you I
+loved you.&rdquo; She leaned away, and looked thoughtfully at him. &ldquo;If I
+had not told you about myself, would you have&mdash;would you&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he interrupted; &ldquo;I would never have let you know I
+loved you. I would never have asked you this&mdash;Norah, will you be my
+wife?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She wept again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, believe me; I am good now&mdash;I am no longer wicked! I will be the
+best wife in the world. Don&rsquo;t think I am&mdash;bad any more. If you do I
+shall die, I shall die!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While he was consoling, her, she brightened up, eager and impetuous.
+&ldquo;Will you marry me to-night?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Will you prove it
+that way. I have a reason for wishing it to be to-night. Will you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of one of two things was this exceeding frankness the outcome: either of
+importunate brazenness or of utter innocence. The lover&rsquo;s perspective
+contained only the one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The sooner,&rdquo; said Lorison, &ldquo;the happier I shall be.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is there to do?&rdquo; she asked. &ldquo;What do you have to get?
+Come! You should know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her energy stirred the dreamer to action.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A city directory first,&rdquo; he cried, gayly, &ldquo;to find where the
+man lives who gives licenses to happiness. We will go together and rout him
+out. Cabs, cars, policemen, telephones and ministers shall aid us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Father Rogan shall marry us,&rdquo; said the girl, with ardour. &ldquo;I
+will take you to him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+An hour later the two stood at the open doorway of an immense, gloomy brick
+building in a narrow and lonely street. The license was tight in Norah&rsquo;s
+hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wait here a moment,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;till I find Father
+Rogan.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She plunged into the black hallway, and the lover was left standing, as it
+were, on one leg, outside. His impatience was not greatly taxed. Gazing
+curiously into what seemed the hallway to Erebus, he was presently reassured by
+a stream of light that bisected the darkness, far down the passage. Then he
+heard her call, and fluttered lampward, like the moth. She beckoned him through
+a doorway into the room whence emanated the light. The room was bare of nearly
+everything except books, which had subjugated all its space. Here and there
+little spots of territory had been reconquered. An elderly, bald man, with a
+superlatively calm, remote eye, stood by a table with a book in his hand, his
+finger still marking a page. His dress was sombre and appertained to a
+religious order. His eye denoted an acquaintance with the perspective.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Father Rogan,&rdquo; said Norah, &ldquo;this is <i>he</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The two of ye,&rdquo; said Father Rogan, &ldquo;want to get
+married?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They did not deny it. He married them. The ceremony was quickly done. One who
+could have witnessed it, and felt its scope, might have trembled at the
+terrible inadequacy of it to rise to the dignity of its endless chain of
+results.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Afterward the priest spake briefly, as if by rote, of certain other civil and
+legal addenda that either might or should, at a later time, cap the ceremony.
+Lorison tendered a fee, which was declined, and before the door closed after
+the departing couple Father Rogan&rsquo;s book popped open again where his
+finger marked it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the dark hall Norah whirled and clung to her companion, tearful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you never, never be sorry?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last she was reassured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the first light they reached upon the street, she asked the time, just as
+she had each night. Lorison looked at his watch. Half-past eight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lorison thought it was from habit that she guided their steps toward the corner
+where they always parted. But, arrived there, she hesitated, and then released
+his arm. A drug store stood on the corner; its bright, soft light shone upon
+them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Please leave me here as usual to-night,&rdquo; said Norah, sweetly.
+&ldquo;I must&mdash;I would rather you would. You will not object? At six
+to-morrow evening I will meet you at Antonio&rsquo;s. I want to sit with you
+there once more. And then&mdash;I will go where you say.&rdquo; She gave him a
+bewildering, bright smile, and walked swiftly away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Surely it needed all the strength of her charm to carry off this astounding
+behaviour. It was no discredit to Lorison&rsquo;s strength of mind that his
+head began to whirl. Pocketing his hands, he rambled vacuously over to the
+druggist&rsquo;s windows, and began assiduously to spell over the names of the
+patent medicines therein displayed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as he had recovered his wits, he proceeded along the street in an
+aimless fashion. After drifting for two or three squares, he flowed into a
+somewhat more pretentious thoroughfare, a way much frequented by him in his
+solitary ramblings. For here was a row of shops devoted to traffic in goods of
+the widest range of choice&mdash;handiworks of art, skill and fancy, products
+of nature and labour from every zone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, for a time, he loitered among the conspicuous windows, where was set,
+emphasized by congested floods of light, the cunningest spoil of the interiors.
+There were few passers, and of this Lorison was glad. He was not of the world.
+For a long time he had touched his fellow man only at the gear of a levelled
+cog-wheel&mdash;at right angles, and upon a different axis. He had dropped into
+a distinctly new orbit. The stroke of ill fortune had acted upon him, in
+effect, as a blow delivered upon the apex of a certain ingenious toy, the
+musical top, which, when thus buffeted while spinning, gives forth, with
+scarcely retarded motion, a complete change of key and chord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strolling along the pacific avenue, he experienced singular, supernatural calm,
+accompanied by an unusual activity of brain. Reflecting upon recent affairs,
+he assured himself of his happiness in having won for a bride the one he had so
+greatly desired, yet he wondered mildly at his dearth of active emotion. Her
+strange behaviour in abandoning him without valid excuse on his bridal eve
+aroused in him only a vague and curious speculation. Again, he found himself
+contemplating, with complaisant serenity, the incidents of her somewhat lively
+career. His perspective seemed to have been queerly shifted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he stood before a window near a corner, his ears were assailed by a waxing
+clamour and commotion. He stood close to the window to allow passage to the
+cause of the hubbub&mdash;a procession of human beings, which rounded the
+corner and headed in his direction. He perceived a salient hue of blue and a
+glitter of brass about a central figure of dazzling white and silver, and a
+ragged wake of black, bobbing figures.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two ponderous policemen were conducting between them a woman dressed as if for
+the stage, in a short, white, satiny skirt reaching to the knees, pink
+stockings, and a sort of sleeveless bodice bright with relucent, armour-like
+scales. Upon her curly, light hair was perched, at a rollicking angle, a
+shining tin helmet. The costume was to be instantly recognized as one of those
+amazing conceptions to which competition has harried the inventors of the
+spectacular ballet. One of the officers bore a long cloak upon his arm, which,
+doubtless, had been intended to veil the candid attractions of their effulgent
+prisoner, but, for some reason, it had not been called into use, to the
+vociferous delight of the tail of the procession.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Compelled by a sudden and vigorous movement of the woman, the parade halted
+before the window by which Lorison stood. He saw that she was young, and, at
+the first glance, was deceived by a sophistical prettiness of her face, which
+waned before a more judicious scrutiny. Her look was bold and reckless, and
+upon her countenance, where yet the contours of youth survived, were the
+finger-marks of old age&rsquo;s credentialed courier, Late Hours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young woman fixed her unshrinking gaze upon Lorison, and called to him in
+the voice of the wronged heroine in straits:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say! You look like a good fellow; come and put up the bail, won&rsquo;t
+you? I&rsquo;ve done nothing to get pinched for. It&rsquo;s all a mistake. See
+how they&rsquo;re treating me! You won&rsquo;t be sorry, if you&rsquo;ll help
+me out of this. Think of your sister or your girl being dragged along the
+streets this way! I say, come along now, like a good fellow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It may be that Lorison, in spite of the unconvincing bathos of this appeal,
+showed a sympathetic face, for one of the officers left the woman&rsquo;s side,
+and went over to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all right, Sir,&rdquo; he said, in a husky, confidential
+tone; &ldquo;she&rsquo;s the right party. We took her after the first act at
+the Green Light Theatre, on a wire from the chief of police of Chicago.
+It&rsquo;s only a square or two to the station. Her rig&rsquo;s pretty bad, but
+she refused to change clothes&mdash;or, rather,&rdquo; added the officer, with
+a smile, &ldquo;to put on some. I thought I&rsquo;d explain matters to you so
+you wouldn&rsquo;t think she was being imposed upon.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is the charge?&rdquo; asked Lorison.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Grand larceny. Diamonds. Her husband is a jeweller in Chicago. She
+cleaned his show case of the sparklers, and skipped with a comic-opera
+troupe.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The policeman, perceiving that the interest of the entire group of spectators
+was centred upon himself and Lorison&mdash;their conference being regarded as a
+possible new complication&mdash;was fain to prolong the situation&mdash;which
+reflected his own importance&mdash;by a little afterpiece of philosophical
+comment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A gentleman like you, Sir,&rdquo; he went on affably, &ldquo;would never
+notice it, but it comes in my line to observe what an immense amount of trouble
+is made by that combination&mdash;I mean the stage, diamonds and light-headed
+women who aren&rsquo;t satisfied with good homes. I tell you, Sir, a man these
+days and nights wants to know what his women folks are up to.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The policeman smiled a good night, and returned to the side of his charge, who
+had been intently watching Lorison&rsquo;s face during the conversation, no
+doubt for some indication of his intention to render succour. Now, at the
+failure of the sign, and at the movement made to continue the ignominious
+progress, she abandoned hope, and addressed him thus, pointedly:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You damn chalk-faced quitter! You was thinking of giving me a hand, but
+you let the cop talk you out of it the first word. You&rsquo;re a dandy to tie
+to. Say, if you ever get a girl, she&rsquo;ll have a picnic. Won&rsquo;t she
+work you to the queen&rsquo;s taste! Oh, my!&rdquo; She concluded with a
+taunting, shrill laugh that rasped Lorison like a saw. The policemen urged her
+forward; the delighted train of gaping followers closed up the rear; and the
+captive Amazon, accepting her fate, extended the scope of her maledictions so
+that none in hearing might seem to be slighted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then there came upon Lorison an overwhelming revulsion of his perspective. It
+may be that he had been ripe for it, that the abnormal condition of mind in
+which he had for so long existed was already about to revert to its balance;
+however, it is certain that the events of the last few minutes had furnished
+the channel, if not the impetus, for the change.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The initial determining influence had been so small a thing as the fact and
+manner of his having been approached by the officer. That agent had, by the
+style of his accost, restored the loiterer to his former place in society. In
+an instant he had been transformed from a somewhat rancid prowler along the
+fishy side streets of gentility into an honest gentleman, with whom even so
+lordly a guardian of the peace might agreeably exchange the compliments.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This, then, first broke the spell, and set thrilling in him a resurrected
+longing for the fellowship of his kind, and the rewards of the virtuous. To
+what end, he vehemently asked himself, was this fanciful self-accusation, this
+empty renunciation, this moral squeamishness through which he had been led to
+abandon what was his heritage in life, and not beyond his deserts? Technically,
+he was uncondemned; his sole guilty spot was in thought rather than deed, and
+cognizance of it unshared by others. For what good, moral or sentimental, did
+he slink, retreating like the hedgehog from his own shadow, to and fro in this
+musty Bohemia that lacked even the picturesque?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the thing that struck home and set him raging was the part played by the
+Amazonian prisoner. To the counterpart of that astounding
+belligerent&mdash;identical at least, in the way of experience&mdash;to one, by
+her own confession, thus far fallen, had he, not three hours since, been united
+in marriage. How desirable and natural it had seemed to him then, and how
+monstrous it seemed now! How the words of diamond thief number two yet burned
+in his ears: &ldquo;If you ever get a girl, she&rsquo;ll have a picnic.&rdquo;
+What did that mean but that women instinctively knew him for one they could
+hoodwink? Still again, there reverberated the policeman&rsquo;s sapient
+contribution to his agony: &ldquo;A man these days and nights wants to know
+what his women folks are up to.&rdquo; Oh, yes, he had been a fool; he had
+looked at things from the wrong standpoint.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the wildest note in all the clamour was struck by pain&rsquo;s forefinger,
+jealousy. Now, at least, he felt that keenest sting&mdash;a mounting love
+unworthily bestowed. Whatever she might be, he loved her; he bore in his own
+breast his doom. A grating, comic flavour to his predicament struck him
+suddenly, and he laughed creakingly as he swung down the echoing pavement. An
+impetuous desire to act, to battle with his fate, seized him. He stopped upon
+his heel, and smote his palms together triumphantly. His wife was&mdash;where?
+But there was a tangible link; an outlet more or less navigable, through which
+his derelict ship of matrimony might yet be safely towed&mdash;the priest!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like all imaginative men with pliable natures, Lorison was, when thoroughly
+stirred, apt to become tempestuous. With a high and stubborn indignation upon
+him, be retraced his steps to the intersecting street by which he had come.
+Down this he hurried to the corner where he had parted with&mdash;an astringent
+grimace tinctured the thought&mdash;his wife. Thence still back he harked,
+following through an unfamiliar district his stimulated recollections of the
+way they had come from that preposterous wedding. Many times he went abroad,
+and nosed his way back to the trail, furious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, when he reached the dark, calamitous building in which his madness had
+culminated, and found the black hallway, he dashed down it, perceiving no light
+or sound. But he raised his voice, hailing loudly; reckless of everything but
+that he should find the old mischief-maker with the eyes that looked too far
+away to see the disaster he had wrought. The door opened, and in the stream of
+light Father Rogan stood, his book in hand, with his finger marking the place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; cried Lorison. &ldquo;You are the man I want. I had a wife of
+you a few hours ago. I would not trouble you, but I neglected to note how it
+was done. Will you oblige me with the information whether the business is
+beyond remedy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come inside,&rdquo; said the priest; &ldquo;there are other lodgers in
+the house, who might prefer sleep to even a gratified curiosity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lorison entered the room and took the chair offered him. The priest&rsquo;s
+eyes looked a courteous interrogation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must apologize again,&rdquo; said the young man, &ldquo;for so soon
+intruding upon you with my marital infelicities, but, as my wife has neglected
+to furnish me with her address, I am deprived of the legitimate recourse of a
+family row.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am quite a plain man,&rdquo; said Father Rogan, pleasantly; &ldquo;but
+I do not see how I am to ask you questions.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pardon my indirectness,&rdquo; said Lorison; &ldquo;I will ask one. In
+this room to-night you pronounced me to be a husband. You afterward spoke of
+additional rites or performances that either should or could be effected. I
+paid little attention to your words then, but I am hungry to hear them repeated
+now. As matters stand, am I married past all help?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are as legally and as firmly bound,&rdquo; said the priest,
+&ldquo;as though it had been done in a cathedral, in the presence of thousands.
+The additional observances I referred to are not necessary to the strictest
+legality of the act, but were advised as a precaution for the future&mdash;for
+convenience of proof in such contingencies as wills, inheritances and the
+like.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lorison laughed harshly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Many thanks,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Then there is no mistake, and I am
+the happy benedict. I suppose I should go stand upon the bridal corner, and
+when my wife gets through walking the streets she will look me up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Father Rogan regarded him calmly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My son,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;when a man and woman come to me to be
+married I always marry them. I do this for the sake of other people whom they
+might go away and marry if they did not marry each other. As you see, I do not
+seek your confidence; but your case seems to me to be one not altogether devoid
+of interest. Very few marriages that have come to my notice have brought such
+well-expressed regret within so short a time. I will hazard one question: were
+you not under the impression that you loved the lady you married, at the time
+you did so;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Loved her!&rdquo; cried Lorison, wildly. &ldquo;Never so well as now,
+though she told me she deceived and sinned and stole. Never more than now,
+when, perhaps, she is laughing at the fool she cajoled and left, with scarcely
+a word, to return to God only knows what particular line of her former
+folly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Father Rogan answered nothing. During the silence that succeeded, he sat with a
+quiet expectation beaming in his full, lambent eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you would listen&mdash;&rdquo; began Lorison. The priest held up his
+hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As I hoped,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I thought you would trust me. Wait
+but a moment.&rdquo; He brought a long clay pipe, filled and lighted it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, my son,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lorison poured a twelve month&rsquo;s accumulated confidence into Father
+Rogan&rsquo;s ear. He told all; not sparing himself or omitting the facts of
+his past, the events of the night, or his disturbing conjectures and fears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The main point,&rdquo; said the priest, when he had concluded,
+&ldquo;seems to me to be this&mdash;are you reasonably sure that you love this
+woman whom you have married?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; exclaimed Lorison, rising impulsively to his
+feet&mdash;&ldquo;why should I deny it? But look at me&mdash;am I fish, flesh
+or fowl? That is the main point to me, I assure you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I understand you,&rdquo; said the priest, also rising, and laying down
+his pipe. &ldquo;The situation is one that has taxed the endurance of much
+older men than you&mdash;in fact, especially much older men than you. I will
+try to relieve you from it, and this night. You shall see for yourself into
+exactly what predicament you have fallen, and how you shall, possibly, be
+extricated. There is no evidence so credible as that of the eyesight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Father Rogan moved about the room, and donned a soft black hat. Buttoning his
+coat to his throat, he laid his hand on the doorknob. &ldquo;Let us
+walk,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two went out upon the street. The priest turned his face down it, and
+Lorison walked with him through a squalid district, where the houses loomed,
+awry and desolate-looking, high above them. Presently they turned into a less
+dismal side street, where the houses were smaller, and, though hinting of the
+most meagre comfort, lacked the concentrated wretchedness of the more populous
+byways.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At a segregated, two-story house Father Rogan halted, and mounted the steps
+with the confidence of a familiar visitor. He ushered Lorison into a narrow
+hallway, faintly lighted by a cobwebbed hanging lamp. Almost immediately a door
+to the right opened and a dingy Irishwoman protruded her head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good evening to ye, Mistress Geehan,&rdquo; said the priest,
+unconsciously, it seemed, falling into a delicately flavoured brogue.
+&ldquo;And is it yourself can tell me if Norah has gone out again, the night,
+maybe?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, it&rsquo;s yer blissid riverence! Sure and I can tell ye the same.
+The purty darlin&rsquo; wint out, as usual, but a bit later. And she says:
+&lsquo;Mother Geehan,&rsquo; says she, &lsquo;it&rsquo;s me last noight out,
+praise the saints, this noight is!&rsquo; And, oh, yer riverence, the swate,
+beautiful drame of a dress she had this toime! White satin and silk and
+ribbons, and lace about the neck and arrums&mdash;&rsquo;twas a sin, yer
+reverence, the gold was spint upon it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The priest heard Lorison catch his breath painfully, and a faint smile
+flickered across his own clean-cut mouth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, then, Mistress Geehan,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll just step
+upstairs and see the bit boy for a minute, and I&rsquo;ll take this gentleman
+up with me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s awake, thin,&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve just
+come down from sitting wid him the last hour, tilling him fine shtories of ould
+County Tyrone. &rsquo;Tis a greedy gossoon, it is, yer riverence, for me
+shtories.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Small the doubt,&rdquo; said Father Rogan. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s no
+rocking would put him to slape the quicker, I&rsquo;m thinking.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amid the woman&rsquo;s shrill protest against the retort, the two men ascended
+the steep stairway. The priest pushed open the door of a room near its top.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is that you already, sister?&rdquo; drawled a sweet, childish voice from
+the darkness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s only ould Father Denny come to see ye, darlin&rsquo;; and a
+foine gentleman I&rsquo;ve brought to make ye a gr-r-and call. And ye resaves
+us fast aslape in bed! Shame on yez manners!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Father Denny, is that you? I&rsquo;m glad. And will you light the
+lamp, please? It&rsquo;s on the table by the door. And quit talking like Mother
+Geehan, Father Denny.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The priest lit the lamp, and Lorison saw a tiny, towsled-haired boy, with a
+thin, delicate face, sitting up in a small bed in a corner. Quickly, also, his
+rapid glance considered the room and its contents. It was furnished with more
+than comfort, and its adornments plainly indicated a woman&rsquo;s discerning
+taste. An open door beyond revealed the blackness of an adjoining room&rsquo;s
+interior.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy clutched both of Father Rogan&rsquo;s hands. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m so glad
+you came,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but why did you come in the night? Did sister
+send you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Off wid ye! Am I to be sint about, at me age, as was Terence McShane, of
+Ballymahone? I come on me own r-r-responsibility.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lorison had also advanced to the boy&rsquo;s bedside. He was fond of children;
+and the wee fellow, laying himself down to sleep alone in that dark room,
+stirred-his heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aren&rsquo;t you afraid, little man?&rdquo; he asked, stooping down
+beside him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sometimes,&rdquo; answered the boy, with a shy smile, &ldquo;when the
+rats make too much noise. But nearly every night, when sister goes out, Mother
+Geehan stays a while with me, and tells me funny stories. I&rsquo;m not often
+afraid, sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This brave little gentleman,&rdquo; said Father Rogan, &ldquo;is a
+scholar of mine. Every day from half-past six to half-past eight&mdash;when
+sister comes for him&mdash;he stops in my study, and we find out what&rsquo;s
+in the inside of books. He knows multiplication, division and fractions; and
+he&rsquo;s troubling me to begin wid the chronicles of Ciaran of Clonmacnoise,
+Corurac McCullenan and Cuan O&rsquo;Lochain, the gr-r-reat Irish
+histhorians.&rdquo; The boy was evidently accustomed to the priest&rsquo;s
+Celtic pleasantries. A little, appreciative grin was all the attention the
+insinuation of pedantry received.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lorison, to have saved his life, could not have put to the child one of those
+vital questions that were wildly beating about, unanswered, in his own brain.
+The little fellow was very like Norah; he had the same shining hair and candid
+eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Father Denny,&rdquo; cried the boy, suddenly, &ldquo;I forgot to
+tell you! Sister is not going away at night any more! She told me so when she
+kissed me good night as she was leaving. And she said she was so happy, and
+then she cried. Wasn&rsquo;t that queer? But I&rsquo;m glad; aren&rsquo;t
+you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, lad. And now, ye omadhaun, go to sleep, and say good night; we must
+be going.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Which shall I do first, Father Denny?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Faith, he&rsquo;s caught me again! Wait till I get the sassenach into
+the annals of Tageruach, the hagiographer; I&rsquo;ll give him enough of the
+Irish idiom to make him more respectful.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The light was out, and the small, brave voice bidding them good night from the
+dark room. They groped downstairs, and tore away from the garrulity of Mother
+Geehan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again the priest steered them through the dim ways, but this time in another
+direction. His conductor was serenely silent, and Lorison followed his example
+to the extent of seldom speaking. Serene he could not be. His heart beat
+suffocatingly in his breast. The following of this blind, menacing trail was
+pregnant with he knew not what humiliating revelation to be delivered at its
+end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They came into a more pretentious street, where trade, it could be surmised,
+flourished by day. And again the priest paused; this time before a lofty
+building, whose great doors and windows in the lowest floor were carefully
+shuttered and barred. Its higher apertures were dark, save in the third story,
+the windows of which were brilliantly lighted. Lorison&rsquo;s ear caught a
+distant, regular, pleasing thrumming, as of music above. They stood at an angle
+of the building. Up, along the side nearest them, mounted an iron stairway. At
+its top was an upright, illuminated parallelogram. Father Rogan had stopped,
+and stood, musing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will say this much,&rdquo; he remarked, thoughtfully: &ldquo;I believe
+you to be a better man than you think yourself to be, and a better man than I
+thought some hours ago. But do not take this,&rdquo; he added, with a smile,
+&ldquo;as much praise. I promised you a possible deliverance from an unhappy
+perplexity. I will have to modify that promise. I can only remove the mystery
+that enhanced that perplexity. Your deliverance depends upon yourself.
+Come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He led his companion up the stairway. Halfway up, Lorison caught him by the
+sleeve. &ldquo;Remember,&rdquo; he gasped, &ldquo;I love that woman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You desired to know.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&mdash;Go on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The priest reached the landing at the top of the stairway. Lorison, behind him,
+saw that the illuminated space was the glass upper half of a door opening into
+the lighted room. The rhythmic music increased as they neared it; the stairs
+shook with the mellow vibrations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lorison stopped breathing when he set foot upon the highest step, for the
+priest stood aside, and motioned him to look through the glass of the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His eye, accustomed to the darkness, met first a blinding glare, and then he
+made out the faces and forms of many people, amid an extravagant display of
+splendid robings&mdash;billowy laces, brilliant-hued finery, ribbons, silks and
+misty drapery. And then he caught the meaning of that jarring hum, and he saw
+the tired, pale, happy face of his wife, bending, as were a score of others,
+over her sewing machine&mdash;toiling, toiling. Here was the folly she pursued,
+and the end of his quest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But not his deliverance, though even then remorse struck him. His shamed soul
+fluttered once more before it retired to make room for the other and better
+one. For, to temper his thrill of joy, the shine of the satin and the glimmer
+of ornaments recalled the disturbing figure of the bespangled Amazon, and the
+base duplicate histories lit by the glare of footlights and stolen diamonds. It
+is past the wisdom of him who only sets the scenes, either to praise or blame
+the man. But this time his love overcame his scruples. He took a quick step,
+and reached out his hand for the doorknob. Father Rogan was quicker to arrest
+it and draw him back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You use my trust in you queerly,&rdquo; said the priest sternly.
+&ldquo;What are you about to do?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am going to my wife,&rdquo; said Lorison. &ldquo;Let me pass.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Listen,&rdquo; said the priest, holding him firmly by the arm. &ldquo;I
+am about to put you in possession of a piece of knowledge of which, thus far,
+you have scarcely proved deserving. I do not think you ever will; but I will
+not dwell upon that. You see in that room the woman you married, working for a
+frugal living for herself, and a generous comfort for an idolized brother. This
+building belongs to the chief costumer of the city. For months the advance
+orders for the coming Mardi Gras festivals have kept the work going day and
+night. I myself secured employment here for Norah. She toils here each night
+from nine o&rsquo;clock until daylight, and, besides, carries home with her
+some of the finer costumes, requiring more delicate needlework, and works there
+part of the day. Somehow, you two have remained strangely ignorant of each
+other&rsquo;s lives. Are you convinced now that your wife is not walking the
+streets?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me go to her,&rdquo; cried Lorison, again struggling, &ldquo;and beg
+her forgiveness!&rsquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said the priest, &ldquo;do you owe me nothing? Be quiet. It
+seems so often that Heaven lets fall its choicest gifts into hands that must be
+taught to hold them. Listen again. You forgot that repentant sin must not
+compromise, but look up, for redemption, to the purest and best. You went to
+her with the fine-spun sophistry that peace could be found in a mutual guilt;
+and she, fearful of losing what her heart so craved, thought it worth the price
+to buy it with a desperate, pure, beautiful lie. I have known her since the day
+she was born; she is as innocent and unsullied in life and deed as a holy
+saint. In that lowly street where she dwells she first saw the light, and she
+has lived there ever since, spending her days in generous self-sacrifice for
+others. Och, ye spalpeen!&rdquo; continued Father Rogan, raising his finger in
+kindly anger at Lorison. &ldquo;What for, I wonder, could she be after making a
+fool of hersilf, and shamin&rsquo; her swate soul with lies, for the like of
+you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Lorison, trembling, &ldquo;say what you please of me.
+Doubt it as you must, I will yet prove my gratitude to you, and my devotion to
+her. But let me speak to her once now, let me kneel for just one moment at her
+feet, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tut, tut!&rdquo; said the priest. &ldquo;How many acts of a love drama
+do you think an old bookworm like me capable of witnessing? Besides, what kind
+of figures do we cut, spying upon the mysteries of midnight millinery! Go to
+meet your wife to-morrow, as she ordered you, and obey her thereafter, and
+maybe some time I shall get forgiveness for the part I have played in this
+night&rsquo;s work. Off wid yez down the shtairs, now! &rsquo;Tis late, and an
+ould man like me should be takin&rsquo; his rest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap24"></a>XXIV<br>
+MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES</h2>
+</div>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aunt Ellen,&rdquo; said Octavia, cheerfully, as she threw her black kid
+gloves carefully at the dignified Persian cat on the window-seat,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m a pauper.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are so extreme in your statements, Octavia, dear,&rdquo; said Aunt
+Ellen, mildly, looking up from her paper. &ldquo;If you find yourself
+temporarily in need of some small change for bonbons, you will find my purse in
+the drawer of the writing desk.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octavia Beaupree removed her hat and seated herself on a footstool near her
+aunt&rsquo;s chair, clasping her hands about her knees. Her slim and flexible
+figure, clad in a modish mourning costume, accommodated itself easily and
+gracefully to the trying position. Her bright and youthful face, with its pair
+of sparkling, life-enamoured eyes, tried to compose itself to the seriousness
+that the occasion seemed to demand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You good auntie, it isn&rsquo;t a case of bonbons; it is abject,
+staring, unpicturesque poverty, with ready-made clothes, gasolined gloves, and
+probably one o&rsquo;clock dinners all waiting with the traditional wolf at the
+door. I&rsquo;ve just come from my lawyer, auntie, and, &lsquo;Please,
+ma&rsquo;am, I ain&rsquo;t got nothink &rsquo;t all. Flowers, lady? Buttonhole,
+gentleman? Pencils, sir, three for five, to help a poor widow?&rsquo; Do I do
+it nicely, auntie, or, as a bread-winner accomplishment, were my lessons in
+elocution entirely wasted?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do be serious, my dear,&rdquo; said Aunt Ellen, letting her paper fall
+to the floor, &ldquo;long enough to tell me what you mean. Colonel
+Beaupree&rsquo;s estate&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Colonel Beaupree&rsquo;s estate,&rdquo; interrupted Octavia, emphasizing
+her words with appropriate dramatic gestures, &ldquo;is of Spanish castellar
+architecture. Colonel Beaupree&rsquo;s resources are&mdash;wind. Colonel
+Beaupree&rsquo;s stocks are&mdash;water. Colonel Beaupree&rsquo;s income
+is&mdash;all in. The statement lacks the legal technicalities to which I have
+been listening for an hour, but that is what it means when translated.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Octavia!&rdquo; Aunt Ellen was now visibly possessed by consternation.
+&ldquo;I can hardly believe it. And it was the impression that he was worth a
+million. And the De Peysters themselves introduced him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octavia rippled out a laugh, and then became properly grave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>De mortuis nil</i>, auntie&mdash;not even the rest of it. The dear
+old colonel&mdash;what a gold brick he was, after all! I paid for my bargain
+fairly&mdash;I&rsquo;m all here, am I not?&mdash;items: eyes, fingers, toes,
+youth, old family, unquestionable position in society as called for in the
+contract&mdash;no wild-cat stock here.&rdquo; Octavia picked up the morning
+paper from the floor. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;m not going to
+&lsquo;squeal&rsquo;&mdash;isn&rsquo;t that what they call it when you rail at
+Fortune because you&rsquo;ve, lost the game?&rdquo; She turned the pages of the
+paper calmly. &ldquo;&lsquo;Stock market&rsquo;&mdash;no use for that.
+&lsquo;Society&rsquo;s doings&rsquo;&mdash;that&rsquo;s done. Here is my
+page&mdash; the wish column. A Van Dresser could not be said to
+&lsquo;want&rsquo; for anything, of course. &lsquo;Chamber-maids, cooks,
+canvassers, stenographers&mdash;&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dear,&rdquo; said Aunt Ellen, with a little tremor in her voice,
+&ldquo;please do not talk in that way. Even if your affairs are in so
+unfortunate a condition, there is my three thousand&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octavia sprang up lithely, and deposited a smart kiss on the delicate cheek of
+the prim little elderly maid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Blessed auntie, your three thousand is just sufficient to insure your
+Hyson to be free from willow leaves and keep the Persian in sterilized cream. I
+know I&rsquo;d be welcome, but I prefer to strike bottom like Beelzebub rather
+than hang around like the Peri listening to the music from the side entrance.
+I&rsquo;m going to earn my own living. There&rsquo;s nothing else to do.
+I&rsquo;m a&mdash;Oh, oh, oh!&mdash;I had forgotten. There&rsquo;s one thing
+saved from the wreck. It&rsquo;s a corral&mdash;no, a ranch in&mdash;let me
+see&mdash;Texas: an asset, dear old Mr. Bannister called it. How pleased he was
+to show me something he could describe as unencumbered! I&rsquo;ve a
+description of it among those stupid papers he made me bring away with me from
+his office. I&rsquo;ll try to find it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octavia found her shopping-bag, and drew from it a long envelope filled with
+typewritten documents.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A ranch in Texas,&rdquo; sighed Aunt Ellen. &ldquo;It sounds to me more
+like a liability than an asset. Those are the places where the centipedes are
+found, and cowboys, and fandangos.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;The Rancho de las Sombras,&rsquo;&rdquo; read Octavia from a
+sheet of violently purple typewriting, &ldquo;&lsquo;is situated one hundred
+and ten miles southeast of San Antonio, and thirty-eight miles from its nearest
+railroad station, Nopal, on the I. and G. N. Ranch, consists of 7,680 acres of
+well-watered land, with title conferred by State patents, and twenty-two
+sections, or 14,080 acres, partly under yearly running lease and partly bought
+under State&rsquo;s twenty-year-purchase act. Eight thousand graded merino
+sheep, with the necessary equipment of horses, vehicles and general ranch
+paraphernalia. Ranch-house built of brick, with six rooms comfortably furnished
+according to the requirements of the climate. All within a strong barbed-wire
+fence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;The present ranch manager seems to be competent and reliable, and
+is rapidly placing upon a paying basis a business that, in other hands, had
+been allowed to suffer from neglect and misconduct.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;This property was secured by Colonel Beaupree in a deal with a
+Western irrigation syndicate, and the title to it seems to be perfect. With
+careful management and the natural increase of land values, it ought to be made
+the foundation for a comfortable fortune for its owner.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Octavia ceased reading, Aunt Ellen uttered something as near a sniff as
+her breeding permitted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The prospectus,&rdquo; she said, with uncompromising metropolitan
+suspicion, &ldquo;doesn&rsquo;t mention the centipedes, or the Indians. And you
+never did like mutton, Octavia. I don&rsquo;t see what advantage you can derive
+from this&mdash;desert.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Octavia was in a trance. Her eyes were steadily regarding something quite
+beyond their focus. Her lips were parted, and her face was lighted by the
+kindling furor of the explorer, the ardent, stirring disquiet of the
+adventurer. Suddenly she clasped her hands together exultantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The problem solves itself, auntie,&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
+going to that ranch. I&rsquo;m going to live on it. I&rsquo;m going to learn to
+like mutton, and even concede the good qualities of centipedes&mdash;at a
+respectful distance. It&rsquo;s just what I need. It&rsquo;s a new life that
+comes when my old one is just ending. It&rsquo;s a release, auntie; it
+isn&rsquo;t a narrowing. Think of the gallops over those leagues of prairies,
+with the wind tugging at the roots of your hair, the coming close to the earth
+and learning over again the stories of the growing grass and the little wild
+flowers without names! Glorious is what it will be. Shall I be a shepherdess
+with a Watteau hat, and a crook to keep the bad wolves from the lambs, or a
+typical Western ranch girl, with short hair, like the pictures of her in the
+Sunday papers? I think the latter. And they&rsquo;ll have my picture, too, with
+the wild-cats I&rsquo;ve slain, single-handed, hanging from my saddle horn.
+&lsquo;From the Four Hundred to the Flocks&rsquo; is the way they&rsquo;ll
+headline it, and they&rsquo;ll print photographs of the old Van Dresser mansion
+and the church where I was married. They won&rsquo;t have my picture, but
+they&rsquo;ll get an artist to draw it. I&rsquo;ll be wild and woolly, and
+I&rsquo;ll grow my own wool.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Octavia!&rdquo; Aunt Ellen condensed into the one word all the protests
+she was unable to utter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say a word, auntie. I&rsquo;m going. I&rsquo;ll see the sky
+at night fit down on the world like a big butter-dish cover, and I&rsquo;ll
+make friends again with the stars that I haven&rsquo;t had a chat with since I
+was a wee child. I wish to go. I&rsquo;m tired of all this. I&rsquo;m glad I
+haven&rsquo;t any money. I could bless Colonel Beaupree for that ranch, and
+forgive him for all his bubbles. What if the life will be rough and lonely!
+I&mdash;I deserve it. I shut my heart to everything except that miserable
+ambition. I&mdash;oh, I wish to go away, and forget&mdash;forget!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octavia swerved suddenly to her knees, laid her flushed face in her
+aunt&rsquo;s lap, and shook with turbulent sobs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aunt Ellen bent over her, and smoothed the coppery-brown hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; she said, gently; &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t
+know&mdash;that. Who was it, dear?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+When Mrs. Octavia Beaupree, née Van Dresser, stepped from the train at Nopal,
+her manner lost, for the moment, some of that easy certitude which had always
+marked her movements. The town was of recent establishment, and seemed to have
+been hastily constructed of undressed lumber and flapping canvas. The element
+that had congregated about the station, though not offensively demonstrative,
+was clearly composed of citizens accustomed to and prepared for rude alarms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octavia stood on the platform, against the telegraph office, and attempted to
+choose by intuition from the swaggering, straggling string of loungers, the
+manager of the Rancho de las Sombras, who had been instructed by Mr. Bannister
+to meet her there. That tall, serious, looking, elderly man in the blue flannel
+shirt and white tie she thought must be he. But, no; he passed by, removing his
+gaze from the lady as hers rested on him, according to the Southern custom. The
+manager, she thought, with some impatience at being kept waiting, should have
+no difficulty in selecting her. Young women wearing the most recent thing in
+ash-coloured travelling suits were not so plentiful in Nopal!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus keeping a speculative watch on all persons of possible managerial aspect,
+Octavia, with a catching breath and a start of surprise, suddenly became aware
+of Teddy Westlake hurrying along the platform in the direction of the
+train&mdash;of Teddy Westlake or his sun-browned ghost in cheviot, boots and
+leather-girdled hat&mdash;Theodore Westlake, Jr., amateur polo (almost)
+champion, all-round butterfly and cumberer of the soil; but a broader, surer,
+more emphasized and determined Teddy than the one she had known a year ago when
+last she saw him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He perceived Octavia at almost the same time, deflected his course, and steered
+for her in his old, straightforward way. Something like awe came upon her as
+the strangeness of his metamorphosis was brought into closer range; the rich,
+red-brown of his complexion brought out so vividly his straw-coloured mustache
+and steel-gray eyes. He seemed more grown-up, and, somehow, farther away. But,
+when he spoke, the old, boyish Teddy came back again. They had been friends
+from childhood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, &rsquo;Tave!&rdquo; he exclaimed, unable to reduce his perplexity
+to coherence. &ldquo;How&mdash;what&mdash;when&mdash;where?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Train,&rdquo; said Octavia; &ldquo;necessity; ten minutes ago; home.
+Your complexion&rsquo;s gone, Teddy. Now,
+how&mdash;what&mdash;when&mdash;where?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m working down here,&rdquo; said Teddy. He cast side glances
+about the station as one does who tries to combine politeness with duty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t notice on the train,&rdquo; he asked, &ldquo;an old
+lady with gray curls and a poodle, who occupied two seats with her bundles and
+quarrelled with the conductor, did you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think not,&rdquo; answered Octavia, reflecting. &ldquo;And you
+haven&rsquo;t, by any chance, noticed a big, gray-mustached man in a blue shirt
+and six-shooters, with little flakes of merino wool sticking in his hair, have
+you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lots of &rsquo;em,&rdquo; said Teddy, with symptoms of mental delirium
+under the strain. Do you happen to know any such individual?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No; the description is imaginary. Is your interest in the old lady whom
+you describe a personal one?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never saw her in my life. She&rsquo;s painted entirely from fancy. She
+owns the little piece of property where I earn my bread and butter&mdash;the
+Rancho de las Sombras. I drove up to meet her according to arrangement with her
+lawyer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octavia leaned against the wall of the telegraph office. Was this possible? And
+didn&rsquo;t he know?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you the manager of that ranch?&rdquo; she asked weakly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am,&rdquo; said Teddy, with pride.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am Mrs. Beaupree,&rdquo; said Octavia faintly; &ldquo;but my hair
+never would curl, and I was polite to the conductor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a moment that strange, grown-up look came back, and removed Teddy miles
+away from her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope you&rsquo;ll excuse me,&rdquo; he said, rather awkwardly.
+&ldquo;You see, I&rsquo;ve been down here in the chaparral a year. I
+hadn&rsquo;t heard. Give me your checks, please, and I&rsquo;ll have your traps
+loaded into the wagon. José will follow with them. We travel ahead in the
+buckboard.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seated by Teddy in a feather-weight buckboard, behind a pair of wild,
+cream-coloured Spanish ponies, Octavia abandoned all thought for the
+exhilaration of the present. They swept out of the little town and down the
+level road toward the south. Soon the road dwindled and disappeared, and they
+struck across a world carpeted with an endless reach of curly mesquite grass.
+The wheels made no sound. The tireless ponies bounded ahead at an unbroken
+gallop. The temperate wind, made fragrant by thousands of acres of blue and
+yellow wild flowers, roared gloriously in their ears. The motion was aërial,
+ecstatic, with a thrilling sense of perpetuity in its effect. Octavia sat
+silent, possessed by a feeling of elemental, sensual bliss. Teddy seemed to be
+wrestling with some internal problem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to call you madama,&rdquo; he announced as the result of
+his labours. &ldquo;That is what the Mexicans will call you&mdash;they&rsquo;re
+nearly all Mexicans on the ranch, you know. That seems to me about the proper
+thing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very well, Mr. Westlake,&rdquo; said Octavia, primly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, now,&rdquo; said Teddy, in some consternation, &ldquo;that&rsquo;s
+carrying the thing too far, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t worry me with your beastly etiquette. I&rsquo;m just
+beginning to live. Don&rsquo;t remind me of anything artificial. If only this
+air could be bottled! This much alone is worth coming for. Oh, look I there
+goes a deer!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Jack-rabbit,&rdquo; said Teddy, without turning his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Could I&mdash;might I drive?&rdquo; suggested Octavia, panting, with
+rose-tinted cheeks and the eye of an eager child.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;On one condition. Could I&mdash;might I smoke?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Forever!&rdquo; cried Octavia, taking the lines with solemn joy.
+&ldquo;How shall I know which way to drive?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Keep her sou&rsquo; by sou&rsquo;east, and all sail set. You see that
+black speck on the horizon under that lowermost Gulf cloud? That&rsquo;s a
+group of live-oaks and a landmark. Steer halfway between that and the little
+hill to the left. I&rsquo;ll recite you the whole code of driving rules for the
+Texas prairies: keep the reins from under the horses&rsquo; feet, and swear at
+&rsquo;em frequent.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m too happy to swear, Ted. Oh, why do people buy yachts or
+travel in palace-cars, when a buckboard and a pair of plugs and a spring
+morning like this can satisfy all desire?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, I&rsquo;ll ask you,&rdquo; protested Teddy, who was futilely
+striking match after match on the dashboard, &ldquo;not to call those denizens
+of the air plugs. They can kick out a hundred miles between daylight and
+dark.&rdquo; At last he succeeded in snatching a light for his cigar from the
+flame held in the hollow of his hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Room!&rdquo; said Octavia, intensely. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s what produces
+the effect. I know now what I&rsquo;ve
+wanted&mdash;scope&mdash;range&mdash;room!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Smoking-room,&rdquo; said Teddy, unsentimentally. &ldquo;I love to smoke
+in a buckboard. The wind blows the smoke into you and out again. It saves
+exertion.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two fell so naturally into their old-time goodfellowship that it was only
+by degrees that a sense of the strangeness of the new relations between them
+came to be felt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Madama,&rdquo; said Teddy, wonderingly, &ldquo;however did you get it
+into your head to cut the crowd and come down here? Is it a fad now among the
+upper classes to trot off to sheep ranches instead of to Newport?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was broke, Teddy,&rdquo; said Octavia, sweetly, with her interest
+centred upon steering safely between a Spanish dagger plant and a clump of
+chaparral; &ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t a thing in the world but this ranch&mdash;not
+even any other home to go to.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come, now,&rdquo; said Teddy, anxiously but incredulously, &ldquo;you
+don&rsquo;t mean it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When my husband,&rdquo; said Octavia, with a shy slurring of the word,
+&ldquo;died three months ago I thought I had a reasonable amount of the
+world&rsquo;s goods. His lawyer exploded that theory in a sixty-minute fully
+illustrated lecture. I took to the sheep as a last resort. Do you happen to
+know of any fashionable caprice among the gilded youth of Manhattan that
+induces them to abandon polo and club windows to become managers of sheep
+ranches?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s easily explained in my case,&rdquo; responded Teddy,
+promptly. &ldquo;I had to go to work. I couldn&rsquo;t have earned my board in
+New York, so I chummed a while with old Sandford, one of the syndicate that
+owned the ranch before Colonel Beaupree bought it, and got a place down here. I
+wasn&rsquo;t manager at first. I jogged around on ponies and studied the
+business in detail, until I got all the points in my head. I saw where it was
+losing and what the remedies were, and then Sandford put me in charge. I get a
+hundred dollars a month, and I earn it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor Teddy!&rdquo; said Octavia, with a smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You needn&rsquo;t. I like it. I save half my wages, and I&rsquo;m as
+hard as a water plug. It beats polo.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will it furnish bread and tea and jam for another outcast from
+civilization?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The spring shearing,&rdquo; said the manager, &ldquo;just cleaned up a
+deficit in last year&rsquo;s business. Wastefulness and inattention have been
+the rule heretofore. The autumn clip will leave a small profit over all
+expenses. Next year there will be jam.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When, about four o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon, the ponies rounded a gentle,
+brush-covered hill, and then swooped, like a double cream-coloured cyclone,
+upon the Rancho de las Sombras, Octavia gave a little cry of delight. A lordly
+grove of magnificent live-oaks cast an area of grateful, cool shade, whence the
+ranch had drawn its name, &ldquo;de las Sombras&rdquo;&mdash;of the shadows.
+The house, of red brick, one story, ran low and long beneath the trees. Through
+its middle, dividing its six rooms in half, extended a broad, arched
+passageway, picturesque with flowering cactus and hanging red earthen jars. A
+&ldquo;gallery,&rdquo; low and broad, encircled the building. Vines climbed
+about it, and the adjacent ground was, for a space, covered with transplanted
+grass and shrubs. A little lake, long and narrow, glimmered in the sun at the
+rear. Further away stood the shacks of the Mexican workers, the corrals, wool
+sheds and shearing pens. To the right lay the low hills, splattered with dark
+patches of chaparral; to the left the unbounded green prairie blending against
+the blue heavens.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a home, Teddy,&rdquo; said Octavia, breathlessly;
+that&rsquo;s what it is&mdash;it&rsquo;s a home.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not so bad for a sheep ranch,&rdquo; admitted Teddy, with excusable
+pride. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been tinkering on it at odd times.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Mexican youth sprang from somewhere in the grass, and took charge of the
+creams. The mistress and the manager entered the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s Mrs. MacIntyre,&rdquo; said Teddy, as a placid, neat,
+elderly lady came out upon the gallery to meet them. &ldquo;Mrs. Mac,
+here&rsquo;s the boss. Very likely she will be wanting a hunk of ham and a dish
+of beans after her drive.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. MacIntyre, the housekeeper, as much a fixture on the place as the lake or
+the live-oaks, received the imputation of the ranch&rsquo;s resources of
+refreshment with mild indignation, and was about to give it utterance when
+Octavia spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Mrs. MacIntyre, don&rsquo;t apologize for Teddy. Yes, I call him
+Teddy. So does every one whom he hasn&rsquo;t duped into taking him seriously.
+You see, we used to cut paper dolls and play jackstraws together ages ago. No
+one minds what he says.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Teddy, &ldquo;no one minds what he says, just so he
+doesn&rsquo;t do it again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octavia cast one of those subtle, sidelong glances toward him from beneath her
+lowered eyelids&mdash;a glance that Teddy used to describe as an upper-cut. But
+there was nothing in his ingenuous, weather-tanned face to warrant a suspicion
+that he was making an allusion&mdash;nothing. Beyond a doubt, thought Octavia,
+he had forgotten.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Westlake likes his fun,&rdquo; said Mrs. Maclntyre, as she conducted
+Octavia to her rooms. &ldquo;But,&rdquo; she added, loyally, &ldquo;people
+around here usually pay attention to what he says when he talks in earnest. I
+don&rsquo;t know what would have become of this place without him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two rooms at the east end of the house had been arranged for the occupancy of
+the ranch&rsquo;s mistress. When she entered them a slight dismay seized her at
+their bare appearance and the scantiness of their furniture; but she quickly
+reflected that the climate was a semi-tropical one, and was moved to
+appreciation of the well-conceived efforts to conform to it. The sashes had
+already been removed from the big windows, and white curtains waved in the Gulf
+breeze that streamed through the wide jalousies. The bare floor was amply
+strewn with cool rugs; the chairs were inviting, deep, dreamy willows; the
+walls were papered with a light, cheerful olive. One whole side of her sitting
+room was covered with books on smooth, unpainted pine shelves. She flew to
+these at once. Before her was a well-selected library. She caught glimpses of
+titles of volumes of fiction and travel not yet seasoned from the dampness of
+the press.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently, recollecting that she was now in a wilderness given over to mutton,
+centipedes and privations, the incongruity of these luxuries struck her, and,
+with intuitive feminine suspicion, she began turning to the fly-leaves of
+volume after volume. Upon each one was inscribed in fluent characters the name
+of Theodore Westlake, Jr.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octavia, fatigued by her long journey, retired early that night. Lying upon her
+white, cool bed, she rested deliciously, but sleep coquetted long with her. She
+listened to faint noises whose strangeness kept her faculties on the
+alert&mdash;the fractious yelping of the coyotes, the ceaseless, low symphony
+of the wind, the distant booming of the frogs about the lake, the lamentation
+of a concertina in the Mexicans&rsquo; quarters. There were many conflicting
+feelings in her heart&mdash;thankfulness and rebellion, peace and disquietude,
+loneliness and a sense of protecting care, happiness and an old, haunting pain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did what any other woman would have done&mdash;sought relief in a wholesome
+tide of unreasonable tears, and her last words, murmured to herself before
+slumber, capitulating, came softly to woo her, were &ldquo;He has
+forgotten.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The manager of the Rancho de las Sombras was no dilettante. He was a
+&ldquo;hustler.&rdquo; He was generally up, mounted, and away of mornings
+before the rest of the household were awake, making the rounds of the flocks
+and camps. This was the duty of the major-domo, a stately old Mexican with a
+princely air and manner, but Teddy seemed to have a great deal of confidence in
+his own eyesight. Except in the busy seasons, he nearly always returned to the
+ranch to breakfast at eight o&rsquo;clock, with Octavia and Mrs. Maclntyre, at
+the little table set in the central hallway, bringing with him a tonic and
+breezy cheerfulness full of the health and flavour of the prairies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A few days after Octavia&rsquo;s arrival he made her get out one of her riding
+skirts, and curtail it to a shortness demanded by the chaparral brakes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With some misgivings she donned this and the pair of buckskin leggings he
+prescribed in addition, and, mounted upon a dancing pony, rode with him to view
+her possessions. He showed her everything&mdash;the flocks of ewes, muttons and
+grazing lambs, the dipping vats, the shearing pens, the uncouth merino rams in
+their little pasture, the water-tanks prepared against the summer
+drought&mdash;giving account of his stewardship with a boyish enthusiasm that
+never flagged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Where was the old Teddy that she knew so well? This side of him was the same,
+and it was a side that pleased her; but this was all she ever saw of him now.
+Where was his sentimentality&mdash;those old, varying moods of impetuous
+love-making, of fanciful, quixotic devotion, of heart-breaking gloom, of
+alternating, absurd tenderness and haughty dignity? His nature had been a
+sensitive one, his temperament bordering closely on the artistic. She knew
+that, besides being a follower of fashion and its fads and sports, he had
+cultivated tastes of a finer nature. He had written things, he had tampered
+with colours, he was something of a student in certain branches of art, and
+once she had been admitted to all his aspirations and thoughts. But
+now&mdash;and she could not avoid the conclusion&mdash;Teddy had barricaded
+against her every side of himself except one&mdash;the side that showed the
+manager of the Rancho de las Sombras and a jolly chum who had forgiven and
+forgotten. Queerly enough the words of Mr. Bannister&rsquo;s description of her
+property came into her mind&mdash;&ldquo;all inclosed within a strong
+barbed-wire fence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Teddy&rsquo;s fenced, too,&rdquo; said Octavia to herself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not difficult for her to reason out the cause of his fortifications. It
+had originated one night at the Hammersmiths&rsquo; ball. It occurred at a time
+soon after she had decided to accept Colonel Beaupree and his million, which
+was no more than her looks and the entrée she held to the inner circles were
+worth. Teddy had proposed with all his impetuosity and fire, and she looked him
+straight in the eyes, and said, coldly and finally: &ldquo;Never let me hear
+any such silly nonsense from you again.&rdquo; &ldquo;You won&rsquo;t,&rdquo;
+said Teddy, with an expression around his mouth, and&mdash;now Teddy was
+inclosed within a strong barbed-wire fence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was on this first ride of inspection that Teddy was seized by the
+inspiration that suggested the name of Mother Goose&rsquo;s heroine, and he at
+once bestowed it upon Octavia. The idea, supported by both a similarity of
+names and identity of occupations, seemed to strike him as a peculiarly happy
+one, and he never tired of using it. The Mexicans on the ranch also took up the
+name, adding another syllable to accommodate their lingual incapacity for the
+final &ldquo;p,&rdquo; gravely referring to her as &ldquo;La Madama
+Bo-Peepy.&rdquo; Eventually it spread, and &ldquo;Madame Bo-Peep&rsquo;s
+ranch&rdquo; was as often mentioned as the &ldquo;Rancho de las Sombras.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Came the long, hot season from May to September, when work is scarce on the
+ranches. Octavia passed the days in a kind of lotus-eater&rsquo;s dream. Books,
+hammocks, correspondence with a few intimate friends, a renewed interest in her
+old water-colour box and easel&mdash;these disposed of the sultry hours of
+daylight. The evenings were always sure to bring enjoyment. Best of all were
+the rapturous horseback rides with Teddy, when the moon gave light over the
+wind-swept leagues, chaperoned by the wheeling night-hawk and the startled owl.
+Often the Mexicans would come up from their shacks with their guitars and sing
+the weirdest of heart-breaking songs. There were long, cosy chats on the breezy
+gallery, and an interminable warfare of wits between Teddy and Mrs. MacIntyre,
+whose abundant Scotch shrewdness often more than overmatched the lighter humour
+in which she was lacking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the nights came, one after another, and were filed away by weeks and
+months&mdash;nights soft and languorous and fragrant, that should have driven
+Strephon to Chloe over wires however barbed, that might have drawn Cupid
+himself to hunt, lasso in hand, among those amorous pastures&mdash;but Teddy
+kept his fences up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One July night Madame Bo-Peep and her ranch manager were sitting on the east
+gallery. Teddy had been exhausting the science of prognostication as to the
+probabilities of a price of twenty-four cents for the autumn clip, and had then
+subsided into an anesthetic cloud of Havana smoke. Only as incompetent a judge
+as a woman would have failed to note long ago that at least a third of his
+salary must have gone up in the fumes of those imported Regalias.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Teddy,&rdquo; said Octavia, suddenly, and rather sharply, &ldquo;what
+are you working down here on a ranch for?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One hundred per,&rdquo; said Teddy, glibly, &ldquo;and found.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve a good mind to discharge you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t do it,&rdquo; said Teddy, with a grin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; demanded Octavia, with argumentative heat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Under contract. Terms of sale respect all unexpired contracts. Mine runs
+until 12 P. M., December thirty-first. You might get up at midnight on that
+date and fire me. If you try it sooner I&rsquo;ll be in a position to bring
+legal proceedings.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octavia seemed to be considering the prospects of litigation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But,&rdquo; continued Teddy cheerfully, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been thinking
+of resigning anyway.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octavia&rsquo;s rocking-chair ceased its motion. There were centipedes in this
+country, she felt sure; and Indians, and vast, lonely, desolate, empty wastes;
+all within strong barbed-wire fence. There was a Van Dresser pride, but there
+was also a Van Dresser heart. She must know for certain whether or not he had
+forgotten.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, well, Teddy,&rdquo; she said, with a fine assumption of polite
+interest, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s lonely down here; you&rsquo;re longing to get back
+to the old life&mdash;to polo and lobsters and theatres and balls.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never cared much for balls,&rdquo; said Teddy virtuously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re getting old, Teddy. Your memory is failing. Nobody ever
+knew you to miss a dance, unless it occurred on the same night with another one
+which you attended. And you showed such shocking bad taste, too, in dancing too
+often with the same partner. Let me see, what was that Forbes girl&rsquo;s
+name&mdash;the one with wall eyes&mdash;Mabel, wasn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No; Adèle. Mabel was the one with the bony elbows. That wasn&rsquo;t
+wall in Adèle&rsquo;s eyes. It was soul. We used to talk sonnets together, and
+Verlaine. Just then I was trying to run a pipe from the Pierian spring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You were on the floor with her,&rdquo; said Octavia, undeflected,
+&ldquo;five times at the Hammersmiths&rsquo;.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hammersmiths&rsquo; what?&rdquo; questioned Teddy, vacuously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ball&mdash;ball,&rdquo; said Octavia, viciously. &ldquo;What were we
+talking of?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eyes, I thought,&rdquo; said Teddy, after some reflection; &ldquo;and
+elbows.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Those Hammersmiths,&rdquo; went on Octavia, in her sweetest society
+prattle, after subduing an intense desire to yank a handful of sunburnt, sandy
+hair from the head lying back contentedly against the canvas of the steamer
+chair, &ldquo;had too much money. Mines, wasn&rsquo;t it? It was something that
+paid something to the ton. You couldn&rsquo;t get a glass of plain water in
+their house. Everything at that ball was dreadfully overdone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was,&rdquo; said Teddy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Such a crowd there was!&rdquo; Octavia continued, conscious that she was
+talking the rapid drivel of a school-girl describing her first dance.
+&ldquo;The balconies were as warm as the rooms. I&mdash;lost&mdash;something at
+that ball.&rdquo; The last sentence was uttered in a tone calculated to remove
+the barbs from miles of wire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So did I,&rdquo; confessed Teddy, in a lower voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A glove,&rdquo; said Octavia, falling back as the enemy approached her
+ditches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Caste,&rdquo; said Teddy, halting his firing line without loss. &ldquo;I
+hobnobbed, half the evening with one of Hammersmith&rsquo;s miners, a fellow
+who kept his hands in his pockets, and talked like an archangel about reduction
+plants and drifts and levels and sluice-boxes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A pearl-gray glove, nearly new,&rdquo; sighed Octavia, mournfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A bang-up chap, that McArdle,&rdquo; maintained Teddy approvingly.
+&ldquo;A man who hated olives and elevators; a man who handled mountains as
+croquettes, and built tunnels in the air; a man who never uttered a word of
+silly nonsense in his life. Did you sign those lease-renewal applications yet,
+madama? They&rsquo;ve got to be on file in the land office by the
+thirty-first.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Teddy turned his head lazily. Octavia&rsquo;s chair was vacant.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+A certain centipede, crawling along the lines marked out by fate, expounded the
+situation. It was early one morning while Octavia and Mrs. Maclntyre were
+trimming the honeysuckle on the west gallery. Teddy had risen and departed
+hastily before daylight in response to word that a flock of ewes had been
+scattered from their bedding ground during the night by a thunder-storm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The centipede, driven by destiny, showed himself on the floor of the gallery,
+and then, the screeches of the two women giving him his cue, he scuttled with
+all his yellow legs through the open door into the furthermost west room, which
+was Teddy&rsquo;s. Arming themselves with domestic utensils selected with
+regard to their length, Octavia and Mrs. Maclntyre, with much clutching of
+skirts and skirmishing for the position of rear guard in the attacking force,
+followed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once outside, the centipede seemed to have disappeared, and his prospective
+murderers began a thorough but cautious search for their victim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even in the midst of such a dangerous and absorbing adventure Octavia was
+conscious of an awed curiosity on finding herself in Teddy&rsquo;s sanctum. In
+that room he sat alone, silently communing with those secret thoughts that he
+now shared with no one, dreamed there whatever dreams he now called on no one
+to interpret.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the room of a Spartan or a soldier. In one corner stood a wide,
+canvas-covered cot; in another, a small bookcase; in another, a grim stand of
+Winchesters and shotguns. An immense table, strewn with letters, papers and
+documents and surmounted by a set of pigeon-holes, occupied one side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The centipede showed genius in concealing himself in such bare quarters. Mrs.
+Maclntyre was poking a broom-handle behind the bookcase. Octavia approached
+Teddy&rsquo;s cot. The room was just as the manager had left it in his hurry.
+The Mexican maid had not yet given it her attention. There was his big pillow
+with the imprint of his head still in the centre. She thought the horrid beast
+might have climbed the cot and hidden itself to bite Teddy. Centipedes were
+thus cruel and vindictive toward managers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She cautiously overturned the pillow, and then parted her lips to give the
+signal for reinforcements at sight of a long, slender, dark object lying there.
+But, repressing it in time, she caught up a glove, a pearl-gray glove,
+flattened&mdash;it might be conceived&mdash;by many, many months of nightly
+pressure beneath the pillow of the man who had forgotten the
+Hammersmiths&rsquo; ball. Teddy must have left so hurriedly that morning that
+he had, for once, forgotten to transfer it to its resting-place by day. Even
+managers, who are notoriously wily and cunning, are sometimes caught up with.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octavia slid the gray glove into the bosom of her summery morning gown. It was
+hers. Men who put themselves within a strong barbed-wire fence, and remember
+Hammersmith balls only by the talk of miners about sluice-boxes, should not be
+allowed to possess such articles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After all, what a paradise this prairie country was! How it blossomed like the
+rose when you found things that were thought to be lost! How delicious was that
+morning breeze coming in the windows, fresh and sweet with the breath of the
+yellow ratama blooms! Might one not stand, for a minute, with shining,
+far-gazing eyes, and dream that mistakes might be corrected?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Why was Mrs. Maclntyre poking about so absurdly with a broom?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve found it,&rdquo; said Mrs. MacIntyre, banging the door.
+&ldquo;Here it is.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did you lose something? asked Octavia, with sweetly polite non-interest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The little devil!&rdquo; said Mrs. Maclntyre, driven to violence.
+&ldquo;Ye&rsquo;ve no forgotten him alretty?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Between them they slew the centipede. Thus was he rewarded for his agency
+toward the recovery of things lost at the Hammersmiths&rsquo; ball.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seems that Teddy, in due course, remembered the glove, and when he returned
+to the house at sunset made a secret but exhaustive search for it. Not until
+evening, upon the moonlit eastern gallery, did he find it. It was upon the hand
+that he had thought lost to him forever, and so he was moved to repeat certain
+nonsense that he had been commanded never, never to utter again. Teddy&rsquo;s
+fences were down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This time there was no ambition to stand in the way, and the wooing was as
+natural and successful as should be between ardent shepherd and gentle
+shepherdess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The prairies changed to a garden. The Rancho de las Sombras became the Ranch of
+Light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A few days later Octavia received a letter from Mr. Bannister, in reply to one
+she had written to him asking some questions about her business. A portion of
+the letter ran as follows:
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+&ldquo;I am at a loss to account for your references to the sheep ranch. Two
+months after your departure to take up your residence upon it, it was
+discovered that Colonel Beaupree&rsquo;s title was worthless. A deed came to
+light showing that he disposed of the property before his death. The matter was
+reported to your manager, Mr. Westlake, who at once repurchased the property.
+It is entirely beyond my powers of conjecture to imagine how you have remained
+in ignorance of this fact. I beg that you that will at once confer with that
+gentleman, who will, at least, corroborate my statement.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octavia sought Teddy, with battle in her eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What are you working on this ranch for?&rdquo; she asked once more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One hundred&mdash;&rdquo; he began to repeat, but saw in her face that
+she knew. She held Mr. Bannister&rsquo;s letter in her hand. He knew that the
+game was up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s my ranch,&rdquo; said Teddy, like a schoolboy detected in
+evil. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a mighty poor manager that isn&rsquo;t able to absorb
+the boss&rsquo;s business if you give him time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why were you working down here?&rdquo; pursued Octavia still struggling
+after the key to the riddle of Teddy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To tell the truth, &rsquo;Tave,&rdquo; said Teddy, with quiet candour,
+&ldquo;it wasn&rsquo;t for the salary. That about kept me in cigars and sunburn
+lotions. I was sent south by my doctor. &rsquo;Twas that right lung that was
+going to the bad on account of over-exercise and strain at polo and gymnastics.
+I needed climate and ozone and rest and things of that sort.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In an instant Octavia was close against the vicinity of the affected organ. Mr.
+Bannister&rsquo;s letter fluttered to the floor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s&mdash;it&rsquo;s well now, isn&rsquo;t it, Teddy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sound as a mesquite chunk. I deceived you in one thing. I paid fifty
+thousand for your ranch as soon as I found you had no title. I had just about
+that much income accumulated at my banker&rsquo;s while I&rsquo;ve been herding
+sheep down here, so it was almost like picking the thing up on a
+bargain-counter for a penny. There&rsquo;s another little surplus of unearned
+increment piling up there, &rsquo;Tave. I&rsquo;ve been thinking of a wedding
+trip in a yacht with white ribbons tied to the mast, through the Mediterranean,
+and then up among the Hebrides and down Norway to the Zuyder Zee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I was thinking,&rdquo; said Octavia, softly, &ldquo;of a wedding
+gallop with my manager among the flocks of sheep and back to a wedding
+breakfast with Mrs. MacIntyre on the gallery, with, maybe, a sprig of orange
+blossom fastened to the red jar above the table.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Teddy laughed, and began to chant:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Little Bo-Peep has lost her sheep,<br>
+And doesn&rsquo;t know where to find &rsquo;em.<br>
+Let &rsquo;em alone, and they&rsquo;ll come home,<br>
+And&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Octavia drew his head down, and whispered in his ear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But that is one of the tales they brought behind them.
+</p>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHIRLIGIGS ***</div>
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diff --git a/1595-h/images/cover.jpg b/1595-h/images/cover.jpg
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #1595 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1595)
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Whirligigs, by O. Henry
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Whirligigs
+
+
+Author: O. Henry
+
+
+
+Release Date: January, 1999 [eBook #1595]
+Most recently updated: February 3, 2011
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHIRLIGIGS***
+
+
+E-text prepared by anonymous Project Gutenberg Volunteers
+and revised by Joseph E. Loewenstein, M.D.
+
+
+
+WHIRLIGIGS
+
+by
+
+O. HENRY
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. THE WORLD AND THE DOOR
+
+ II. THE THEORY AND THE HOUND
+
+ III. THE HYPOTHESES OF FAILURE
+
+ IV. CALLOWAY'S CODE
+
+ V. A MATTER OF MEAN ELEVATION
+
+ VI. "GIRL"
+
+ VII. SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW
+
+ VIII. THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF
+
+ IX. THE MARRY MONTH OF MAY
+
+ X. A TECHNICAL ERROR
+
+ XI. SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE
+
+ XII. THE WHIRLIGIG OF LIFE
+
+ XIII. A SACRIFICE HIT
+
+ XIV. THE ROADS WE TAKE
+
+ XV. A BLACKJACK BARGAINER
+
+ XVI. THE SONG AND THE SERGEANT
+
+ XVII. ONE DOLLAR'S WORTH
+
+XVIII. A NEWSPAPER STORY
+
+ XIX. TOMMY'S BURGLAR
+
+ XX. A CHAPARRAL CHRISTMAS
+
+ XXI. A LITTLE LOCAL COLOUR
+
+ XXII. GEORGIA'S RULING
+
+XXIII. BLIND MAN'S HOLIDAY
+
+ XXIV. MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+THE WORLD AND THE DOOR
+
+
+A favourite dodge to get your story read by the public is to assert
+that it is true, and then add that Truth is stranger than Fiction.
+I do not know if the yarn I am anxious for you to read is true; but
+the Spanish purser of the fruit steamer _El Carrero_ swore to me by
+the shrine of Santa Guadalupe that he had the facts from the U. S.
+vice-consul at La Paz--a person who could not possibly have been
+cognizant of half of them.
+
+As for the adage quoted above, I take pleasure in puncturing it by
+affirming that I read in a purely fictional story the other day the
+line: "'Be it so,' said the policeman." Nothing so strange has yet
+cropped out in Truth.
+
+
+When H. Ferguson Hedges, millionaire promoter, investor and
+man-about-New-York, turned his thoughts upon matters convivial, and
+word of it went "down the line," bouncers took a precautionary turn
+at the Indian clubs, waiters put ironstone china on his favourite
+tables, cab drivers crowded close to the curbstone in front of
+all-night cafs, and careful cashiers in his regular haunts charged
+up a few bottles to his account by way of preface and introduction.
+
+As a money power a one-millionaire is of small account in a city where
+the man who cuts your slice of beef behind the free-lunch counter
+rides to work in his own automobile. But Hedges spent his money as
+lavishly, loudly and showily as though he were only a clerk
+squandering a week's wages. And, after all, the bartender takes no
+interest in your reserve fund. He would rather look you up on his
+cash register than in Bradstreet.
+
+On the evening that the material allegation of facts begins, Hedges
+was bidding dull care begone in the company of five or six good
+fellows--acquaintances and friends who had gathered in his wake.
+
+Among them were two younger men--Ralph Merriam, a broker, and Wade,
+his friend.
+
+Two deep-sea cabmen were chartered. At Columbus Circle they hove
+to long enough to revile the statue of the great navigator,
+unpatriotically rebuking him for having voyaged in search of land
+instead of liquids. Midnight overtook the party marooned in the rear
+of a cheap caf far uptown.
+
+Hedges was arrogant, overriding and quarrelsome. He was burly and
+tough, iron-gray but vigorous, "good" for the rest of the night. There
+was a dispute--about nothing that matters--and the five-fingered words
+were passed--the words that represent the glove cast into the lists.
+Merriam played the rle of the verbal Hotspur.
+
+Hedges rose quickly, seized his chair, swung it once and smashed
+wildly down at Merriam's head. Merriam dodged, drew a small revolver
+and shot Hedges in the chest. The leading roysterer stumbled, fell in
+a wry heap, and lay still.
+
+Wade, a commuter, had formed that habit of promptness. He juggled
+Merriam out a side door, walked him to the corner, ran him a block and
+caught a hansom. They rode five minutes and then got out on a dark
+corner and dismissed the cab. Across the street the lights of a small
+saloon betrayed its hectic hospitality.
+
+"Go in the back room of that saloon," said Wade, "and wait. I'll go
+find out what's doing and let you know. You may take two drinks while
+I am gone--no more."
+
+At ten minutes to one o'clock Wade returned. "Brace up, old chap," he
+said. "The ambulance got there just as I did. The doctor says he's
+dead. You may have one more drink. You let me run this thing for
+you. You've got to skip. I don't believe a chair is legally a deadly
+weapon. You've got to make tracks, that's all there is to it."
+
+Merriam complained of the cold querulously, and asked for another
+drink. "Did you notice what big veins he had on the back of his
+hands?" he said. "I never could stand--I never could--"
+
+"Take one more," said Wade, "and then come on. I'll see you through."
+
+Wade kept his promise so well that at eleven o'clock the next morning
+Merriam, with a new suit case full of new clothes and hair-brushes,
+stepped quietly on board a little 500-ton fruit steamer at an East
+River pier. The vessel had brought the season's first cargo of limes
+from Port Limon, and was homeward bound. Merriam had his bank balance
+of $2,800 in his pocket in large bills, and brief instructions to pile
+up as much water as he could between himself and New York. There was
+no time for anything more.
+
+From Port Limon Merriam worked down the coast by schooner and sloop to
+Colon, thence across the isthmus to Panama, where he caught a tramp
+bound for Callao and such intermediate ports as might tempt the
+discursive skipper from his course.
+
+It was at La Paz that Merriam decided to land--La Paz the Beautiful,
+a little harbourless town smothered in a living green ribbon that
+banded the foot of a cloud-piercing mountain. Here the little
+steamer stopped to tread water while the captain's dory took him
+ashore that he might feel the pulse of the cocoanut market. Merriam
+went too, with his suit case, and remained.
+
+Kalb, the vice-consul, a Grco-Armenian citizen of the United States,
+born in Hessen-Darmstadt, and educated in Cincinnati ward primaries,
+considered all Americans his brothers and bankers. He attached
+himself to Merriam's elbow, introduced him to every one in La Paz who
+wore shoes, borrowed ten dollars and went back to his hammock.
+
+There was a little wooden hotel in the edge of a banana grove, facing
+the sea, that catered to the tastes of the few foreigners that had
+dropped out of the world into the _triste_ Peruvian town. At Kalb's
+introductory: "Shake hands with ----," he had obediently exchanged
+manual salutations with a German doctor, one French and two Italian
+merchants, and three or four Americans who were spoken of as gold men,
+rubber men, mahogany men--anything but men of living tissue.
+
+After dinner Merriam sat in a corner of the broad front _galeria_ with
+Bibb, a Vermonter interested in hydraulic mining, and smoked and drank
+Scotch "smoke." The moonlit sea, spreading infinitely before him,
+seemed to separate him beyond all apprehension from his old life. The
+horrid tragedy in which he had played such a disastrous part now
+began, for the first time since he stole on board the fruiter, a
+wretched fugitive, to lose its sharper outlines. Distance lent
+assuagement to his view. Bibb had opened the flood-gates of a stream
+of long-dammed discourse, overjoyed to have captured an audience that
+had not suffered under a hundred repetitions of his views and
+theories.
+
+"One year more," said Bibb, "and I'll go back to God's country. Oh, I
+know it's pretty here, and you get _dolce far niente_ handed to you in
+chunks, but this country wasn't made for a white man to live in.
+You've got to have to plug through snow now and then, and see a game
+of baseball and wear a stiff collar and have a policeman cuss you.
+Still, La Paz is a good sort of a pipe-dreamy old hole. And Mrs.
+Conant is here. When any of us feels particularly like jumping into
+the sea we rush around to her house and propose. It's nicer to be
+rejected by Mrs. Conant than it is to be drowned. And they say
+drowning is a delightful sensation."
+
+"Many like her here?" asked Merriam.
+
+"Not anywhere," said Bibb, with a comfortable sigh. "She's the only
+white woman in La Paz. The rest range from a dappled dun to the
+colour of a b-flat piano key. She's been here a year. Comes
+from--well, you know how a woman can talk--ask 'em to say 'string'
+and they'll say 'crow's foot' or 'cat's cradle.' Sometimes you'd think
+she was from Oshkosh, and again from Jacksonville, Florida, and the
+next day from Cape Cod."
+
+"Mystery?" ventured Merriam.
+
+"M--well, she looks it; but her talk's translucent enough. But
+that's a woman. I suppose if the Sphinx were to begin talking she'd
+merely say: 'Goodness me! more visitors coming for dinner, and nothing
+to eat but the sand which is here.' But you won't think about that
+when you meet her, Merriam. You'll propose to her too."
+
+To make a hard story soft, Merriam did meet her and propose to her.
+He found her to be a woman in black with hair the colour of a bronze
+turkey's wings, and mysterious, _remembering_ eyes that--well, that
+looked as if she might have been a trained nurse looking on when Eve
+was created. Her words and manner, though, were translucent, as Bibb
+had said. She spoke, vaguely, of friends in California and some of
+the lower parishes in Louisiana. The tropical climate and indolent
+life suited her; she had thought of buying an orange grove later on;
+La Paz, all in all, charmed her.
+
+Merriam's courtship of the Sphinx lasted three months, although be did
+not know that he was courting her. He was using her as an antidote
+for remorse, until he found, too late, that he had acquired the habit.
+During that time he had received no news from home. Wade did not know
+where he was; and he was not sure of Wade's exact address, and was
+afraid to write. He thought he had better let matters rest as they
+were for a while.
+
+One afternoon he and Mrs. Conant hired two ponies and rode out along
+the mountain trail as far as the little cold river that came tumbling
+down the foothills. There they stopped for a drink, and Merriam spoke
+his piece--he proposed, as Bibb had prophesied.
+
+Mrs. Conant gave him one glance of brilliant tenderness, and then her
+face took on such a strange, haggard look that Merriam was shaken out
+of his intoxication and back to his senses.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Florence," he said, releasing her hand; "but I'll
+have to hedge on part of what I said. I can't ask you to marry me, of
+course. I killed a man in New York--a man who was my friend--shot
+him down--in quite a cowardly manner, I understand. Of course, the
+drinking didn't excuse it. Well, I couldn't resist having my say; and
+I'll always mean it. I'm here as a fugitive from justice, and--I
+suppose that ends our acquaintance."
+
+Mrs. Conant plucked little leaves assiduously from the low-hanging
+branch of a lime tree.
+
+"I suppose so," she said, in low and oddly uneven tones; "but that
+depends upon you. I'll be as honest as you were. I poisoned my
+husband. I am a self-made widow. A man cannot love a murderess. So
+I suppose that ends our acquaintance."
+
+She looked up at him slowly. His face turned a little pale, and he
+stared at her blankly, like a deaf-and-dumb man who was wondering what
+it was all about.
+
+She took a swift step toward him, with stiffened arms and eyes
+blazing.
+
+"Don't look at me like that!" she cried, as though she were in acute
+pain. "Curse me, or turn your back on me, but don't look that way.
+Am I a woman to be beaten? If I could show you--here on my arms,
+and on my back are scars--and it has been more than a year--scars
+that he made in his brutal rages. A holy nun would have risen and
+struck the fiend down. Yes, I killed him. The foul and horrible
+words that he hurled at me that last day are repeated in my ears every
+night when I sleep. And then came his blows, and the end of my
+endurance. I got the poison that afternoon. It was his custom to
+drink every night in the library before going to bed a hot punch made
+of rum and wine. Only from my fair hands would he receive it--
+because he knew the fumes of spirits always sickened me. That night
+when the maid brought it to me I sent her downstairs on an errand.
+Before taking him his drink I went to my little private cabinet and
+poured into it more than a tea-spoonful of tincture of aconite--
+enough to kill three men, so I had learned. I had drawn $6,000 that I
+had in bank, and with that and a few things in a satchel I left the
+house without any one seeing me. As I passed the library I heard him
+stagger up and fall heavily on a couch. I took a night train for New
+Orleans, and from there I sailed to the Bermudas. I finally cast
+anchor in La Paz. And now what have you to say? Can you open your
+mouth?"
+
+Merriam came back to life.
+
+"Florence," he said earnestly, "I want you. I don't care what you've
+done. If the world--"
+
+"Ralph," she interrupted, almost with a scream, "be my world!"
+
+Her eyes melted; she relaxed magnificently and swayed toward Merriam
+so suddenly that he had to jump to catch her.
+
+Dear me! in such scenes how the talk runs into artificial prose. But
+it can't be helped. It's the subconscious smell of the footlights'
+smoke that's in all of us. Stir the depths of your cook's soul
+sufficiently and she will discourse in Bulwer-Lyttonese.
+
+Merriam and Mrs. Conant were very happy. He announced their
+engagement at the Hotel Orilla del Mar. Eight foreigners and four
+native Astors pounded his back and shouted insincere congratulations
+at him. Pedrito, the Castilian-mannered barkeep, was goaded to extra
+duty until his agility would have turned a Boston cherry-phosphate
+clerk a pale lilac with envy.
+
+They were both very happy. According to the strange mathematics of
+the god of mutual affinity, the shadows that clouded their pasts when
+united became only half as dense instead of darker. They shut the
+world out and bolted the doors. Each was the other's world. Mrs.
+Conant lived again. The remembering look left her eyes. Merriam was
+with her every moment that was possible. On a little plateau under a
+grove of palms and calabash trees they were going to build a fairy
+bungalow. They were to be married in two months. Many hours of the
+day they had their heads together over the house plans. Their joint
+capital would set up a business in fruit or woods that would yield a
+comfortable support. "Good night, my world," would say Mrs. Conant
+every evening when Merriam left her for his hotel. They were very
+happy. Their love had, circumstantially, that element of melancholy
+in it that it seems to require to attain its supremest elevation. And
+it seemed that their mutual great misfortune or sin was a bond that
+nothing could sever.
+
+One day a steamer hove in the offing. Bare-legged and bare-shouldered
+La Paz scampered down to the beach, for the arrival of a steamer was
+their loop-the-loop, circus, Emancipation Day and four-o'clock tea.
+
+When the steamer was near enough, wise ones proclaimed that she was
+the _Pajaro_, bound up-coast from Callao to Panama.
+
+The _Pajaro_ put on brakes a mile off shore. Soon a boat came bobbing
+shoreward. Merriam strolled down on the beach to look on. In the
+shallow water the Carib sailors sprang out and dragged the boat with a
+mighty rush to the firm shingle. Out climbed the purser, the captain
+and two passengers, ploughing their way through the deep sand toward
+the hotel. Merriam glanced toward them with the mild interest due to
+strangers. There was something familiar to him in the walk of one of
+the passengers. He looked again, and his blood seemed to turn to
+strawberry ice cream in his veins. Burly, arrogant, debonair as ever,
+H. Ferguson Hedges, the man he had killed, was coming toward him ten
+feet away.
+
+When Hedges saw Merriam his face flushed a dark red. Then he shouted
+in his old, bluff way: "Hello, Merriam. Glad to see you. Didn't
+expect to find you out here. Quinby, this is my old friend Merriam,
+of New York--Merriam, Mr. Quinby."
+
+Merriam gave Hedges and then Quinby an ice-cold hand. "Br-r-r-r!" said
+Hedges. "But you've got a frappd flipper! Man, you're not well.
+You're as yellow as a Chinaman. Malarial here? Steer us to a bar if
+there is such a thing, and let's take a prophylactic."
+
+Merriam, still half comatose, led them toward the Hotel Orilla del
+Mar.
+
+"Quinby and I," explained Hedges, puffing through the slippery sand,
+"are looking out along the coast for some investments. We've just
+come up from Concepcin and Valparaiso and Lima. The captain of this
+subsidized ferry boat told us there was some good picking around
+here in silver mines. So we got off. Now, where is that caf,
+Merriam? Oh, in this portable soda water pavilion?"
+
+Leaving Quinby at the bar, Hedges drew Merriam aside.
+
+"Now, what does this mean?" he said, with gruff kindness. "Are you
+sulking about that fool row we had?"
+
+"I thought," stammered Merriam--"I heard--they told me you were--
+that I had--"
+
+"Well, you didn't, and I'm not," said Hedges. "That fool young
+ambulance surgeon told Wade I was a candidate for a coffin just
+because I'd got tired and quit breathing. I laid up in a private
+hospital for a month; but here I am, kicking as hard as ever. Wade
+and I tried to find you, but couldn't. Now, Merriam, shake hands and
+forget it all. I was as much to blame as you were; and the shot
+really did me good--I came out of the hospital as healthy and fit as
+a cab horse. Come on; that drink's waiting."
+
+"Old man," said Merriam, brokenly, "I don't know how to thank you--I
+--well, you know--"
+
+"Oh, forget it," boomed Hedges. "Quinby'll die of thirst if we don't
+join him."
+
+Bibb was sitting on the shady side of the gallery waiting for the
+eleven-o'clock breakfast. Presently Merriam came out and joined him.
+His eye was strangely bright.
+
+"Bibb, my boy," said he, slowly waving his hand, "do you see those
+mountains and that sea and sky and sunshine?--they're mine, Bibbsy
+--all mine."
+
+"You go in," said Bibb, "and take eight grains of quinine, right away.
+It won't do in this climate for a man to get to thinking he's
+Rockefeller, or James O'Neill either."
+
+Inside, the purser was untying a great roll of newspapers, many of
+them weeks old, gathered in the lower ports by the _Pajaro_ to be
+distributed at casual stopping-places. Thus do the beneficent voyagers
+scatter news and entertainment among the prisoners of sea and
+mountains.
+
+Tio Pancho, the hotel proprietor, set his great silver-rimmed _anteojos_
+upon his nose and divided the papers into a number of smaller rolls.
+A barefooted _muchacho_ dashed in, desiring the post of messenger.
+
+"_Bien venido_," said Tio Pancho. "This to Seora Conant; that to el
+Doctor S-S-Schlegel--_Dios_! what a name to say!--that to Seor Davis
+--one for Don Alberto. These two for the _Casa de Huespedes, Numero
+6, en la calle de las Buenas Gracias_. And say to them all, _muchacho_,
+that the _Pajaro_ sails for Panama at three this afternoon. If any have
+letters to send by the post, let them come quickly, that they may
+first pass through the _correo_."
+
+Mrs. Conant received her roll of newspapers at four o'clock. The boy
+was late in delivering them, because he had been deflected from his
+duty by an iguana that crossed his path and to which he immediately
+gave chase. But it made no hardship, for she had no letters to send.
+
+She was idling in a hammock in the patio of the house that she
+occupied, half awake, half happily dreaming of the paradise that she
+and Merriam had created out of the wrecks of their pasts. She was
+content now for the horizon of that shimmering sea to be the horizon
+of her life. They had shut out the world and closed the door.
+
+Merriam was coming to her house at seven, after his dinner at the
+hotel. She would put on a white dress and an apricot-coloured lace
+mantilla, and they would walk an hour under the cocoanut palms by the
+lagoon. She smiled contentedly, and chose a paper at random from the
+roll the boy had brought.
+
+At first the words of a certain headline of a Sunday newspaper meant
+nothing to her; they conveyed only a visualized sense of familiarity.
+The largest type ran thus: "Lloyd B. Conant secures divorce." And then
+the subheadings: "Well-known Saint Louis paint manufacturer wins
+suit, pleading one year's absence of wife." "Her mysterious
+disappearance recalled." "Nothing has been heard of her since."
+
+Twisting herself quickly out of the hammock, Mrs. Conant's eye soon
+traversed the half-column of the "Recall." It ended thus: "It will be
+remembered that Mrs. Conant disappeared one evening in March of last
+year. It was freely rumoured that her marriage with Lloyd B. Conant
+resulted in much unhappiness. Stories were not wanting to the effect
+that his cruelty toward his wife had more than once taken the form of
+physical abuse. After her departure a full bottle of tincture of
+aconite, a deadly poison, was found in a small medicine cabinet in her
+bedroom. This might have been an indication that she meditated
+suicide. It is supposed that she abandoned such an intention if she
+possessed it, and left her home instead."
+
+Mrs. Conant slowly dropped the paper, and sat on a chair, clasping her
+hands tightly.
+
+"Let me think--O God!--let me think," she whispered. "I took
+the bottle with me . . . I threw it out of the window of the train
+. . . I-- . . . there was another bottle in the cabinet . . .
+there were two, side by side--the aconite--and the valerian that I
+took when I could not sleep . . . If they found the aconite bottle
+full, why--but, he is alive, of course--I gave him only a
+harmless dose of valerian . . . I am not a murderess in fact . . .
+Ralph, I--O God, don't let this be a dream!"
+
+She went into the part of the house that she rented from the old
+Peruvian man and his wife, shut the door, and walked up and down her
+room swiftly and feverishly for half an hour. Merriam's photograph
+stood in a frame on a table. She picked it up, looked at it with a
+smile of exquisite tenderness, and--dropped four tears on it. And
+Merriam only twenty rods away! Then she stood still for ten minutes,
+looking into space. She looked into space through a slowly opening
+door. On her side of the door was the building material for a castle
+of Romance--love, an Arcady of waving palms, a lullaby of waves on
+the shore of a haven of rest, respite, peace, a lotus land of dreamy
+ease and security--a life of poetry and heart's ease and refuge.
+Romanticist, will you tell me what Mrs. Conant saw on the other side
+of the door? You cannot?--that is, you will not? Very well; then
+listen.
+
+_She saw herself go into a department store and buy five spools of
+silk thread and three yards of gingham to make an apron for the cook.
+"Shall I charge it, ma'am?" asked the clerk. As she walked out a
+lady whom she met greeted her cordially. "Oh, where did you get the
+pattern for those sleeves, dear Mrs. Conant?" she said. At the corner
+a policeman helped her across the street and touched his helmet. "Any
+callers?" she asked the maid when she reached home. "Mrs. Waldron,"
+answered the maid, "and the two Misses Jenkinson." "Very well," she
+said. "You may bring me a cup of tea, Maggie._"
+
+Mrs. Conant went to the door and called Angela, the old Peruvian
+woman. "If Mateo is there send him to me." Mateo, a half-breed,
+shuffling and old but efficient, came.
+
+"Is there a steamer or a vessel of any kind leaving this coast
+to-night or to-morrow that I can get passage on?" she asked.
+
+Mateo considered.
+
+"At Punta Reina, thirty miles down the coast, seora," he answered,
+"there is a small steamer loading with cinchona and dyewoods. She
+sails for San Francisco to-morrow at sunrise. So says my brother, who
+arrived in his sloop to-day, passing by Punta Reina."
+
+"You must take me in that sloop to that steamer to-night. Will you do
+that?"
+
+"Perhaps--" Mateo shrugged a suggestive shoulder. Mrs. Conant
+took a handful of money from a drawer and gave it to him.
+
+"Get the sloop ready behind the little point of land below the town,"
+she ordered. "Get sailors, and be ready to sail at six o'clock. In
+half an hour bring a cart partly filled with straw into the patio
+here, and take my trunk to the sloop. There is more money yet. Now,
+hurry."
+
+For one time Mateo walked away without shuffling his feet.
+
+"Angela," cried Mrs. Conant, almost fiercely, "come and help me pack.
+I am going away. Out with this trunk. My clothes first. Stir
+yourself. Those dark dresses first. Hurry."
+
+From the first she did not waver from her decision. Her view was clear
+and final. Her door had opened and let the world in. Her love for
+Merriam was not lessened; but it now appeared a hopeless and
+unrealizable thing. The visions of their future that had seemed so
+blissful and complete had vanished. She tried to assure herself that
+her renunciation was rather for his sake than for her own. Now that
+she was cleared of her burden--at least, technically--would not
+his own weigh too heavily upon him? If she should cling to him, would
+not the difference forever silently mar and corrode their happiness?
+Thus she reasoned; but there were a thousand little voices calling to
+her that she could feel rather than hear, like the hum of distant,
+powerful machinery--the little voices of the world, that, when
+raised in unison, can send their insistent call through the thickest
+door.
+
+Once while packing, a brief shadow of the lotus dream came back to
+her. She held Merriam's picture to her heart with one hand, while she
+threw a pair of shoes into the trunk with her other.
+
+At six o'clock Mateo returned and reported the sloop ready. He and
+his brother lifted the trunk into the cart, covered it with straw and
+conveyed it to the point of embarkation. From there they transferred
+it on board in the sloop's dory. Then Mateo returned for additional
+orders.
+
+Mrs. Conant was ready. She had settled all business matters with
+Angela, and was impatiently waiting. She wore a long, loose black-silk
+duster that she often walked about in when the evenings were chilly.
+On her head was a small round hat, and over it the apricot-coloured
+lace mantilla.
+
+Dusk had quickly followed the short twilight. Mateo led her by dark
+and grass-grown streets toward the point behind which the sloop was
+anchored. On turning a corner they beheld the Hotel Orilla del Mar
+three streets away, nebulously aglow with its array of kerosene lamps.
+
+Mrs. Conant paused, with streaming eyes. "I must, I _must_ see him
+once before I go," she murmured in anguish. But even then she did not
+falter in her decision. Quickly she invented a plan by which she might
+speak to him, and yet make her departure without his knowing. She
+would walk past the hotel, ask some one to call him out and talk a few
+moments on some trivial excuse, leaving him expecting to see her at
+her home at seven.
+
+She unpinned her hat and gave it to Mateo. "Keep this, and wait here
+till I come," she ordered. Then she draped the mantilla over her head
+as she usually did when walking after sunset, and went straight to the
+Orilla del Mar.
+
+She was glad to see the bulky, white-clad figure of Tio Pancho
+standing alone on the gallery.
+
+"Tio Pancho," she said, with a charming smile, "may I trouble you to
+ask Mr. Merriam to come out for just a few moments that I may speak
+with him?"
+
+Tio Pancho bowed as an elephant bows.
+
+"Buenas tardes, Seora Conant," he said, as a cavalier talks. And
+then he went on, less at his ease:
+
+"But does not the seora know that Seor Merriam sailed on the _Pajaro_
+for Panama at three o'clock of this afternoon?"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+THE THEORY AND THE HOUND
+
+
+Not many days ago my old friend from the tropics, J. P. Bridger,
+United States consul on the island of Ratona, was in the city. We
+had wassail and jubilee and saw the Flatiron building, and missed
+seeing the Bronxless menagerie by about a couple of nights. And
+then, at the ebb tide, we were walking up a street that parallels and
+parodies Broadway.
+
+A woman with a comely and mundane countenance passed us, holding in
+leash a wheezing, vicious, waddling, brute of a yellow pug. The dog
+entangled himself with Bridger's legs and mumbled his ankles in a
+snarling, peevish, sulky bite. Bridger, with a happy smile, kicked
+the breath out of the brute; the woman showered us with a quick rain
+of well-conceived adjectives that left us in no doubt as to our place
+in her opinion, and we passed on. Ten yards farther an old woman
+with disordered white hair and her bankbook tucked well hidden
+beneath her tattered shawl begged. Bridger stopped and disinterred
+for her a quarter from his holiday waistcoat.
+
+On the next corner a quarter of a ton of well-clothed man with a
+rice-powdered, fat, white jowl, stood holding the chain of a
+devil-born bulldog whose forelegs were strangers by the length of a
+dachshund. A little woman in a last-season's hat confronted him and
+wept, which was plainly all she could do, while he cursed her in low
+sweet, practised tones.
+
+Bridger smiled again--strictly to himself--and this time he took out
+a little memorandum book and made a note of it. This he had no right
+to do without due explanation, and I said so.
+
+"It's a new theory," said Bridger, "that I picked up down in Ratona.
+I've been gathering support for it as I knock about. The world isn't
+ripe for it yet, but--well I'll tell you; and then you run your
+mind back along the people you've known and see what you make of it."
+
+And so I cornered Bridger in a place where they have artificial palms
+and wine; and he told me the story which is here in my words and on
+his responsibility.
+
+One afternoon at three o'clock, on the island of Ratona, a boy raced
+along the beach screaming, "_Pajaro_, ahoy!"
+
+Thus he made known the keenness of his hearing and the justice of his
+discrimination in pitch.
+
+He who first heard and made oral proclamation concerning the toot
+of an approaching steamer's whistle, and correctly named the steamer,
+was a small hero in Ratona--until the next steamer came. Wherefore,
+there was rivalry among the barefoot youth of Ratona, and many fell
+victims to the softly blown conch shells of sloops which, as they
+enter harbour, sound surprisingly like a distant steamer's signal.
+And some could name you the vessel when its call, in your duller
+ears, sounded no louder than the sigh of the wind through the
+branches of the cocoanut palms.
+
+But to-day he who proclaimed the _Pajaro_ gained his honours. Ratona
+bent its ear to listen; and soon the deep-tongued blast grew louder
+and nearer, and at length Ratona saw above the line of palms on the
+low "point" the two black funnels of the fruiter slowly creeping
+toward the mouth of the harbour.
+
+You must know that Ratona is an island twenty miles off the south of
+a South American republic. It is a port of that republic; and it
+sleeps sweetly in a smiling sea, toiling not nor spinning; fed by the
+abundant tropics where all things "ripen, cease and fall toward the
+grave."
+
+Eight hundred people dream life away in a green-embowered village
+that follows the horseshoe curve of its bijou harbour. They are
+mostly Spanish and Indian _mestizos_, with a shading of San Domingo
+Negroes, a lightening of pure-blood Spanish officials and a slight
+leavening of the froth of three or four pioneering white races. No
+steamers touch at Ratona save the fruit steamers which take on their
+banana inspectors there on their way to the coast. They leave Sunday
+newspapers, ice, quinine, bacon, watermelons and vaccine matter at
+the island and that is about all the touch Ratona gets with the
+world.
+
+The _Pajaro_ paused at the mouth of the harbour, rolling heavily in
+the swell that sent the whitecaps racing beyond the smooth water
+inside. Already two dories from the village--one conveying fruit
+inspectors, the other going for what it could get--were halfway out
+to the steamer.
+
+The inspectors' dory was taken on board with them, and the _Pajaro_
+steamed away for the mainland for its load of fruit.
+
+The other boat returned to Ratona bearing a contribution from the
+_Pajaro's_ store of ice, the usual roll of newspapers and one
+passenger--Taylor Plunkett, sheriff of Chatham County, Kentucky.
+
+Bridger, the United States consul at Ratona, was cleaning his rifle
+in the official shanty under a bread-fruit tree twenty yards from the
+water of the harbour. The consul occupied a place somewhat near the
+tail of his political party's procession. The music of the band
+wagon sounded very faintly to him in the distance. The plums of
+office went to others. Bridger's share of the spoils--the
+consulship at Ratona--was little more than a prune--a dried prune
+from the boarding-house department of the public crib. But $900
+yearly was opulence in Ratona. Besides, Bridger had contracted a
+passion for shooting alligators in the lagoons near his consulate,
+and was not unhappy.
+
+He looked up from a careful inspection of his rifle lock and saw a
+broad man filling his doorway. A broad, noiseless, slow-moving man,
+sunburned almost to the brown of Vandyke. A man of forty-five,
+neatly clothed in homespun, with scanty light hair, a close-clipped
+brown-and-gray beard and pale-blue eyes expressing mildness and
+simplicity.
+
+"You are Mr. Bridger, the consul," said the broad man. "They
+directed me here. Can you tell me what those big bunches of things
+like gourds are in those trees that look like feather dusters along
+the edge of the water?"
+
+"Take that chair," said the consul, reoiling his cleaning rag.
+"No, the other one--that bamboo thing won't hold you. Why, they're
+cocoanuts--green cocoanuts. The shell of 'em is always a light
+green before they're ripe."
+
+"Much obliged," said the other man, sitting down carefully. "I
+didn't quite like to tell the folks at home they were olives unless I
+was sure about it. My name is Plunkett. I'm sheriff of Chatham
+County, Kentucky. I've got extradition papers in my pocket
+authorizing the arrest of a man on this island. They've been signed
+by the President of this country, and they're in correct shape. The
+man's name is Wade Williams. He's in the cocoanut raising
+business. What he's wanted for is the murder of his wife two years
+ago. Where can I find him?"
+
+The consul squinted an eye and looked through his rifle barrel.
+
+"There's nobody on the island who calls himself 'Williams,'" he
+remarked.
+
+"Didn't suppose there was," said Plunkett mildly. "He'll do by any
+other name."
+
+"Besides myself," said Bridger, "there are only two Americans on
+Ratona--Bob Reeves and Henry Morgan."
+
+"The man I want sells cocoanuts," suggested Plunkett.
+
+"You see that cocoanut walk extending up to the point?" said the
+consul, waving his hand toward the open door. "That belongs to Bob
+Reeves. Henry Morgan owns half the trees to loo'ard on the island."
+
+"One, month ago," said the sheriff, "Wade Williams wrote a
+confidential letter to a man in Chatham county, telling him where he
+was and how he was getting along. The letter was lost; and the person
+that found it gave it away. They sent me after him, and I've got the
+papers. I reckon he's one of your cocoanut men for certain."
+
+"You've got his picture, of course," said Bridger. "It might be
+Reeves or Morgan, but I'd hate to think it. They're both as fine
+fellows as you'd meet in an all-day auto ride."
+
+"No," doubtfully answered Plunkett; "there wasn't any picture of
+Williams to be had. And I never saw him myself. I've been sheriff
+only a year. But I've got a pretty accurate description of him. About
+5 feet 11; dark-hair and eyes; nose inclined to be Roman; heavy about
+the shoulders; strong, white teeth, with none missing; laughs a good
+deal, talkative; drinks considerably but never to intoxication; looks
+you square in the eye when talking; age thirty-five. Which one of
+your men does that description fit?"
+
+The consul grinned broadly.
+
+"I'll tell you what you do," he said, laying down his rifle and
+slipping on his dingy black alpaca coat. "You come along, Mr.
+Plunkett, and I'll take you up to see the boys. If you can tell
+which one of 'em your description fits better than it does the
+other you have the advantage of me."
+
+Bridger conducted the sheriff out and along the hard beach close to
+which the tiny houses of the village were distributed. Immediately
+back of the town rose sudden, small, thickly wooded hills. Up one of
+these, by means of steps cut in the hard clay, the consul led
+Plunkett. On the very verge of an eminence was perched a two-room
+wooden cottage with a thatched roof. A Carib woman was washing
+clothes outside. The consul ushered the sheriff to the door of the
+room that overlooked the harbour.
+
+Two men were in the room, about to sit down, in their shirt sleeves,
+to a table spread for dinner. They bore little resemblance one to
+the other in detail; but the general description given by Plunkett
+could have been justly applied to either. In height, colour of hair,
+shape of nose, build and manners each of them tallied with it. They
+were fair types of jovial, ready-witted, broad-gauged Americans who
+had gravitated together for companionship in an alien land.
+
+"Hello, Bridger" they called in unison at sight Of the consul. "Come
+and have dinner with us!" And then they noticed Plunkett at his
+heels, and came forward with hospitable curiosity.
+
+"Gentlemen," said the consul, his voice taking on unaccustomed
+formality, "this is Mr. Plunkett. Mr. Plunkett--Mr. Reeves and Mr.
+Morgan."
+
+The cocoanut barons greeted the newcomer joyously. Reeves seemed
+about an inch taller than Morgan, but his laugh was not quite as
+loud. Morgan's eyes were deep brown; Reeves's were black. Reeves
+was the host and busied himself with fetching other chairs and
+calling to the Carib woman for supplemental table ware. It was
+explained that Morgan lived in a bamboo shack to "loo'ard," but that
+every day the two friends dined together. Plunkett stood still
+during the preparations, looking about mildly with his pale-blue
+eyes. Bridger looked apologetic and uneasy.
+
+At length two other covers were laid and the company was assigned to
+places. Reeves and Morgan stood side by side across the table from
+the visitors. Reeves nodded genially as a signal for all to seat
+themselves. And then suddenly Plunkett raised his hand with a
+gesture of authority. He was looking straight between Reeves and
+Morgan.
+
+"Wade Williams," he said quietly, "you are under arrest for murder."
+
+Reeves and Morgan instantly exchanged a quick, bright glance, the
+quality of which was interrogation, with a seasoning of surprise.
+Then, simultaneously they turned to the speaker with a puzzled and
+frank deprecation in their gaze.
+
+"Can't say that we understand you, Mr. Plunkett," said Morgan,
+cheerfully. "Did you say 'Williams'?"
+
+"What's the joke, Bridgy?" asked Reeves, turning, to the consul with
+a smile.
+
+Before Bridger could answer Plunkett spoke again.
+
+"I'll explain," he said, quietly. "One of you don't need any
+explanation, but this is for the other one. One of you is Wade
+Williams of Chatham County, Kentucky. You murdered your wife on May
+5, two years ago, after ill-treating and abusing her continually for
+five years. I have the proper papers in my pocket for taking you
+back with me, and you are going. We will return on the fruit steamer
+that comes back by this island to-morrow to leave its inspectors. I
+acknowledge, gentlemen, that I'm not quite sure which one of you is
+Williams. But Wade Williams goes back to Chatham County to-morrow. I
+want you to understand that."
+
+A great sound of merry laughter from Morgan and Reeves went out over
+the still harbour. Two or three fishermen in the fleet of sloops
+anchored there looked up at the house of the diablos Americanos on
+the hill and wondered.
+
+"My dear Mr. Plunkett," cried Morgan, conquering his mirth, "the
+dinner is getting, cold. Let us sit down and eat. I am anxious to
+get my spoon into that shark-fin soup. Business afterward."
+
+"Sit down, gentlemen, if you please," added Reeves, pleasantly. "I
+am sure Mr. Plunkett will not object. Perhaps a little time may be of
+advantage to him in identifying--the gentleman he wishes to
+arrest."
+
+"No objections, I'm sure," said Plunkett, dropping into his chair
+heavily. "I'm hungry myself. I didn't want to accept the
+hospitality of you folks without giving you notice; that's all."
+
+Reeves set bottles and glasses on the table.
+
+"There's cognac," he said, "and anisada, and Scotch 'smoke,' and rye.
+Take your choice."
+
+Bridger chose rye, Reeves poured three fingers of Scotch for himself,
+Morgan took the same. The sheriff, against much protestation, filled
+his glass from the water bottle.
+
+"Here's to the appetite," said Reeves, raising his glass, "of Mr.
+Williams!" Morgan's laugh and his drink encountering sent him into a
+choking splutter. All began to pay attention to the dinner, which
+was well cooked and palatable.
+
+"Williams!" called Plunkett, suddenly and sharply.
+
+All looked up wonderingly. Reeves found the sheriff's mild eye
+resting upon him. He flushed a little.
+
+"See here," he said, with some asperity, "my name's Reeves, and I
+don't want you to--" But the comedy of the thing came to his rescue,
+and he ended with a laugh.
+
+"I suppose, Mr. Plunkett," said Morgan, carefully seasoning an
+alligator pear, "that you are aware of the fact that you will import
+a good deal of trouble for yourself into Kentucky if you take back
+the wrong man--that is, of course, if you take anybody back?"
+
+"Thank you for the salt," said the sheriff. "Oh, I'll take somebody
+back. It'll be one of you two gentlemen. Yes, I know I'd get stuck
+for damages if I make a mistake. But I'm going to try to get the
+right man."
+
+"I'll tell you what you do," said Morgan, leaning forward with a
+jolly twinkle in his eyes. "You take me. I'll go without any
+trouble. The cocoanut business hasn't panned out well this year, and
+I'd like to make some extra money out of your bondsmen."
+
+"That's not fair," chimed in Reeves. "I got only $16 a thousand for
+my last shipment. Take me, Mr. Plunkett."
+
+"I'll take Wade Williams," said the sheriff, patiently, "or I'll come
+pretty close to it."
+
+"It's like dining with a ghost," remarked Morgan, with a pretended
+shiver. "The ghost of a murderer, too! Will somebody pass the
+toothpicks to the shade of the naughty Mr. Williams?"
+
+Plunkett seemed as unconcerned as if he were dining at his own table
+in Chatham County. He was a gallant trencherman, and the strange
+tropic viands tickled his palate. Heavy, commonplace, almost
+slothful in his movements, he appeared to be devoid of all the
+cunning and watchfulness of the sleuth. He even ceased to observe,
+with any sharpness or attempted discrimination, the two men, one of
+whom he had undertaken with surprising self-confidence, to drag
+away upon the serious charge of wife-murder. Here, indeed, was a
+problem set before him that if wrongly solved would have amounted to
+his serious discomfiture, yet there he sat puzzling his soul (to all
+appearances) over the novel flavour of a broiled iguana cutlet.
+
+The consul felt a decided discomfort. Reeves and Morgan were his
+friends and pals; yet the sheriff from Kentucky had a certain right
+to his official aid and moral support. So Bridger sat the silentest
+around the board and tried to estimate the peculiar situation. His
+conclusion was that both Reeves and Morgan, quickwitted, as he knew
+them to be, had conceived at the moment of Plunkett's disclosure of
+his mission--and in the brief space of a lightning flash--the
+idea that the other might be the guilty Williams; and that each of
+them had decided in that moment loyally to protect his comrade
+against the doom that threatened him. This was the consul's theory
+and if he had been a bookmaker at a race of wits for life and liberty
+he would have offered heavy odds against the plodding sheriff from
+Chatham County, Kentucky.
+
+When the meal was concluded the Carib woman came and removed the
+dishes and cloth. Reeves strewed the table with excellent cigars,
+and Plunkett, with the others, lighted one of these with evident
+gratification.
+
+"I may be dull," said Morgan, with a grin and a wink at Bridger; "but
+I want to know if I am. Now, I say this is all a joke of Mr.
+Plunkett's, concocted to frighten two babes-in-the-woods. Is this
+Williamson to be taken seriously or not?"
+
+"'Williams,'" corrected Plunkett gravely. "I never got off any jokes
+in my life. I know I wouldn't travel 2,000 miles to get off a poor
+one as this would be if I didn't take Wade Williams back with me.
+Gentlemen!" continued the sheriff, now letting his mild eyes travel
+impartially from one of the company to another, "see if you can find
+any joke in this case. Wade Williams is listening to the words I
+utter now; but out of politeness, I will speak of him as a third
+person. For five years he made his wife lead the life of a dog--No;
+I'll take that back. No dog in Kentucky was ever treated as she
+was. He spent the money that she brought him--spent it at races, at
+the card table and on horses and hunting. He was a good fellow to
+his friends, but a cold, sullen demon at home. He wound up the five
+years of neglect by striking her with his closed hand--a hand as
+hard as a stone--when she was ill and weak from suffering. She
+died the next day; and he skipped. That's all there is to it. It's
+enough. I never saw Williams; but I knew his wife. I'm not a man to
+tell half. She and I were keeping company when she met him. She
+went to Louisville on a visit and saw him there. I'll admit that he
+spoilt my chances in no time. I lived then on the edge of the
+Cumberland mountains. I was elected sheriff of Chatham County a year
+after Wade Williams killed his wife. My official duty sends me out
+here after him; but I'll admit that there's personal feeling, too.
+And he's going back with me. Mr.--er--Reeves, will you pass me a
+match?
+
+"Awfully imprudent of Williams," said Morgan, putting his feet up
+against the wall, "to strike a Kentucky lady. Seems to me I've heard
+they were scrappers."
+
+"Bad, bad Williams," said Reeves, pouring out more Scotch.
+
+The two men spoke lightly, but the consul saw and felt the tension
+and the carefulness in their actions and words. "Good old fellows,"
+he said to himself; "they're both all right. Each of 'em is standing
+by the other like a little brick church."
+
+And then a dog walked into the room where they sat--a black-and-tan
+hound, long-eared, lazy, confident of welcome.
+
+Plunkett turned his head and looked at the animal, which halted,
+confidently, within a few feet of his chair.
+
+Suddenly the sheriff, with a deep-mouthed oath, left his seat and,
+bestowed upon the dog a vicious and heavy kick, with his ponderous
+shoe.
+
+The hound, heartbroken, astonished, with flapping ears and incurved
+tail, uttered a piercing yelp of pain and surprise.
+
+Reeves and the consul remained in their chairs, saying nothing, but
+astonished at the unexpected show of intolerance from the easy-going
+man from Chatham county.
+
+But Morgan, with a suddenly purpling face, leaped, to his feet and
+raised a threatening arm above the guest.
+
+"You--brute!" he shouted, passionately; "why did you do that?"
+
+Quickly the amenities returned, Plunkett muttered some indistinct
+apology and regained his seat. Morgan with a decided effort
+controlled his indignation and also returned to his chair.
+
+And then Plunkett with the spring of a tiger, leaped around the
+corner of the table and snapped handcuffs on the paralyzed Morgan's
+wrists.
+
+"Hound-lover and woman-killer!" he cried; "get ready to meet your
+God."
+
+When Bridger had finished I asked him:
+
+"Did he get the right man?"
+
+"He did," said the Consul.
+
+"And how did he know?" I inquired, being in a kind of bewilderment.
+
+"When he put Morgan in the dory," answered Bridger, "the next day to
+take him aboard the _Pajaro_, this man Plunkett stopped to shake hands
+with me and I asked him the same question."
+
+"'Mr. Bridger,' said he, 'I'm a Kentuckian, and I've seen a great
+deal of both men and animals. And I never yet saw a man that was
+overfond of horses and dogs but what was cruel to women.'"
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+THE HYPOTHESES OF FAILURE
+
+
+Lawyer Gooch bestowed his undivided attention upon the engrossing arts
+of his profession. But one flight of fancy did he allow his mind to
+entertain. He was fond of likening his suite of office rooms to the
+bottom of a ship. The rooms were three in number, with a door
+opening from one to another. These doors could also be closed.
+
+"Ships," Lawyer Gooch would say, "are constructed for safety, with
+separate, water-tight compartments in their bottoms. If one
+compartment springs a leak it fills with water; but the good ship goes
+on unhurt. Were it not for the separating bulkheads one leak would
+sink the vessel. Now it often happens that while I am occupied with
+clients, other clients with conflicting interests call. With the
+assistance of Archibald--an office boy with a future--I cause the
+dangerous influx to be diverted into separate compartments, while I
+sound with my legal plummet the depth of each. If necessary, they
+may be baled into the hallway and permitted to escape by way of the
+stairs, which we may term the lee scuppers. Thus the good ship of
+business is kept afloat; whereas if the element that supports her were
+allowed to mingle freely in her hold we might be swamped--ha, ha, ha!"
+
+The law is dry. Good jokes are few. Surely it might be permitted
+Lawyer Gooch to mitigate the bore of briefs, the tedium of torts and
+the prosiness of processes with even so light a levy upon the good
+property of humour.
+
+Lawyer Gooch's practice leaned largely to the settlement of marital
+infelicities. Did matrimony languish through complications, he
+mediated, soothed and arbitrated. Did it suffer from implications,
+he readjusted, defended and championed. Did it arrive at the
+extremity of duplications, he always got light sentences for his
+clients.
+
+But not always was Lawyer Gooch the keen, armed, wily belligerent,
+ready with his two-edged sword to lop off the shackles of Hymen. He
+had been known to build up instead of demolishing, to reunite instead
+of severing, to lead erring and foolish ones back into the fold
+instead of scattering the flock. Often had he by his eloquent and
+moving appeals sent husband and wife, weeping, back into each other's
+arms. Frequently he had coached childhood so successfully that, at
+the psychological moment (and at a given signal) the plaintive pipe of
+"Papa, won't you tum home adain to me and muvver?" had won the day
+and upheld the pillars of a tottering home.
+
+Unprejudiced persons admitted that Lawyer Gooch received as big fees
+from these reyoked clients as would have been paid him had the cases
+been contested in court. Prejudiced ones intimated that his fees were
+doubled, because the penitent couples always came back later for the
+divorce, anyhow.
+
+There came a season in June when the legal ship of Lawyer Gooch (to
+borrow his own figure) was nearly becalmed. The divorce mill grinds
+slowly in June. It is the month of Cupid and Hymen.
+
+Lawyer Gooch, then, sat idle in the middle room of his clientless
+suite. A small anteroom connected--or rather separated--this
+apartment from the hallway. Here was stationed Archibald, who wrested
+from visitors their cards or oral nomenclature which he bore to his
+master while they waited.
+
+Suddenly, on this day, there came a great knocking at the outermost
+door.
+
+Archibald, opening it, was thrust aside as superfluous by the visitor,
+who without due reverence at once penetrated to the office of Lawyer
+Gooch and threw himself with good-natured insolence into a comfortable
+chair facing that gentlemen.
+
+"You are Phineas C. Gooch, attorney-at-law?" said the visitor, his
+tone of voice and inflection making his words at once a question, an
+assertion and an accusation.
+
+Before committing himself by a reply, the lawyer estimated his
+possible client in one of his brief but shrewd and calculating
+glances.
+
+The man was of the emphatic type--large-sized, active, bold and
+debonair in demeanour, vain beyond a doubt, slightly swaggering, ready
+and at ease. He was well-clothed, but with a shade too much
+ornateness. He was seeking a lawyer; but if that fact would seem to
+saddle him with troubles they were not patent in his beaming eye and
+courageous air.
+
+"My name is Gooch," at length the lawyer admitted. Upon pressure he
+would also have confessed to the Phineas C. But he did not consider it
+good practice to volunteer information. "I did not receive your
+card," he continued, by way of rebuke, "so I--"
+
+"I know you didn't," remarked the visitor, coolly; "And you won't just
+yet. Light up?" He threw a leg over an arm of his chair, and tossed
+a handful of rich-hued cigars upon the table. Lawyer Gooch knew the
+brand. He thawed just enough to accept the invitation to smoke.
+
+"You are a divorce lawyer," said the cardless visitor. This time there
+was no interrogation in his voice. Nor did his words constitute a
+simple assertion. They formed a charge--a denunciation--as one would
+say to a dog: "You are a dog." Lawyer Gooch was silent under the
+imputation.
+
+"You handle," continued the visitor, "all the various ramifications of
+busted-up connubiality. You are a surgeon, we might saw, who extracts
+Cupid's darts when he shoots 'em into the wrong parties. You furnish
+patent, incandescent lights for premises where the torch of Hymen has
+burned so low you can't light a cigar at it. Am I right, Mr. Gooch?"
+
+"I have undertaken cases," said the lawyer, guardedly, "in the line to
+which your figurative speech seems to refer. Do you wish to consult me
+professionally, Mr.--" The lawyer paused, with significance.
+
+"Not yet," said the other, with an arch wave of his cigar, "not just
+yet. Let us approach the subject with the caution that should have
+been used in the original act that makes this pow-wow necessary.
+There exists a matrimonial jumble to be straightened out. But before
+I give you names I want your honest--well, anyhow, your professional
+opinion on the merits of the mix-up. I want you to size up the
+catastrophe--abstractly--you understand? I'm Mr. Nobody; and I've got
+a story to tell you. Then you say what's what. Do you get my
+wireless?"
+
+"You want to state a hypothetical case?" suggested Lawyer Gooch.
+
+"That's the word I was after. 'Apothecary' was the best shot I could
+make at it in my mind. The hypothetical goes. I'll state the case.
+Suppose there's a woman--a deuced fine-looking woman--who has run
+away from her husband and home? She's badly mashed on another man who
+went to her town to work up some real estate business. Now, we may as
+well call this woman's husband Thomas R. Billings, for that's his
+name. I'm giving you straight tips on the cognomens. The Lothario
+chap is Henry K. Jessup. The Billingses lived in a little town called
+Susanville--a good many miles from here. Now, Jessup leaves
+Susanville two weeks ago. The next day Mrs. Billings follows him.
+She's dead gone on this man Jessup; you can bet your law library on
+that."
+
+Lawyer Gooch's client said this with such unctuous satisfaction that
+even the callous lawyer experienced a slight ripple of repulsion. He
+now saw clearly in his fatuous visitor the conceit of the lady-killer,
+the egoistic complacency of the successful trifler.
+
+"Now," continued the visitor, "suppose this Mrs. Billings wasn't happy
+at home? We'll say she and her husband didn't gee worth a cent.
+They've got incompatibility to burn. The things she likes, Billings
+wouldn't have as a gift with trading-stamps. It's Tabby and Rover
+with them all the time. She's an educated woman in science and
+culture, and she reads things out loud at meetings. Billings is not
+on. He don't appreciate progress and obelisks and ethics, and
+things of that sort. Old Billings is simply a blink when it comes to
+such things. The lady is out and out above his class. Now, lawyer,
+don't it look like a fair equalization of rights and wrongs that a
+woman like that should be allowed to throw down Billings and take the
+man that can appreciate her?
+
+"Incompatibility," said Lawyer Gooch, "is undoubtedly the source of
+much marital discord and unhappiness. Where it is positively proved,
+divorce would seem to be the equitable remedy. Are you--excuse me--is
+this man Jessup one to whom the lady may safely trust her future?"
+
+"Oh, you can bet on Jessup," said the client, with a confident wag of
+his head. "Jessup's all right. He'll do the square thing. Why, he
+left Susanville just to keep people from talking about Mrs. Billings.
+But she followed him up, and now, of course, he'll stick to her.
+When she gets a divorce, all legal and proper, Jessup will do the
+proper thing."
+
+"And now," said Lawyer Gooch, "continuing the hypothesis, if you
+prefer, and supposing that my services should be desired in the case,
+what--"
+
+The client rose impulsively to his feet.
+
+"Oh, dang the hypothetical business," he exclaimed, impatiently.
+"Let's let her drop, and get down to straight talk. You ought to know
+who I am by this time. I want that woman to have her divorce. I'll
+pay for it. The day you set Mrs. Billings free I'll pay you five
+hundred dollars."
+
+Lawyer Gooch's client banged his fist upon the table to punctuate his
+generosity.
+
+"If that is the case--" began the lawyer.
+
+"Lady to see you, sir," bawled Archibald, bouncing in from his
+anteroom. He had orders to always announce immediately any client
+that might come. There was no sense in turning business away.
+
+Lawyer Gooch took client number one by the arm and led him suavely
+into one of the adjoining rooms. "Favour me by remaining here a few
+minutes, sir," said he. "I will return and resume our consultation
+with the least possible delay. I am rather expecting a visit from a
+very wealthy old lady in connection with a will. I will not keep you
+waiting long."
+
+The breezy gentleman seated himself with obliging acquiescence, and
+took up a magazine. The lawyer returned to the middle office,
+carefully closing behind him the connecting door.
+
+"Show the lady in, Archibald," he said to the office boy, who was
+awaiting the order.
+
+A tall lady, of commanding presence and sternly handsome, entered
+the room. She wore robes--robes; not clothes--ample and fluent.
+In her eye could be perceived the lambent flame of genius and soul.
+In her hand was a green bag of the capacity of a bushel, and an
+umbrella that also seemed to wear a robe, ample and fluent. She
+accepted a chair.
+
+"Are you Mr. Phineas C. Gooch, the lawyer?" she asked, in formal and
+unconciliatory tones.
+
+"I am," answered Lawyer Gooch, without circumlocution. He never
+circumlocuted when dealing with a woman. Women circumlocute. Time is
+wasted when both sides in debate employ the same tactics.
+
+"As a lawyer, sir," began the lady, "you may have acquired some
+knowledge of the human heart. Do you believe that the pusillanimous
+and petty conventions of our artificial social life should stand as an
+obstacle in the way of a noble and affectionate heart when it finds
+its true mate among the miserable and worthless wretches in the world
+that are called men?"
+
+"Madam," said Lawyer Gooch, in the tone that he used in curbing his
+female clients, "this is an office for conducting the practice of law.
+I am a lawyer, not a philosopher, nor the editor of an 'Answers to the
+Lovelorn' column of a newspaper. I have other clients waiting. I
+will ask you kindly to come to the point."
+
+"Well, you needn't get so stiff around the gills about it," said the
+lady, with a snap of her luminous eyes and a startling gyration of her
+umbrella. "Business is what I've come for. I want your opinion in
+the matter of a suit for divorce, as the vulgar would call it, but
+which is really only the readjustment of the false and ignoble
+conditions that the short-sighted laws of man have interposed between
+a loving--"
+
+"I beg your pardon, madam," interrupted Lawyer Gooch, with some
+impatience, "for reminding you again that this is a law office.
+Perhaps Mrs. Wilcox--"
+
+"Mrs. Wilcox is all right," cut in the lady, with a hint of asperity.
+"And so are Tolstoi, and Mrs. Gertrude Atherton, and Omar Khayyam, and
+Mr. Edward Bok. I've read 'em all. I would like to discuss with you
+the divine right of the soul as opposed to the freedom-destroying
+restrictions of a bigoted and narrow-minded society. But I will
+proceed to business. I would prefer to lay the matter before you in
+an impersonal way until you pass upon its merits. That is to describe
+it as a supposable instance, without--"
+
+"You wish to state a hypothetical case?" said Lawyer Gooch.
+
+"I was going to say that," said the lady, sharply. "Now, suppose there
+is a woman who is all soul and heart and aspirations for a complete
+existence. This woman has a husband who is far below her in intellect,
+in taste--in everything. Bah! he is a brute. He despises literature.
+He sneers at the lofty thoughts of the world's great thinkers. He
+thinks only of real estate and such sordid things. He is no mate for a
+woman with soul. We will say that this unfortunate wife one day meets
+with her ideal--a man with brain and heart and force. She loves him.
+Although this man feels the thrill of a new-found affinity he is too
+noble, too honourable to declare himself. He flies from the presence
+of his beloved. She flies after him, trampling, with superb
+indifference, upon the fetters with which an unenlightened social
+system would bind her. Now, what will a divorce cost? Eliza Ann
+Timmins, the poetess of Sycamore Gap, got one for three hundred and
+forty dollars. Can I--I mean can this lady I speak of get one that
+cheap?"
+
+"Madam," said Lawyer Gooch, "your last two or three sentences delight
+me with their intelligence and clearness. Can we not now abandon the
+hypothetical and come down to names and business?"
+
+"I should say so," exclaimed the lady, adopting the practical with
+admirable readiness. "Thomas R. Billings is the name of the low
+brute who stands between the happiness of his legal--his legal, but
+not his spiritual--wife and Henry K. Jessup, the noble man whom
+nature intended for her mate. I," concluded the client, with an air
+of dramatic revelation, "am Mrs. Billings!"
+
+"Gentlemen to see you, sir," shouted Archibald, invading the room
+almost at a handspring. Lawyer Gooch arose from his chair.
+
+"Mrs. Billings," he said courteously, "allow me to conduct you into
+the adjoining office apartment for a few minutes. I am expecting a
+very wealthy old gentleman on business connected with a will. In a
+very short while I will join you, and continue our consultation."
+
+With his accustomed chivalrous manner, Lawyer Gooch ushered his
+soulful client into the remaining unoccupied room, and came out,
+closing the door with circumspection.
+
+The next visitor introduced by Archibald was a thin, nervous,
+irritable-looking man of middle age, with a worried and apprehensive
+expression of countenance. He carried in one hand a small satchel,
+which he set down upon the floor beside the chair which the lawyer
+placed for him. His clothing was of good quality, but it was worn
+without regard to neatness or style, and appeared to be covered with
+the dust of travel.
+
+"You make a specialty of divorce cases," he said, in, an agitated but
+business-like tone.
+
+"I may say," began Lawyer Gooch, "that my practice has not
+altogether avoided--"
+
+"I know you do," interrupted client number three. "You needn't tell
+me. I've heard all about you. I have a case to lay before you
+without necessarily disclosing any connection that I might have with
+it--that is--"
+
+"You wish," said Lawyer Gooch, "to state a hypothetical case.
+
+"You may call it that. I am a plain man of business. I will be as
+brief as possible. We will first take up hypothetical woman. We will
+say she is married uncongenially. In many ways she is a superior
+woman. Physically she is considered to be handsome. She is devoted
+to what she calls literature--poetry and prose, and such stuff. Her
+husband is a plain man in the business walks of life. Their home has
+not been happy, although the husband has tried to make it so. Some
+time ago a man--a stranger--came to the peaceful town in which
+they lived and engaged in some real estate operations. This woman met
+him, and became unaccountably infatuated with him. Her attentions
+became so open that the man felt the community to be no safe place for
+him, so he left it. She abandoned husband and home, and followed him.
+She forsook her home, where she was provided with every comfort, to
+follow this man who had inspired her with such a strange affection.
+Is there anything more to be deplored," concluded the client, in a
+trembling voice, "than the wrecking of a home by a woman's
+uncalculating folly?"
+
+Lawyer Gooch delivered the cautious opinion that there was not.
+
+"This man she has gone to join," resumed the visitor, "is not the man
+to make her happy. It is a wild and foolish self-deception that makes
+her think he will. Her husband, in spite of their many disagreements,
+is the only one capable of dealing with her sensitive and peculiar
+nature. But this she does not realize now."
+
+"Would you consider a divorce the logical cure in the case you
+present?" asked Lawyer Gooch, who felt that the conversation was
+wandering too far from the field of business.
+
+"A divorce!" exclaimed the client, feelingly--almost tearfully.
+"No, no--not that. I have read, Mr. Gooch, of many instances where
+your sympathy and kindly interest led you to act as a mediator
+between estranged husband and wife, and brought them together again.
+Let us drop the hypothetical case--I need conceal no longer that it
+is I who am the sufferer in this sad affair--the names you shall
+have--Thomas R. Billings and wife--and Henry K. Jessup, the man
+with whom she is infatuated."
+
+Client number three laid his hand upon Mr. Gooch's arm. Deep emotion
+was written upon his careworn face. "For Heaven's sake", he said
+fervently, "help me in this hour of trouble. Seek out Mrs. Billings,
+and persuade her to abandon this distressing pursuit of her lamentable
+folly. Tell her, Mr. Gooch, that her husband is willing to receive
+her back to his heart and home--promise her anything that will
+induce her to return. I have heard of your success in these matters.
+Mrs. Billings cannot be very far away. I am worn out with travel
+and weariness. Twice during the pursuit I saw her, but various
+circumstances prevented our having an interview. Will you undertake
+this mission for me, Mr. Gooch, and earn my everlasting gratitude?"
+
+"It is true," said Lawyer Gooch, frowning slightly at the other's last
+words, but immediately calling up an expression of virtuous
+benevolence, "that on a number of occasions I have been successful in
+persuading couples who sought the severing of their matrimonial bonds
+to think better of their rash intentions and return to their homes
+reconciled. But I assure you that the work is often exceedingly
+difficult. The amount of argument, perseverance, and, if I may be
+allowed to say it, eloquence that it requires would astonish you. But
+this is a case in which my sympathies would be wholly enlisted. I
+feel deeply for you sir, and I would be most happy to see husband and
+wife reunited. But my time," concluded the lawyer, looking at his
+watch as if suddenly reminded of the fact, "is valuable."
+
+"I am aware of that," said the client, "and if you will take the case
+and persuade Mrs. Billings to return home and leave the man alone that
+she is following--on that day I will pay you the sum of one thousand
+dollars. I have made a little money in real estate during the recent
+boom in Susanville, and I will not begrudge that amount."
+
+"Retain your seat for a few moments, please," said Lawyer Gooch,
+arising, and again consulting his watch. "I have another client
+waiting in an adjoining room whom I had very nearly forgotten. I will
+return in the briefest possible space."
+
+The situation was now one that fully satisfied Lawyer Gooch's love of
+intricacy and complication. He revelled in cases that presented such
+subtle problems and possibilities. It pleased him to think that he
+was master of the happiness and fate of the three individuals who sat,
+unconscious of one another's presence, within his reach. His old
+figure of the ship glided into his mind. But now the figure failed,
+for to have filled every compartment of an actual vessel would have
+been to endanger her safety; with his compartments full, his ship of
+affairs could but sail on to the advantageous port of a fine, fat fee.
+The thing for him to do, of course, was to wring the best bargain he
+could from some one of his anxious cargo.
+
+First he called to the office boy: "Lock the outer door, Archibald,
+and admit no one." Then he moved, with long, silent strides into the
+room in which client number one waited. That gentleman sat, patiently
+scanning the pictures in the magazine, with a cigar in his mouth and
+his feet upon a table.
+
+"Well," he remarked, cheerfully, as the lawyer entered, "have you made
+up your mind? Does five hundred dollars go for getting the fair lady
+a divorce?"
+
+"You mean that as a retainer?" asked Lawyer Gooch, softly
+interrogative.
+
+"Hey? No; for the whole job. It's enough, ain't it?"
+
+"My fee," said Lawyer Gooch, "would be one thousand five hundred
+dollars. Five hundred dollars down, and the remainder upon issuance
+of the divorce."
+
+A loud whistle came from client number one. His feet descended to the
+floor.
+
+"Guess we can't close the deal," he said, arising, "I cleaned up five
+hundred dollars in a little real estate dicker down in Susanville.
+I'd do anything I could to free the lady, but it out-sizes my pile."
+
+"Could you stand one thousand two hundred dollars?" asked the lawyer,
+insinuatingly.
+
+"Five hundred is my limit, I tell you. Guess I'll have to hunt up a
+cheaper lawyer." The client put on his hat.
+
+"Out this way, please," said Lawyer Gooch, opening the door that led
+into the hallway.
+
+As the gentleman flowed out of the compartment and down the stairs,
+Lawyer Gooch smiled to himself. "Exit Mr. Jessup," he murmured, as he
+fingered the Henry Clay tuft of hair at his ear. "And now for the
+forsaken husband." He returned to the middle office, and assumed a
+businesslike manner.
+
+"I understand," he said to client number three, "that you agree to pay
+one thousand dollars if I bring about, or am instrumental in bringing
+about, the return of Mrs. Billings to her home, and her abandonment of
+her infatuated pursuit of the man for whom she has conceived such a
+violent fancy. Also that the case is now unreservedly in my hands on
+that basis. Is that correct?"
+
+"Entirely", said the other, eagerly. "And I can produce the cash any
+time at two hours' notice."
+
+Lawyer Gooch stood up at his full height. His thin figure seemed to
+expand. His thumbs sought the arm-holes of his vest. Upon his face
+was a look of sympathetic benignity that he always wore during such
+undertakings.
+
+"Then, sir," he said, in kindly tones, "I think I can promise you an
+early relief from your troubles. I have that much confidence in my
+powers of argument and persuasion, in the natural impulses of the
+human heart toward good, and in the strong influence of a husband's
+unfaltering love. Mrs. Billings, sir, is here--in that room--" the
+lawyer's long arm pointed to the door. "I will call her in at once;
+and our united pleadings--"
+
+Lawyer Gooch paused, for client number three had leaped from his chair
+as if propelled by steel springs, and clutched his satchel.
+
+"What the devil," he exclaimed, harshly, "do you mean? That woman in
+there! I thought I shook her off forty miles back."
+
+He ran to the open window, looked out below, and threw one leg over
+the sill.
+
+"Stop!" cried Lawyer Gooch, in amazement. "What would you do? Come,
+Mr. Billings, and face your erring but innocent wife. Our combined
+entreaties cannot fail to--"
+
+"Billings!" shouted the now thoroughly moved client. "I'll Billings
+you, you old idiot!"
+
+Turning, he hurled his satchel with fury at the lawyer's head. It
+struck that astounded peacemaker between the eyes, causing him to
+stagger backward a pace or two. When Lawyer Gooch recovered his wits
+he saw that his client had disappeared. Rushing to the window, he
+leaned out, and saw the recreant gathering himself up from the top of
+a shed upon which he had dropped from the second-story window.
+Without stopping to collect his hat he then plunged downward the
+remaining ten feet to the alley, up which he flew with prodigious
+celerity until the surrounding building swallowed him up from view.
+
+Lawyer Gooch passed his hand tremblingly across his brow. It was a
+habitual act with him, serving to clear his thoughts. Perhaps also it
+now seemed to soothe the spot where a very hard alligator-hide satchel
+had struck.
+
+The satchel lay upon the floor, wide open, with its contents spilled
+about. Mechanically, Lawyer Gooch stooped to gather up the articles.
+The first was a collar; and the omniscient eye of the man of law
+perceived, wonderingly, the initials H. K. J. marked upon it. Then
+came a comb, a brush, a folded map, and a piece of soap. Lastly, a
+handful of old business letters, addressed--every one of them--to
+"Henry K. Jessup, Esq."
+
+Lawyer Gooch closed the satchel, and set it upon the table. He
+hesitated for a moment, and then put on his hat and walked into the
+office boy's anteroom.
+
+"Archibald," he said mildly, as he opened the hall door, "I am going
+around to the Supreme Court rooms. In five minutes you may step into
+the inner office, and inform the lady who is waiting there that"--
+here Lawyer Gooch made use of the vernacular--"that there's nothing
+doing."
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+CALLOWAY'S CODE
+
+
+The New York _Enterprise_ sent H. B. Calloway as special correspondent
+to the Russo-Japanese-Portsmouth war.
+
+For two months Calloway hung about Yokohama and Tokio, shaking dice
+with the other correspondents for drinks of 'rickshaws--oh, no,
+that's something to ride in; anyhow, he wasn't earning the salary
+that his paper was paying him. But that was not Calloway's fault.
+The little brown men who held the strings of Fate between their
+fingers were not ready for the readers of the _Enterprise_ to season
+their breakfast bacon and eggs with the battles of the descendants of
+the gods.
+
+But soon the column of correspondents that were to go out with the
+First Army tightened their field-glass belts and went down to the
+Yalu with Kuroki. Calloway was one of these.
+
+Now, this is no history of the battle of the Yalu River. That has
+been told in detail by the correspondents who gazed at the shrapnel
+smoke rings from a distance of three miles. But, for justice's sake,
+let it be understood that the Japanese commander prohibited a nearer
+view.
+
+Calloway's feat was accomplished before the battle. What he did was
+to furnish the _Enterprise_ with the biggest beat of the war. That
+paper published exclusively and in detail the news of the attack on
+the lines of the Russian General on the same day that it was made.
+No other paper printed a word about it for two days afterward, except
+a London paper, whose account was absolutely incorrect and untrue.
+
+Calloway did this in face of the fact that General Kuroki was making
+his moves and laying his plans with the profoundest secrecy as far
+as the world outside his camps was concerned. The correspondents
+were forbidden to send out any news whatever of his plans; and every
+message that was allowed on the wires was censored with rigid
+severity.
+
+The correspondent for the London paper handed in a cablegram
+describing Kuroki's plans; but as it was wrong from beginning to end
+the censor grinned and let it go through.
+
+So, there they were--Kuroki on one side of the Yalu with forty-two
+thousand infantry, five thousand cavalry, and one hundred and
+twenty-four guns. On the other side, Zassulitch waited for him with
+only twenty-three thousand men, and with a long stretch of river to
+guard. And Calloway had got hold of some important inside information
+that he knew would bring the _Enterprise_ staff around a cablegram as
+thick as flies around a Park Row lemonade stand. If he could only get
+that message past the censor--the new censor who had arrived and
+taken his post that day!
+
+Calloway did the obviously proper thing. He lit his pipe and sat down
+on a gun carriage to think it over. And there we must leave him; for
+the rest of the story belongs to Vesey, a sixteen-dollar-a-week
+reporter on the _Enterprise_.
+
+
+Calloway's cablegram was handed to the managing editor at four
+o'clock in the afternoon. He read it three times; and then drew a
+pocket mirror from a pigeon-hole in his desk, and looked at his
+reflection carefully. Then he went over to the desk of Boyd, his
+assistant (he usually called Boyd when he wanted him), and laid the
+cablegram before him.
+
+"It's from Calloway," he said. "See what you make of it."
+
+The message was dated at Wi-ju, and these were the words of it:
+
+
+ Foregone preconcerted rash witching goes muffled rumour mine dark
+ silent unfortunate richmond existing great hotly brute select
+ mooted parlous beggars ye angel incontrovertible.
+
+
+Boyd read it twice.
+
+"It's either a cipher or a sunstroke," said he.
+
+"Ever hear of anything like a code in the office--a secret code?"
+asked the m. e., who had held his desk for only two years. Managing
+editors come and go.
+
+"None except the vernacular that the lady specials write in," said
+Boyd. "Couldn't be an acrostic, could it?"
+
+"I thought of that," said the m. e., "but the beginning letters
+contain only four vowels. It must be a code of some sort."
+
+"Try em in groups," suggested Boyd. "Let's see--'Rash witching
+goes'--not with me it doesn't. 'Muffled rumour mine'--must
+have an underground wire. 'Dark silent unfortunate richmond'--no
+reason why he should knock that town so hard. 'Existing great
+hotly'--no it doesn't pan out. I'll call Scott."
+
+The city editor came in a hurry, and tried his luck. A city editor
+must know something about everything; so Scott knew a little about
+cipher-writing.
+
+"It may be what is called an inverted alphabet cipher," said he.
+"I'll try that. 'R' seems to be the oftenest used initial letter,
+with the exception of 'm.' Assuming 'r' to mean 'e', the most
+frequently used vowel, we transpose the letters--so."
+
+Scott worked rapidly with his pencil for two minutes; and then showed
+the first word according to his reading--the word "Scejtzez."
+
+"Great!" cried Boyd. "It's a charade. My first is a Russian
+general. Go on, Scott."
+
+"No, that won't work," said the city editor. "It's undoubtedly a
+code. It's impossible to read it without the key. Has the office
+ever used a cipher code?"
+
+"Just what I was asking," said the m.e. "Hustle everybody up that
+ought to know. We must get at it some way. Calloway has evidently
+got hold of something big, and the censor has put the screws on, or
+he wouldn't have cabled in a lot of chop suey like this."
+
+Throughout the office of the _Enterprise_ a dragnet was sent, hauling
+in such members of the staff as would be likely to know of a code,
+past or present, by reason of their wisdom, information, natural
+intelligence, or length of servitude. They got together in a group
+in the city room, with the m. e. in the centre. No one had heard
+of a code. All began to explain to the head investigator that
+newspapers never use a code, anyhow--that is, a cipher code. Of
+course the Associated Press stuff is a sort of code--an abbreviation,
+rather--but--
+
+The m. e. knew all that, and said so. He asked each man how long he
+had worked on the paper. Not one of them had drawn pay from an
+_Enterprise_ envelope for longer than six years. Calloway had been on
+the paper twelve years.
+
+"Try old Heffelbauer," said the m. e. "He was here when Park Row was
+a potato patch."
+
+Heffelbauer was an institution. He was half janitor, half handy-man
+about the office, and half watchman--thus becoming the peer of
+thirteen and one-half tailors. Sent for, he came, radiating his
+nationality.
+
+"Heffelbauer," said the m. e., "did you ever hear of a code belonging
+to the office a long time ago--a private code? You know what a code
+is, don't you?"
+
+"Yah," said Heffelbauer. "Sure I know vat a code is. Yah, apout
+dwelf or fifteen year ago der office had a code. Der reborters in der
+city-room haf it here."
+
+"Ah!" said the m. e. "We're getting on the trail now. Where was it
+kept, Heffelbauer? What do you know about it?"
+
+"Somedimes," said the retainer, "dey keep it in der little room
+behind der library room."
+
+"Can you find it?" asked the m. e. eagerly. "Do you know where it is?"
+
+"Mein Gott!" said Heffelbauer. "How long you dink a code live? Der
+reborters call him a maskeet. But von day he butt mit his head der
+editor, und--"
+
+"Oh, he's talking about a goat," said Boyd. "Get out, Heffelbauer."
+
+Again discomfited, the concerted wit and resource of the _Enterprise_
+huddled around Calloway's puzzle, considering its mysterious words
+in vain.
+
+Then Vesey came in.
+
+Vesey was the youngest reporter. He had a thirty-two-inch chest and
+wore a number fourteen collar; but his bright Scotch plaid suit gave
+him presence and conferred no obscurity upon his whereabouts. He
+wore his hat in such a position that people followed him about to see
+him take it off, convinced that it must be hung upon a peg driven
+into the back of his head. He was never without an immense, knotted,
+hard-wood cane with a German-silver tip on its crooked handle. Vesey
+was the best photograph hustler in the office. Scott said it was
+because no living human being could resist the personal triumph it
+was to hand his picture over to Vesey. Vesey always wrote his own
+news stories, except the big ones, which were sent to the rewrite
+men. Add to this fact that among all the inhabitants, temples, and
+groves of the earth nothing existed that could abash Vesey, and his
+dim sketch is concluded.
+
+Vesey butted into the circle of cipher readers very much as
+Heffelbauer's "code" would have done, and asked what was up. Some
+one explained, with the touch of half-familiar condescension that
+they always used toward him. Vesey reached out and took the
+cablegram from the m. e.'s hand. Under the protection of some
+special Providence, he was always doing appalling things like that,
+and coming, off unscathed.
+
+"It's a code," said Vesey. "Anybody got the key?"
+
+"The office has no code," said Boyd, reaching for the message. Vesey
+held to it.
+
+"Then old Calloway expects us to read it, anyhow," said he. "He's up
+a tree, or something, and he's made this up so as to get it by the
+censor. It's up to us. Gee! I wish they had sent me, too. Say--we
+can't afford to fall down on our end of it. 'Foregone, preconcerted
+rash, witching'--h'm."
+
+Vesey sat down on a table corner and began to whistle softly,
+frowning at the cablegram.
+
+"Let's have it, please," said the m. e. "We've got to get to work on
+it."
+
+"I believe I've got a line on it," said Vesey. "Give me ten
+minutes."
+
+He walked to his desk, threw his hat into a waste-basket, spread out
+flat on his chest like a gorgeous lizard, and started his pencil
+going. The wit and wisdom of the _Enterprise_ remained in a loose
+group, and smiled at one another, nodding their heads toward Vesey.
+Then they began to exchange their theories about the cipher.
+
+It took Vesey exactly fifteen minutes. He brought to the m. e. a pad
+with the code-key written on it.
+
+"I felt the swing of it as soon as I saw it," said Vesey. "Hurrah for
+old Calloway! He's done the Japs and every paper in town that prints
+literature instead of news. Take a look at that."
+
+Thus had Vesey set forth the reading of the code:
+
+ Foregone - conclusion
+ Preconcerted - arrangement
+ Rash - act
+ Witching - hour of midnight
+ Goes - without saying
+ Muffled - report
+ Rumour - hath it
+ Mine - host
+ Dark - horse
+ Silent - majority
+ Unfortunate - pedestrians*
+ Richmond - in the field
+ Existing - conditions
+ Great - White Way
+ Hotly - contested
+ Brute - force
+ Select - few
+ Mooted - question
+ Parlous - times
+ Beggars - description
+ Ye - correspondent
+ Angel - unawares
+ Incontrovertible - fact
+
+ *Mr. Vesey afterward explained that the logical journalistic
+ complement of the word "unfortunate" was once the word
+ "victim." But, since the automobile became so popular, the
+ correct following word is now "pedestrians." Of course, in
+ Calloway's code it meant infantry.
+
+"It's simply newspaper English," explained Vesey. "I've been
+reporting on the _Enterprise_ long enough to know it by heart. Old
+Calloway gives us the cue word, and we use the word that naturally
+follows it just as we use 'em in the paper. Read it over, and you'll
+see how pat they drop into their places. Now, here's the message he
+intended us to get."
+
+Vesey handed out another sheet of paper.
+
+ Concluded arrangement to act at hour of midnight
+ without saying. Report hath it that a large body of
+ cavalry and an overwhelming force of infantry will be
+ thrown into the field. Conditions white. Way contested
+ by only a small force. Question the Times description.
+ Its correspondent is unaware of the facts.
+
+"Great stuff!" cried Boyd excitedly. "Kuroki crosses the Yalu
+to-night and attacks. Oh, we won't do a thing to the sheets that make
+up with Addison's essays, real estate transfers, and bowling scores!"
+
+"Mr. Vesey," said the m. e., with his jollying-which-you-should-regard-
+as-a-favour manner, "you have cast a serious reflection upon the
+literary standards of the paper that employs you. You have also
+assisted materially in giving us the biggest 'beat' of the year. I
+will let you know in a day or two whether you are to be discharged or
+retained at a larger salary. Somebody send Ames to me."
+
+Ames was the king-pin, the snowy-petalled Marguerite, the star-bright
+looloo of the rewrite men. He saw attempted murder in the pains of
+green-apple colic, cyclones in the summer zephyr, lost children in
+every top-spinning urchin, an uprising of the down-trodden masses in
+every hurling of a derelict potato at a passing automobile. When not
+rewriting, Ames sat on the porch of his Brooklyn villa playing
+checkers with his ten-year-old son.
+
+Ames and the "war editor" shut themselves in a room. There was a map
+in there stuck full of little pins that represented armies and
+divisions. Their fingers had been itching for days to move those
+pins along the crooked line of the Yalu. They did so now; and in
+words of fire Ames translated Calloway's brief message into a front
+page masterpiece that set the world talking. He told of the secret
+councils of the Japanese officers; gave Kuroki's flaming speeches in
+full; counted the cavalry and infantry to a man and a horse;
+described the quick and silent building, of the bridge at Suikauchen,
+across which the Mikado's legions were hurled upon the surprised
+Zassulitch, whose troops were widely scattered along the river. And
+the battle!--well, you know what Ames can do with a battle if you give
+him just one smell of smoke for a foundation. And in the same story,
+with seemingly supernatural knowledge, he gleefully scored the most
+profound and ponderous paper in England for the false and misleading
+account of the intended movements of the Japanese First Army printed
+in its issue of _the same date_.
+
+Only one error was made; and that was the fault of the cable operator
+at Wi-ju. Calloway pointed it out after he came back. The word
+"great" in his code should have been "gage," and its complemental
+words "of battle." But it went to Ames "conditions white," and of
+course he took that to mean snow. His description of the Japanese
+army struggling through the snowstorm, blinded by the whirling flakes,
+was thrillingly vivid. The artists turned out some effective
+illustrations that made a hit as pictures of the artillery dragging
+their guns through the drifts. But, as the attack was made on the
+first day of May, "conditions white" excited some amusement. But it
+in made no difference to the _Enterprise_, anyway.
+
+It was wonderful. And Calloway was wonderful in having made the new
+censor believe that his jargon of words meant no more than a
+complaint of the dearth of news and a petition for more expense
+money. And Vesey was wonderful. And most wonderful of all are
+words, and how they make friends one with another, being oft
+associated, until not even obituary notices them do part.
+
+
+On the second day following, the city editor halted at Vesey's desk
+where the reporter was writing the story of a man who had broken his
+leg by falling into a coal-hole--Ames having failed to find a
+murder motive in it.
+
+"The old man says your salary is to be raised to twenty a week," said
+Scott.
+
+"All right," said Vesey. "Every little helps. Say--Mr. Scott,
+which would you say--'We can state without fear of successful
+contradiction,' or, 'On the whole it can be safely asserted'?"
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+A MATTER OF MEAN ELEVATION
+
+
+One winter the Alcazar Opera Company of New Orleans made a speculative
+trip along the Mexican, Central American and South American coasts.
+The venture proved a most successful one. The music-loving,
+impressionable Spanish-Americans deluged the company with dollars and
+"vivas." The manager waxed plump and amiable. But for the
+prohibitive climate he would have put forth the distinctive flower of
+his prosperity--the overcoat of fur, braided, frogged and opulent.
+Almost was he persuaded to raise the salaries of his company. But
+with a mighty effort he conquered the impulse toward such an
+unprofitable effervescence of joy.
+
+At Macuto, on the coast of Venezuela, the company scored its greatest
+success. Imagine Coney Island translated into Spanish and you will
+comprehend Macuto. The fashionable season is from November to March.
+Down from La Guayra and Caracas and Valencia and other interior towns
+flock the people for their holiday season. There are bathing and
+fiestas and bull fights and scandal. And then the people have a
+passion for music that the bands in the plaza and on the sea beach
+stir but do not satisfy. The coming of the Alcazar Opera Company
+aroused the utmost ardour and zeal among the pleasure seekers.
+
+The illustrious Guzman Blanco, President and Dictator of Venezuela,
+sojourned in Macuto with his court for the season. That potent ruler
+--who himself paid a subsidy of 40,000 pesos each year to grand opera
+in Caracas--ordered one of the Government warehouses to be cleared
+for a temporary theatre. A stage was quickly constructed and rough
+wooden benches made for the audience. Private boxes were added for
+the use of the President and the notables of the army and Government.
+
+The company remained in Macuto for two weeks. Each performance filled
+the house as closely as it could be packed. Then the music-mad people
+fought for room in the open doors and windows, and crowded about,
+hundreds deep, on the outside. Those audiences formed a brilliantly
+diversified patch of colour. The hue of their faces ranged from the
+clear olive of the pure-blood Spaniards down through the yellow and
+brown shades of the Mestizos to the coal-black Carib and the Jamaica
+Negro. Scattered among them were little groups of Indians with faces
+like stone idols, wrapped in gaudy fibre-woven blankets--Indians
+down from the mountain states of Zamora and Los Andes and Miranda to
+trade their gold dust in the coast towns.
+
+The spell cast upon these denizens of the interior fastnesses was
+remarkable. They sat in petrified ecstasy, conspicuous among the
+excitable Macutians, who wildly strove with tongue and hand to give
+evidence of their delight. Only once did the sombre rapture of these
+aboriginals find expression. During the rendition of "Faust," Guzman
+Blanco, extravagantly pleased by the "Jewel Song," cast upon the stage
+a purse of gold pieces. Other distinguished citizens followed his lead
+to the extent of whatever loose coin they had convenient, while some
+of the fair and fashionable seoras were moved, in imitation, to
+fling a jewel or a ring or two at the feet of the Marguerite--who
+was, according to the bills, Mlle. Nina Giraud. Then, from different
+parts of the house rose sundry of the stolid hillmen and cast upon the
+stage little brown and dun bags that fell with soft "thumps" and did
+not rebound. It was, no doubt, pleasure at the tribute to her art
+that caused Mlle. Giraud's eyes to shine so brightly when she opened
+these little deerskin bags in her dressing room and found them to
+contain pure gold dust. If so, the pleasure was rightly hers, for her
+voice in song, pure, strong and thrilling with the feeling of the
+emotional artist, deserved the tribute that it earned.
+
+But the triumph of the Alcazar Opera Company is not the theme--it
+but leans upon and colours it. There happened in Macuto a tragic
+thing, an unsolvable mystery, that sobered for a time the gaiety of
+the happy season.
+
+One evening between the short twilight and the time when she should
+have whirled upon the stage in the red and black of the ardent Carmen,
+Mlle. Nina Giraud disappeared from the sight and ken of 6,000 pairs
+of eyes and as many minds in Macuto. There was the usual turmoil and
+hurrying to seek her. Messengers flew to the little French-kept hotel
+where she stayed; others of the company hastened here or there where
+she might be lingering in some tienda or unduly prolonging her bath
+upon the beach. All search was fruitless. Mademoiselle had
+vanished.
+
+Half an hour passed and she did not appear. The dictator, unused to
+the caprices of prime donne, became impatient. He sent an aide from
+his box to say to the manager that if the curtain did not at once rise
+he would immediately hale the entire company to the calabosa, though
+it would desolate his heart, indeed, to be compelled to such an act.
+Birds in Macuto could be made to sing.
+
+The manager abandoned hope for the time of Mlle. Giraud. A member of
+the chorus, who had dreamed hopelessly for years of the blessed
+opportunity, quickly Carmenized herself and the opera went on.
+
+Afterward, when the lost cantatrice appeared not, the aid of the
+authorities was invoked. The President at once set the army, the
+police and all citizens to the search. Not one clue to Mlle. Giraud's
+disappearance was found. The Alcazar left to fill engagements farther
+down the coast.
+
+On the way back the steamer stopped at Macuto and the manager made
+anxious inquiry. Not a trace of the lady had been discovered. The
+Alcazar could do no more. The personal belongings of the missing lady
+were stored in the hotel against her possible later reappearance and
+the opera company continued upon its homeward voyage to New Orleans.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the camino real along the beach the two saddle mules and the four
+pack mules of Don Seor Johnny Armstrong stood, patiently awaiting the
+crack of the whip of the _arriero_, Luis. That would be the signal for
+the start on another long journey into the mountains. The pack mules
+were loaded with a varied assortment of hardware and cutlery. These
+articles Don Johnny traded to the interior Indians for the gold dust
+that they washed from the Andean streams and stored in quills and bags
+against his coming. It was a profitable business, and Seor Armstrong
+expected soon to be able to purchase the coffee plantation that he
+coveted.
+
+Armstrong stood on the narrow sidewalk, exchanging garbled Spanish
+with old Peralto, the rich native merchant who had just charged him
+four prices for half a gross of pot-metal hatchets, and abridged
+English with Rucker, the little German who was Consul for the United
+States.
+
+"Take with you, seor," said Peralto, "the blessings of the saints
+upon your journey."
+
+"Better try quinine," growled Rucker through his pipe. "Take two
+grains every night. And don't make your trip too long, Johnny,
+because we haf needs of you. It is ein villainous game dot Melville
+play of whist, and dere is no oder substitute. _Auf wiedersehen_, und
+keep your eyes dot mule's ears between when you on der edge of der
+brecipices ride."
+
+The bells of Luis's mule jingled and the pack train filed after the
+warning note. Armstrong, waved a good-bye and took his place at the
+tail of the procession. Up the narrow street they turned, and passed
+the two-story wooden Hotel Ingles, where Ives and Dawson and Richards
+and the rest of the chaps were dawdling on the broad piazza, reading
+week-old newspapers. They crowded to the railing and shouted many
+friendly and wise and foolish farewells after him. Across the plaza
+they trotted slowly past the bronze statue of Guzman Blanco, within
+its fence of bayoneted rifles captured from revolutionists, and out
+of the town between the rows of thatched huts swarming with the
+unclothed youth of Macuto. They plunged into the damp coolness of
+banana groves at length to emerge upon a bright stream, where brown
+women in scant raiment laundered clothes destructively upon the rocks.
+Then the pack train, fording the stream, attacked the sudden ascent,
+and bade adieu to such civilization as the coast afforded.
+
+For weeks Armstrong, guided by Luis, followed his regular route among
+the mountains. After he had collected an arroba of the precious
+metal, winning a profit of nearly $5,000, the heads of the lightened
+mules were turned down-trail again. Where the head of the Guarico
+River springs from a great gash in the mountain-side, Luis halted the
+train.
+
+"Half a day's journey from here, Seor," said he, "is the village of
+Tacuzama, which we have never visited. I think many ounces of gold may
+be procured there. It is worth the trial."
+
+Armstrong concurred, and they turned again upward toward Tacuzama.
+The trail was abrupt and precipitous, mounting through a dense
+forest. As night fell, dark and gloomy, Luis once more halted.
+Before them was a black chasm, bisecting the path as far as they could
+see.
+
+Luis dismounted. "There should be a bridge," he called, and ran along
+the cleft a distance. "It is here," he cried, and remounting, led the
+way. In a few moments Armstrong, heard a sound as though a thunderous
+drum were beating somewhere in the dark. It was the falling of the
+mules' hoofs upon the bridge made of strong hides lashed to poles and
+stretched across the chasm. Half a mile further was Tacuzama. The
+village was a congregation of rock and mud huts set in the
+profundity of an obscure wood. As they rode in a sound inconsistent
+with that brooding solitude met their ears. From a long, low mud hut
+that they were nearing rose the glorious voice of a woman in song.
+The words were English, the air familiar to Armstrong's memory, but
+not to his musical knowledge.
+
+He slipped from his mule and stole to a narrow window in one end of
+the house. Peering cautiously inside, he saw, within three feet of
+him, a woman of marvellous, imposing beauty, clothed in a splendid
+loose robe of leopard skins. The hut was packed close to the small
+space in which she stood with the squatting figures of Indians.
+
+The woman finished her song and seated herself close to the little
+window, as if grateful for the unpolluted air that entered it.
+When she had ceased several of the audience rose and cast little
+softly-falling bags at her feet. A harsh murmur--no doubt a
+barbarous kind of applause and comment--went through the grim
+assembly.
+
+Armstrong, was used to seizing opportunities promptly. Taking
+advantage of the noise he called to the woman in a low but distinct
+voice: "Do not turn your head this way, but listen. I am an American.
+If you need assistance tell me how I can render it. Answer as briefly
+as you can."
+
+The woman was worthy of his boldness. Only by a sudden flush of her
+pale cheek did she acknowledge understanding of his words. Then she
+spoke, scarcely moving her lips.
+
+"I am held a prisoner by these Indians. God knows I need help. In
+two hours come to the little hut twenty yards toward the Mountainside.
+There will be a light and a red curtain in the window. There is
+always a guard at the door, whom you will have to overcome. For the
+love of heaven, do not fail to come."
+
+The story seems to shrink from adventure and rescue and mystery. The
+theme is one too gentle for those brave and quickening tones. And yet
+it reaches as far back as time itself. It has been named
+"environment," which is as weak a word as any to express the
+unnameable kinship of man to nature, that queer fraternity that causes
+stones and trees and salt water and clouds to play upon our emotions.
+Why are we made serious and solemn and sublime by mountain heights,
+grave and contemplative by an abundance of overhanging trees,
+reduced to inconstancy and monkey capers by the ripples on a sandy
+beach? Did the protoplasm--but enough. The chemists are looking
+into the matter, and before long they will have all life in the table
+of the symbols.
+
+Briefly, then, in order to confine the story within scientific bounds,
+John Armstrong, went to the hut, choked the Indian guard and carried
+away Mlle. Giraud. With her was also conveyed a number of pounds of
+gold dust she had collected during her six months' forced engagement
+in Tacuzama. The Carabobo Indians are easily the most enthusiastic
+lovers of music between the equator and the French Opera House in New
+Orleans. They are also strong believers that the advice of Emerson
+was good when he said: "The thing thou wantest, O discontented man
+--take it, and pay the price." A number of them had attended the
+performance of the Alcazar Opera Company in Macuto, and found Mlle.
+Giraud's style and technique satisfactory. They wanted her, so they
+took her one evening suddenly and without any fuss. They treated her
+with much consideration, exacting only one song recital each day. She
+was quite pleased at being rescued by Mr. Armstrong. So much for
+mystery and adventure. Now to resume the theory of the protoplasm.
+
+John Armstrong and Mlle. Giraud rode among the Andean peaks, enveloped
+in their greatness and sublimity. The mightiest cousins, furthest
+removed, in nature's great family become conscious of the tie. Among
+those huge piles of primordial upheaval, amid those gigantic silences
+and elongated fields of distance the littlenesses of men are
+precipitated as one chemical throws down a sediment from another.
+They moved reverently, as in a temple. Their souls were uplifted in
+unison with the stately heights. They travelled in a zone of majesty
+and peace.
+
+To Armstrong the woman seemed almost a holy thing. Yet bathed in the
+white, still dignity of her martyrdom that purified her earthly beauty
+and gave out, it seemed, an aura of transcendent loveliness, in those
+first hours of companionship she drew from him an adoration that was
+half human love, half the worship of a descended goddess.
+
+Never yet since her rescue had she smiled. Over her dress she still
+wore the robe of leopard skins, for the mountain air was cold. She
+looked to be some splendid princess belonging to those wild and
+awesome altitudes. The spirit of the region chimed with hers. Her
+eyes were always turned upon the sombre cliffs, the blue gorges and
+the snow-clad turrets, looking a sublime melancholy equal to their
+own. At times on the journey she sang thrilling te deums and
+misereres that struck the true note of the hills, and made their
+route seem like a solemn march down a cathedral aisle. The rescued
+one spoke but seldom, her mood partaking of the hush of nature that
+surrounded them. Armstrong looked upon her as an angel. He could not
+bring himself to the sacrilege of attempting to woo her as other
+women may be wooed.
+
+On the third day they had descended as far as the _tierra templada_,
+the zona of the table lands and foot hills. The mountains were
+receding in their rear, but still towered, exhibiting yet impressively
+their formidable heads. Here they met signs of man. They saw the
+white houses of coffee plantations gleam across the clearings. They
+struck into a road where they met travellers and pack-mules. Cattle
+were grazing on the slopes. They passed a little village where the
+round-eyed _nios_ shrieked and called at sight of them.
+
+Mlle. Giraud laid aside her leopard-skin robe. It seemed to be a
+trifle incongruous now. In the mountains it had appeared fitting
+and natural. And if Armstrong was not mistaken she laid aside with
+it something of the high dignity of her demeanour. As the country
+became more populous and significant of comfortable life he saw, with
+a feeling of joy, that the exalted princess and priestess of the
+Andean peaks was changing to a woman--an earth woman, but no less
+enticing. A little colour crept to the surface of her marble cheek.
+She arranged the conventional dress that the removal of the robe now
+disclosed with the solicitous touch of one who is conscious of the
+eyes of others. She smoothed the careless sweep of her hair. A
+mundane interest, long latent in the chilling atmosphere of the
+ascetic peaks, showed in her eyes.
+
+This thaw in his divinity sent Armstrong's heart going faster. So
+might an Arctic explorer thrill at his first ken of green fields and
+liquescent waters. They were on a lower plane of earth and life and
+were succumbing to its peculiar, subtle influence. The austerity of
+the hills no longer thinned the air they breathed. About them was the
+breath of fruit and corn and builded homes, the comfortable smell of
+smoke and warm earth and the consolations man has placed between
+himself and the dust of his brother earth from which he sprung.
+While traversing those awful mountains, Mile. Giraud had seemed to
+be wrapped in their spirit of reverent reserve. Was this that same
+woman--now palpitating, warm, eager, throbbing with conscious life and
+charm, feminine to her finger-tips? Pondering over this, Armstrong
+felt certain misgivings intrude upon his thoughts. He wished he could
+stop there with this changing creature, descending no farther. Here
+was the elevation and environment to which her nature seemed to
+respond with its best. He feared to go down upon the man-dominated
+levels. Would her spirit not yield still further in that artificial
+zone to which they were descending?
+
+Now from a little plateau they saw the sea flash at the edge of the
+green lowlands. Mile. Giraud gave a little, catching sigh.
+
+"Oh! look, Mr. Armstrong, there is the sea! Isn't it lovely? I'm so
+tired of mountains." She heaved a pretty shoulder in a gesture of
+repugnance. "Those horrid Indians! Just think of what I suffered!
+Although I suppose I attained my ambition of becoming a stellar
+attraction, I wouldn't care to repeat the engagement. It was very
+nice of you to bring me away. Tell me, Mr. Armstrong--honestly, now
+--do I look such an awful, awful fright? I haven't looked into a
+mirror, you know, for months."
+
+Armstrong made answer according to his changed moods. Also he laid
+his hand upon hers as it rested upon the horn of her saddle. Luis was
+at the head of the pack train and could not see. She allowed it to
+remain there, and her eyes smiled frankly into his.
+
+Then at sundown they dropped upon the coast level under the palms and
+lemons among the vivid greens and scarlets and ochres of the _tierra
+caliente_. They rode into Macuto, and saw the line of volatile bathers
+frolicking in the surf. The mountains were very far away.
+
+Mlle. Giraud's eyes were shining with a joy that could not have
+existed under the chaperonage of the mountain-tops. There were other
+spirits calling to her--nymphs of the orange groves, pixies from the
+chattering surf, imps, born of the music, the perfumes, colours and
+the insinuating presence of humanity. She laughed aloud, musically,
+at a sudden thought.
+
+"Won't there be a sensation?" she called to Armstrong. "Don't I wish
+I had an engagement just now, though! What a picnic the press agent
+would have! 'Held a prisoner by a band of savage Indians subdued by
+the spell of her wonderful voice'--wouldn't that make great stuff?
+But I guess I quit the game winner, anyhow--there ought to be a
+couple of thousand dollars in that sack of gold dust I collected as
+encores, don't you think?"
+
+He left her at the door of the little Hotel de Buen Descansar, where
+she had stopped before. Two hours later he returned to the hotel. He
+glanced in at the open door of the little combined reception room and
+cafe.
+
+Half a dozen of Macuto's representative social and official
+_caballeros_ were distributed about the room. Seor Villablanca, the
+wealthy rubber concessionist, reposed his fat figure on two chairs,
+with an emollient smile beaming upon his chocolate-coloured face.
+Guilbert, the French mining engineer, leered through his polished
+nose-glasses. Colonel Mendez, of the regular army, in gold-laced
+uniform and fatuous grin, was busily extracting corks from champagne
+bottles. Other patterns of Macutian gallantry and fashion pranced and
+posed. The air was hazy with cigarette smoke. Wine dripped upon the
+floor.
+
+Perched upon a table in the centre of the room in an attitude of easy
+preminence was Mlle. Giraud. A chic costume of white lawn and cherry
+ribbons supplanted her travelling garb. There was a suggestion of
+lace, and a frill or two, with a discreet, small implication of
+hand-embroidered pink hosiery. Upon her lap rested a guitar. In her
+face was the light of resurrection, the peace of elysium attained
+through fire and suffering. She was singing to a lively accompaniment
+a little song:
+
+ "When you see de big round moon
+ Comin' up like a balloon,
+ Dis nigger skips fur to kiss de lips
+ Ob his stylish, black-faced coon."
+
+The singer caught sight of Armstrong.
+
+"Hi! there, Johnny," she called; "I've been expecting you for an
+hour. What kept you? Gee! but these smoked guys are the slowest you
+ever saw. They ain't on, at all. Come along in, and I'll make this
+coffee-coloured old sport with the gold epaulettes open one for you
+right off the ice."
+
+"Thank you," said Armstrong; "not just now, I believe. I've several
+things to attend to."
+
+He walked out and down the street, and met Rucker coming up from the
+Consulate.
+
+"Play you a game of billiards," said Armstrong. "I want something to
+take the taste of the sea level out of my mouth."
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+"GIRL"
+
+
+In gilt letters on the ground glass of the door of room No. 962 were
+the words: "Robbins & Hartley, Brokers." The clerks had gone. It was
+past five, and with the solid tramp of a drove of prize Percherons,
+scrub-women were invading the cloud-capped twenty-story office
+building. A puff of red-hot air flavoured with lemon peelings,
+soft-coal smoke and train oil came in through the half-open windows.
+
+Robbins, fifty, something of an overweight beau, and addicted to first
+nights and hotel palm-rooms, pretended to be envious of his partner's
+commuter's joys.
+
+"Going to be something doing in the humidity line to-night," he said.
+"You out-of-town chaps will be the people, with your katydids and
+moonlight and long drinks and things out on the front porch."
+
+Hartley, twenty-nine, serious, thin, good-looking, nervous, sighed
+and frowned a little.
+
+"Yes," said he, "we always have cool nights in Floralhurst, especially
+in the winter."
+
+A man with an air of mystery came in the door and went up to Hartley.
+
+"I've found where she lives," he announced in the portentous
+half-whisper that makes the detective at work a marked being to his
+fellow men.
+
+Hartley scowled him into a state of dramatic silence and quietude.
+But by that time Robbins had got his cane and set his tie pin to his
+liking, and with a debonair nod went out to his metropolitan
+amusements.
+
+"Here is the address," said the detective in a natural tone, being
+deprived of an audience to foil.
+
+Hartley took the leaf torn out of the sleuth's dingy memorandum book.
+On it were pencilled the words "Vivienne Arlington, No. 341 East
+----th Street, care of Mrs. McComus."
+
+"Moved there a week ago," said the detective. "Now, if you want any
+shadowing done, Mr. Hartley, I can do you as fine a job in that line
+as anybody in the city. It will be only $7 a day and expenses. Can
+send in a daily typewritten report, covering--"
+
+"You needn't go on," interrupted the broker. "It isn't a case of that
+kind. I merely wanted the address. How much shall I pay you?"
+
+"One day's work," said the sleuth. "A tenner will cover it."
+
+Hartley paid the man and dismissed him. Then he left the office and
+boarded a Broadway car. At the first large crosstown artery of travel
+he took an eastbound car that deposited him in a decaying avenue,
+whose ancient structures once sheltered the pride and glory of the
+town.
+
+Walking a few squares, he came to the building that he sought. It was
+a new flathouse, bearing carved upon its cheap stone portal its
+sonorous name, "The Vallambrosa." Fire-escapes zigzagged down its
+front--these laden with household goods, drying clothes, and
+squalling children evicted by the midsummer heat. Here and there a
+pale rubber plant peeped from the miscellaneous mass, as if wondering
+to what kingdom it belonged--vegetable, animal or artificial.
+
+Hartley pressed the "McComus" button. The door latch clicked
+spasmodically--now hospitably, now doubtfully, as though in
+anxiety whether it might be admitting friends or duns. Hartley
+entered and began to climb the stairs after the manner of those who
+seek their friends in city flat-houses--which is the manner of a boy
+who climbs an apple-tree, stopping when he comes upon what he wants.
+
+On the fourth floor he saw Vivienne standing in an open door. She
+invited him inside, with a nod and a bright, genuine smile. She
+placed a chair for him near a window, and poised herself gracefully
+upon the edge of one of those Jekyll-and-Hyde pieces of furniture that
+are masked and mysteriously hooded, unguessable bulks by day and
+inquisitorial racks of torture by night.
+
+Hartley cast a quick, critical, appreciative glance at her before
+speaking, and told himself that his taste in choosing had been
+flawless.
+
+Vivienne was about twenty-one. She was of the purest Saxon type. Her
+hair was a ruddy golden, each filament of the neatly gathered mass
+shining with its own lustre and delicate graduation of colour. In
+perfect harmony were her ivory-clear complexion and deep sea-blue eyes
+that looked upon the world with the ingenuous calmness of a mermaid or
+the pixie of an undiscovered mountain stream. Her frame was strong
+and yet possessed the grace of absolute naturalness. And yet with all
+her Northern clearness and frankness of line and colouring, there
+seemed to be something of the tropics in her--something of languor
+in the droop of her pose, of love of ease in her ingenious complacency
+of satisfaction and comfort in the mere act of breathing--something
+that seemed to claim for her a right as a perfect work of nature to
+exist and be admired equally with a rare flower or some beautiful,
+milk-white dove among its sober-hued companions.
+
+She was dressed in a white waist and dark skirt--that discreet
+masquerade of goose-girl and duchess.
+
+"Vivienne," said Hartley, looking at her pleadingly, "you did not
+answer my last letter. It was only by nearly a week's search that I
+found where you had moved to. Why have you kept me in suspense when
+you knew how anxiously I was waiting to see you and hear from you?"
+
+The girl looked out the window dreamily.
+
+"Mr. Hartley," she said hesitatingly, "I hardly know what to say to
+you. I realize all the advantages of your offer, and sometimes I feel
+sure that I could be contented with you. But, again, I am doubtful.
+I was born a city girl, and I am afraid to bind myself to a quiet
+suburban life."
+
+"My dear girl," said Hartley, ardently, "have I not told you that you
+shall have everything that your heart can desire that is in my power
+to give you? You shall come to the city for the theatres, for
+shopping and to visit your friends as often as you care to. You can
+trust me, can you not?"
+
+"To the fullest," she said, turning her frank eyes upon him with a
+smile. "I know you are the kindest of men, and that the girl you get
+will be a lucky one. I learned all about you when I was at the
+Montgomerys'."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Hartley, with a tender, reminiscent light in his eye;
+"I remember well the evening I first saw you at the Montgomerys'.
+Mrs. Montgomery was sounding your praises to me all the evening.
+And she hardly did you justice. I shall never forget that supper.
+Come, Vivienne, promise me. I want you. You'll never regret coming
+with me. No one else will ever give you as pleasant a home."
+
+The girl sighed and looked down at her folded hands.
+
+A sudden jealous suspicion seized Hartley.
+
+"Tell me, Vivienne," he asked, regarding her keenly, "is there
+another--is there some one else?"
+
+A rosy flush crept slowly over her fair cheeks and neck.
+
+"You shouldn't ask that, Mr. Hartley," she said, in some confusion.
+"But I will tell you. There is one other--but he has no right--I
+have promised him nothing."
+
+"His name?" demanded Hartley, sternly.
+
+"Townsend."
+
+"Rafford Townsend!" exclaimed Hartley, with a grim tightening of his
+jaw. "How did that man come to know you? After all I've done for
+him--"
+
+"His auto has just stopped below," said Vivienne, bending over the
+window-sill. "He's coming for his answer. Oh I don't know what to
+do!"
+
+The bell in the flat kitchen whirred. Vivienne hurried to press the
+latch button.
+
+"Stay here," said Hartley. "I will meet him in the hall."
+
+Townsend, looking like a Spanish grandee in his light tweeds, Panama
+hat and curling black mustache, came up the stairs three at a time.
+He stopped at sight of Hartley and looked foolish.
+
+"Go back," said Hartley, firmly, pointing downstairs with his
+forefinger.
+
+"Hullo!" said Townsend, feigning surprise. "What's up? What are you
+doing here, old man?"
+
+"Go back," repeated Hartley, inflexibly. "The Law of the Jungle. Do
+you want the Pack to tear you in pieces? The kill is mine."
+
+"I came here to see a plumber about the bathroom connections," said
+Townsend, bravely.
+
+"All right," said Hartley. "You shall have that lying plaster to
+stick upon your traitorous soul. But, go back." Townsend went
+downstairs, leaving a bitter word to be wafted up the draught of the
+staircase. Hartley went back to his wooing.
+
+"Vivienne," said he, masterfully. "I have got to have you. I will
+take no more refusals or dilly-dallying."
+
+"When do you want me?" she asked.
+
+"Now. As soon as you can get ready."
+
+She stood calmly before him and looked him in the eye.
+
+"Do you think for one moment," she said, "that I would enter your home
+while Hloise is there?"
+
+Hartley cringed as if from an unexpected blow. He folded his arms and
+paced the carpet once or twice.
+
+"She shall go," he declared grimly. Drops stood upon his brow. "Why
+should I let that woman make my life miserable? Never have I seen one
+day of freedom from trouble since I have known her. You are right,
+Vivienne. Hloise must be sent away before I can take you home. But
+she shall go. I have decided. I will turn her from my doors."
+
+"When will you do this?" asked the girl.
+
+Hartley clinched his teeth and bent his brows together.
+
+"To-night," he said, resolutely. "I will send her away to-night."
+
+"Then," said Vivienne, "my answer is 'yes.' Come for me when you
+will."
+
+She looked into his eyes with a sweet, sincere light in her own.
+Hartley could scarcely believe that her surrender was true, it was
+so swift and complete.
+
+"Promise me," he said feelingly, "on your word and honour."
+
+"On my word and honour," repeated Vivienne, softly.
+
+At the door he turned and gazed at her happily, but yet as one who
+scarcely trusts the foundations of his joy.
+
+"To-morrow," he said, with a forefinger of reminder uplifted.
+
+"To-morrow," she repeated with a smile of truth and candour.
+
+In an hour and forty minutes Hartley stepped off the train at
+Floralhurst. A brisk walk of ten minutes brought him to the gate of a
+handsome two-story cottage set upon a wide and well-tended lawn.
+Halfway to the house he was met by a woman with jet-black braided hair
+and flowing white summer gown, who half strangled him without apparent
+cause.
+
+When they stepped into the hall she said:
+
+"Mamma's here. The auto is coming for her in half an hour. She came
+to dinner, but there's no dinner."
+
+"I've something to tell you," said Hartley. "I thought to break it to
+you gently, but since your mother is here we may as well out with it."
+
+He stooped and whispered something at her ear.
+
+His wife screamed. Her mother came running into the hall. The
+dark-haired woman screamed again--the joyful scream of a well-beloved
+and petted woman.
+
+"Oh, mamma!" she cried ecstatically, "what do you think? Vivienne is
+coming to cook for us! She is the one that stayed with the
+Montgomerys a whole year. And now, Billy, dear," she concluded, "you
+must go right down into the kitchen and discharge Hloise. She has
+been drunk again the whole day long."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW
+
+
+The season of irresponsibility is at hand. Come, let us twine round
+our brows wreaths of poison ivy (that is for idiocy), and wander hand
+in hand with sociology in the summer fields.
+
+Likely as not the world is flat. The wise men have tried to prove
+that it is round, with indifferent success. They pointed out to us a
+ship going to sea, and bade us observe that, at length, the convexity
+of the earth hid from our view all but the vessel's topmast. But we
+picked up a telescope and looked, and saw the decks and hull again.
+Then the wise men said: "Oh, pshaw! anyhow, the variation of the
+intersection of the equator and the ecliptic proves it." We could not
+see this through our telescope, so we remained silent. But it stands
+to reason that, if the world were round, the queues of Chinamen
+would stand straight up from their heads instead of hanging down their
+backs, as travellers assure us they do.
+
+Another hot-weather corroboration of the flat theory is the fact that
+all of life, as we know it, moves in little, unavailing circles.
+More justly than to anything else, it can be likened to the game
+of baseball. Crack! we hit the ball, and away we go. If we earn a
+run (in life we call it success) we get back to the home plate and
+sit upon a bench. If we are thrown out, we walk back to the home
+plate--and sit upon a bench.
+
+The circumnavigators of the alleged globe may have sailed the rim of a
+watery circle back to the same port again. The truly great return at
+the high tide of their attainments to the simplicity of a child. The
+billionaire sits down at his mahogany to his bowl of bread and milk.
+When you reach the end of your career, just take down the sign "Goal"
+and look at the other side of it. You will find "Beginning Point"
+there. It has been reversed while you were going around the track.
+
+But this is humour, and must be stopped. Let us get back to the
+serious questions that arise whenever Sociology turns summer boarder.
+You are invited to consider the scene of the story--wild, Atlantic
+waves, thundering against a wooded and rock-bound shore--in the
+Greater City of New York.
+
+The town of Fishampton, on the south shore of Long Island, is noted
+for its clam fritters and the summer residence of the Van Plushvelts.
+
+The Van Plushvelts have a hundred million dollars, and their name is a
+household word with tradesmen and photographers.
+
+On the fifteenth of June the Van Plushvelts boarded up the front door
+of their city house, carefully deposited their cat on the sidewalk,
+instructed the caretaker not to allow it to eat any of the ivy on the
+walls, and whizzed away in a 40-horse-power to Fishampton to stray
+alone in the shade--Amaryllis not being in their class. If you are a
+subscriber to the _Toadies' Magazine_, you have often--You say you are
+not? Well, you buy it at a news-stand, thinking that the newsdealer
+is not wise to you. But he knows about it all. HE knows--HE knows!
+I say that you have often seen in the _Toadies' Magazine_ pictures of
+the Van Plushvelts' summer home; so it will not be described here.
+Our business is with young Haywood Van Plushvelt, sixteen years old,
+heir to the century of millions, darling of the financial gods and
+great grandson of Peter Van Plushvelt, former owner of a particularly
+fine cabbage patch that has been ruined by an intrusive lot of
+downtown skyscrapers.
+
+One afternoon young Haywood Van Plushvelt strolled out between the
+granite gate posts of "Dolce far Niente"--that's what they called
+the place; and it was an improvement on dolce Far Rockaway, I can
+tell you.
+
+Haywood walked down into the village. He was human, after all, and
+his prospective millions weighed upon him. Wealth had wreaked upon
+him its direfullest. He was the product of private tutors. Even under
+his first hobby-horse had tan bark been strewn. He had been born with
+a gold spoon, lobster fork and fish-set in his mouth. For which I
+hope, later, to submit justification, I must ask your consideration of
+his haberdashery and tailoring.
+
+Young Fortunatus was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a
+neat, white straw hat, neat low-cut tan shoes, of the well-known
+"immaculate" trade mark, a neat, narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried
+a slender, neat, bamboo cane.
+
+Down Persimmon Street (there's never tree north of Hagerstown, Md.)
+came from the village "Smoky" Dodson, fifteen and a half, worst boy in
+Fishampton. "Smoky" was dressed in a ragged red sweater, wrecked and
+weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and trousers of the
+"serviceable" brand. Dust, clinging to the moisture induced by free
+exercise, darkened wide areas of his face. "Smoky" carried a baseball
+bat, and a league ball that advertised itself in the rotundity of his
+trousers pocket. Haywood stopped and passed the time of day.
+
+"Going to play ball?" he asked.
+
+"Smoky's" eyes and countenance confronted him with a frank
+blue-and-freckled scrutiny.
+
+"Me?" he said, with deadly mildness; "sure not. Can't you see I've
+got a divin' suit on? I'm goin' up in a submarine balloon to catch
+butterflies with a two-inch auger.
+
+"Excuse me," said Haywood, with the insulting politeness of his
+caste, "for mistaking you for a gentleman. I might have known
+better."
+
+"How might you have known better if you thought I was one?" said
+"Smoky," unconsciously a logician.
+
+"By your appearance," said Haywood. "No gentleman is dirty, ragged
+and a liar."
+
+"Smoky" hooted once like a ferry-boat, spat on his hand, got a firm
+grip on his baseball bat and then dropped it against the fence.
+
+"Say," said he, "I knows you. You're the pup that belongs in that
+swell private summer sanitarium for city-guys over there. I seen you
+come out of the gate. You can't bluff nobody because you're rich.
+And because you got on swell clothes. Arabella! Yah!"
+
+"Ragamuffin!" said Haywood.
+
+"Smoky" picked up a fence-rail splinter and laid it on his shoulder.
+
+"Dare you to knock it off," he challenged.
+
+"I wouldn't soil my hands with you," said the aristocrat.
+
+"'Fraid," said "Smoky" concisely. "Youse city-ducks ain't got the I
+sand. I kin lick you with one-hand."
+
+"I don't wish to have any trouble with you," said Haywood. "I asked
+you a civil question; and you replied, like a--like a--a cad."
+
+"Wot's a cad?" asked "Smoky."
+
+"A cad is a disagreeable person," answered Haywood, "who lacks manners
+and doesn't know his place. They sometimes play baseball."
+
+"I can tell you what a mollycoddle is," said "Smoky." "It's a monkey
+dressed up by its mother and sent out to pick daisies on the lawn."
+
+"When you have the honour to refer to the members of my family," said
+Haywood, with some dim ideas of a code in his mind, "you'd better
+leave the ladies out of your remarks."
+
+"Ho! ladies!" mocked the rude one. "I say ladies! I know what them
+rich women in the city does. They, drink cocktails and swear and give
+parties to gorillas. The papers say so."
+
+Then Haywood knew that it must be. He took off his coat, folded it
+neatly and laid it on the roadside grass, placed his hat upon it and
+began to unknot his blue silk tie.
+
+"Hadn't yer better ring fer yer maid, Arabella?" taunted "Smoky."
+"Wot yer going to do--go to bed?"
+
+"I'm going to give you a good trouncing," said the hero. He did not
+hesitate, although the enemy was far beneath him socially. He
+remembered that his father once thrashed a cabman, and the papers gave
+it two columns, first page. And the _Toadies' Magazine_ had a special
+article on Upper Cuts by the Upper Classes, and ran new pictures of
+the Van Plushvelt country seat, at Fishampton.
+
+"Wot's trouncing?" asked "Smoky," suspiciously. "I don't want your
+old clothes. I'm no--oh, you mean to scrap! My, my! I won't do a
+thing to mamma's pet. Criminy! I'd hate to be a hand-laundered thing
+like you.
+
+"Smoky" waited with some awkwardness for his adversary to prepare for
+battle. His own decks were always clear for action. When he should
+spit upon the palm of his terrible right it was equivalent to "You may
+fire now, Gridley."
+
+The hated patrician advanced, with his shirt sleeves neatly rolled up.
+"Smoky" waited, in an attitude of ease, expecting the affair to be
+conducted according to Fishampton's rules of war. These allowed
+combat to be prefaced by stigma, recrimination, epithet, abuse and
+insult gradually increasing in emphasis and degree. After a round of
+these "you're anothers" would come the chip knocked from the shoulder,
+or the advance across the "dare" line drawn with a toe on the ground.
+Next light taps given and taken, these also increasing in force until
+finally the blood was up and fists going at their best.
+
+But Haywood did not know Fishampton's rules. Noblesse oblige kept a
+faint smile on his face as he walked slowly up to "Smoky" and said:
+
+"Going to play ball?"
+
+"Smoky" quickly understood this to be a putting of the previous
+question, giving him the chance to make practical apology by answering
+it with civility and relevance.
+
+"Listen this time," said he. "I'm goin' skatin' on the river. Don't
+you see me automobile with Chinese lanterns on it standin' and waitin'
+for me?"
+
+Haywood knocked him down.
+
+"Smoky" felt wronged. To thus deprive him of preliminary wrangle and
+objurgation was to send an armoured knight full tilt against a
+crashing lance without permitting him first to caracole around the
+list to the flourish of trumpets. But he scrambled up and fell upon
+his foe, head, feet and fists.
+
+The fight lasted one round of an hour and ten minutes. It was
+lengthened until it was more like a war or a family feud than a fight.
+Haywood had learned some of the science of boxing and wrestling from
+his tutors, but these he discarded for the more instinctive methods of
+battle handed down by the cave-dwelling Van Plushvelts.
+
+So, when he found himself, during the mle, seated upon the kicking
+and roaring "Smoky's" chest, he improved the opportunity by vigorously
+kneading handfuls of sand and soil into his adversary's ears, eyes
+and mouth, and when "Smoky" got the proper leg hold and "turned" him,
+he fastened both hands in the Plushvelt hair and pounded the Plushvelt
+head against the lap of mother earth. Of course, the strife was not
+incessantly active. There were seasons when one sat upon the other,
+holding him down, while each blew like a grampus, spat out the more
+inconveniently large sections of gravel and earth and strove to subdue
+the spirit of his opponent with a frightful and soul-paralyzing glare.
+
+At last, it seemed that in the language of the ring, their efforts
+lacked steam. They broke away, and each disappeared in a cloud as he
+brushed away the dust of the conflict. As soon as his breath
+permitted, Haywood walked close to "Smoky" and said:
+
+"Going to play ball?"
+
+"Smoky" looked pensively at the sky, at his bat lying on the ground,
+and at the "leaguer" rounding his pocket.
+
+"Sure," he said, offhandedly. "The 'Yellowjackets' plays the 'Long
+Islands.' I'm cap'n of the 'Long Islands.'"
+
+"I guess I didn't mean to say you were ragged," said Haywood. "But
+you are dirty, you know."
+
+"Sure," said "Smoky." "Yer get that way knockin' around. Say, I
+don't believe them New York papers about ladies drinkin' and havin'
+monkeys dinin' at the table with 'em. I guess they're lies, like they
+print about people eatin' out of silver plates, and ownin' dogs that
+cost $100."
+
+"Certainly," said Haywood. "What do you play on your team?"
+
+"Ketcher. Ever play any?"
+
+"Never in my life," said Haywood. "I've never known any fellows
+except one or two of my cousins."
+
+"Jer like to learn? We're goin' to have a practice-game before the
+match. Wanter come along? I'll put yer in left-field, and yer won't
+be long ketchin' on."
+
+"I'd like it bully," said Haywood. "I've always wanted to play
+baseball."
+
+The ladies' maids of New York and the families of Western mine owners
+with social ambitions will remember well the sensation that was
+created by the report that the young multi-millionaire, Haywood Van
+Plushvelt, was playing ball with the village youths of Fishampton. It
+was conceded that the millennium of democracy had come. Reporters and
+photographers swarmed to the island. The papers printed half-page
+pictures of him as short-stop stopping a hot grounder. The _Toadies'
+Magazine_ got out a Bat and Ball number that covered the subject
+historically, beginning with the vampire bat and ending with the
+Patriarchs' ball--illustrated with interior views of the Van
+Plushvelt country seat. Ministers, educators and sociologists
+everywhere hailed the event as the tocsin call that proclaimed the
+universal brotherhood of man.
+
+One afternoon I was reclining under the trees near the shore at
+Fishampton in the esteemed company of an eminent, bald-headed young
+sociologist. By way of note it may be inserted that all sociologists
+are more or less bald, and exactly thirty-two. Look 'em over.
+
+The sociologist was citing the Van Plushvelt case as the most
+important "uplift" symptom of a generation, and as an excuse for his
+own existence.
+
+Immediately before us were the village baseball grounds. And now came
+the sportive youth of Fishampton and distributed themselves, shouting,
+about the diamond.
+
+"There," said the sociologist, pointing, "there is young Van
+Plushvelt."
+
+I raised myself (so far a cosycophant with Mary Ann) and gazed.
+
+Young Van Plushvelt sat upon the ground. He was dressed in a ragged
+red sweater, wrecked and weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and
+trousers of the "serviceable" brand. Dust clinging to the moisture
+induced by free exercise, darkened wide areas of his face.
+
+"That is he," repeated the sociologist. If he had said "him" I could
+have been less vindictive.
+
+On a bench, with an air, sat the young millionaire's chum.
+
+He was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a neat white straw
+hat, neat low-cut tan shoes, linen of the well-known "immaculate"
+trade mark, a neat, narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried a slender,
+neat bamboo cane.
+
+I laughed loudly and vulgarly.
+
+"What you want to do," said I to the sociologist, "is to establish a
+reformatory for the Logical Vicious Circle. Or else I've got wheels.
+It looks to me as if things are running round and round in circles
+instead of getting anywhere."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked the man of progress.
+
+"Why, look what he has done to 'Smoky'," I replied.
+
+"You will always be a fool," said my friend, the sociologist,
+getting up and walking away.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF
+
+
+It looked like a good thing: but wait till I tell you. We were down
+South, in Alabama--Bill Driscoll and myself--when this kidnapping
+idea struck us. It was, as Bill afterward expressed it, "during a
+moment of temporary mental apparition"; but we didn't find that out
+till later.
+
+There was a town down there, as flat as a flannel-cake, and called
+Summit, of course. It contained inhabitants of as undeleterious and
+self-satisfied a class of peasantry as ever clustered around a
+Maypole.
+
+Bill and me had a joint capital of about six hundred dollars, and
+we needed just two thousand dollars more to pull off a fraudulent
+town-lot scheme in Western Illinois with. We talked it over on the
+front steps of the hotel. Philoprogenitiveness, says we, is strong
+in semi-rural communities; therefore and for other reasons, a
+kidnapping project ought to do better there than in the radius of
+newspapers that send reporters out in plain clothes to stir up talk
+about such things. We knew that Summit couldn't get after us with
+anything stronger than constables and maybe some lackadaisical
+bloodhounds and a diatribe or two in the _Weekly Farmers' Budget_.
+So, it looked good.
+
+We selected for our victim the only child of a prominent citizen named
+Ebenezer Dorset. The father was respectable and tight, a mortgage
+fancier and a stern, upright collection-plate passer and forecloser.
+The kid was a boy of ten, with bas-relief freckles, and hair the
+colour of the cover of the magazine you buy at the news-stand when you
+want to catch a train. Bill and me figured that Ebenezer would melt
+down for a ransom of two thousand dollars to a cent. But wait till I
+tell you.
+
+About two miles from Summit was a little mountain, covered with a
+dense cedar brake. On the rear elevation of this mountain was a cave.
+There we stored provisions. One evening after sundown, we drove in a
+buggy past old Dorset's house. The kid was in the street, throwing
+rocks at a kitten on the opposite fence.
+
+"Hey, little boy!" says Bill, "would you like to have a bag of candy
+and a nice ride?"
+
+The boy catches Bill neatly in the eye with a piece of brick.
+
+"That will cost the old man an extra five hundred dollars," says Bill,
+climbing over the wheel.
+
+That boy put up a fight like a welter-weight cinnamon bear; but, at
+last, we got him down in the bottom of the buggy and drove away. We
+took him up to the cave and I hitched the horse in the cedar brake.
+After dark I drove the buggy to the little village, three miles away,
+where we had hired it, and walked back to the mountain.
+
+Bill was pasting court-plaster over the scratches and bruises on his
+features. There was a fire burning behind the big rock at the entrance
+of the cave, and the boy was watching a pot of boiling coffee, with
+two buzzard tail-feathers stuck in his red hair. He points a stick
+at me when I come up, and says:
+
+"Ha! cursed paleface, do you dare to enter the camp of Red Chief, the
+terror of the plains?
+
+"He's all right now," says Bill, rolling up his trousers and examining
+some bruises on his shins. "We're playing Indian. We're making
+Buffalo Bill's show look like magic-lantern views of Palestine in the
+town hall. I'm Old Hank, the Trapper, Red Chief's captive, and I'm to
+be scalped at daybreak. By Geronimo! that kid can kick hard."
+
+Yes, sir, that boy seemed to be having the time of his life. The fun
+of camping out in a cave had made him forget that he was a captive
+himself. He immediately christened me Snake-eye, the Spy, and
+announced that, when his braves returned from the warpath, I was to be
+broiled at the stake at the rising of the sun.
+
+Then we had supper; and he filled his mouth full of bacon and bread
+and gravy, and began to talk. He made a during-dinner speech
+something like this:
+
+"I like this fine. I never camped out before; but I had a pet 'possum
+once, and I was nine last birthday. I hate to go to school. Rats ate
+up sixteen of Jimmy Talbot's aunt's speckled hen's eggs. Are there
+any real Indians in these woods? I want some more gravy. Does the
+trees moving make the wind blow? We had five puppies. What makes your
+nose so red, Hank? My father has lots of money. Are the stars hot? I
+whipped Ed Walker twice, Saturday. I don't like girls. You dassent
+catch toads unless with a string. Do oxen make any noise? Why are
+oranges round? Have you got beds to sleep on in this cave? Amos Murray
+has got six toes. A parrot can talk, but a monkey or a fish can't.
+How many does it take to make twelve?"
+
+Every few minutes he would remember that he was a pesky redskin, and
+pick up his stick rifle and tiptoe to the mouth of the cave to rubber
+for the scouts of the hated paleface. Now and then he would let out a
+war-whoop that made Old Hank the Trapper shiver. That boy had Bill
+terrorized from the start.
+
+"Red Chief," says I to the kid, "would you like to go home?"
+
+"Aw, what for?" says he. "I don't have any fun at home. I hate to
+go to school. I like to camp out. You won't take me back home again,
+Snake-eye, will you?"
+
+"Not right away," says I. "We'll stay here in the cave a while."
+
+"All right!" says he. "That'll be fine. I never had such fun in all
+my life."
+
+We went to bed about eleven o'clock. We spread down some wide
+blankets and quilts and put Red Chief between us. We weren't afraid
+he'd run away. He kept us awake for three hours, jumping up and
+reaching for his rifle and screeching: "Hist! pard," in mine and
+Bill's ears, as the fancied crackle of a twig or the rustle of a leaf
+revealed to his young imagination the stealthy approach of the outlaw
+band. At last, I fell into a troubled sleep, and dreamed that I had
+been kidnapped and chained to a tree by a ferocious pirate with red
+hair.
+
+Just at daybreak, I was awakened by a series of awful screams from
+Bill. They weren't yells, or howls, or shouts, or whoops, or yawps,
+such as you'd expect from a manly set of vocal organs--they were
+simply indecent, terrifying, humiliating screams, such as women emit
+when they see ghosts or caterpillars. It's an awful thing to hear a
+strong, desperate, fat man scream incontinently in a cave at daybreak.
+
+I jumped up to see what the matter was. Red Chief was sitting on
+Bill's chest, with one hand twined in Bill's hair. In the other he
+had the sharp case-knife we used for slicing bacon; and he was
+industriously and realistically trying to take Bill's scalp, according
+to the sentence that had been pronounced upon him the evening before.
+
+I got the knife away from the kid and made him lie down again. But,
+from that moment, Bill's spirit was broken. He laid down on his side
+of the bed, but he never closed an eye again in sleep as long as that
+boy was with us. I dozed off for a while, but along toward sun-up I
+remembered that Red Chief had said I was to be burned at the stake
+at the rising of the sun. I wasn't nervous or afraid; but I sat up
+and lit my pipe and leaned against a rock.
+
+"What you getting up so soon for, Sam?" asked Bill.
+
+"Me?" says I. "Oh, I got a kind of a pain in my shoulder. I thought
+sitting up would rest it."
+
+"You're a liar!" says Bill. "You're afraid. You was to be burned at
+sunrise, and you was afraid he'd do it. And he would, too, if he
+could find a match. Ain't it awful, Sam? Do you think anybody will pay
+out money to get a little imp like that back home?"
+
+"Sure," said I. "A rowdy kid like that is just the kind that parents
+dote on. Now, you and the Chief get up and cook breakfast, while I go
+up on the top of this mountain and reconnoitre."
+
+I went up on the peak of the little mountain and ran my eye over the
+contiguous vicinity. Over toward Summit I expected to see the sturdy
+yeomanry of the village armed with scythes and pitchforks beating the
+countryside for the dastardly kidnappers. But what I saw was a
+peaceful landscape dotted with one man ploughing with a dun mule.
+Nobody was dragging the creek; no couriers dashed hither and yon,
+bringing tidings of no news to the distracted parents. There was a
+sylvan attitude of somnolent sleepiness pervading that section of the
+external outward surface of Alabama that lay exposed to my view.
+"Perhaps," says I to myself, "it has not yet been discovered that
+the wolves have borne away the tender lambkin from the fold. Heaven
+help the wolves!" says I, and I went down the mountain to breakfast.
+
+When I got to the cave I found Bill backed up against the side of it,
+breathing hard, and the boy threatening to smash him with a rock half
+as big as a cocoanut.
+
+"He put a red-hot boiled potato down my back," explained Bill, "and
+then mashed it with his foot; and I boxed his ears. Have you got a gun
+about you, Sam?"
+
+I took the rock away from the boy and kind of patched up the argument.
+"I'll fix you," says the kid to Bill. "No man ever yet struck the Red
+Chief but what he got paid for it. You better beware!"
+
+After breakfast the kid takes a piece of leather with strings wrapped
+around it out of his pocket and goes outside the cave unwinding it.
+
+"What's he up to now?" says Bill, anxiously. "You don't think he'll
+run away, do you, Sam?"
+
+"No fear of it," says I. "He don't seem to be much of a home body.
+But we've got to fix up some plan about the ransom. There don't seem
+to be much excitement around Summit on account of his disappearance;
+but maybe they haven't realized yet that he's gone. His folks may
+think he's spending the night with Aunt Jane or one of the neighbours.
+Anyhow, he'll be missed to-day. To-night we must get a message to his
+father demanding the two thousand dollars for his return."
+
+Just then we heard a kind Of war-whoop, such as David might have
+emitted when he knocked out the champion Goliath. It was a sling that
+Red Chief had pulled out of his pocket, and he was whirling it around
+his head.
+
+I dodged, and heard a heavy thud and a kind of a sigh from Bill, like
+a horse gives out when you take his saddle off. A niggerhead rock the
+size of an egg had caught Bill just behind his left ear. He loosened
+himself all over and fell in the fire across the frying pan of hot
+water for washing the dishes. I dragged him out and poured cold water
+on his head for half an hour.
+
+By and by, Bill sits up and feels behind his ear and says: "Sam, do
+you know who my favourite Biblical character is?"
+
+"Take it easy," says I. "You'll come to your senses presently."
+
+"King Herod," says he. "You won't go away and leave me here alone,
+will you, Sam?"
+
+I went out and caught that boy and shook him until his freckles
+rattled.
+
+"If you don't behave," says I, "I'll take you straight home. Now, are
+you going to be good, or not?"
+
+"I was only funning," says he sullenly. "I didn't mean to hurt Old
+Hank. But what did he hit me for? I'll behave, Snake-eye, if you
+won't send me home, and if you'll let me play the Black Scout to-day."
+
+"I don't know the game," says I. "That's for you and Mr. Bill to
+decide. He's your playmate for the day. I'm going away for a while,
+on business. Now, you come in and make friends with him and say you
+are sorry for hurting him, or home you go, at once."
+
+I made him and Bill shake hands, and then I took Bill aside and told
+him I was going to Poplar Cove, a little village three miles from the
+cave, and find out what I could about how the kidnapping had been
+regarded in Summit. Also, I thought it best to send a peremptory
+letter to old man Dorset that day, demanding the ransom and dictating
+how it should be paid.
+
+"You know, Sam," says Bill, "I've stood by you without batting an
+eye in earthquakes, fire and flood--in poker games, dynamite
+outrages, police raids, train robberies and cyclones. I never lost my
+nerve yet till we kidnapped that two-legged skyrocket of a kid. He's
+got me going. You won't leave me long with him, will you, Sam?"
+
+"I'll be back some time this afternoon," says I. "You must keep the
+boy amused and quiet till I return. And now we'll write the letter to
+old Dorset."
+
+Bill and I got paper and pencil and worked on the letter while Red
+Chief, with a blanket wrapped around him, strutted up and down,
+guarding the mouth of the cave. Bill begged me tearfully to make the
+ransom fifteen hundred dollars instead of two thousand. "I ain't
+attempting," says he, "to decry the celebrated moral aspect of
+parental affection, but we're dealing with humans, and it ain't human
+for anybody to give up two thousand dollars for that forty-pound chunk
+of freckled wildcat. I'm willing to take a chance at fifteen hundred
+dollars. You can charge the difference up to me."
+
+So, to relieve Bill, I acceded, and we collaborated a letter that ran
+this way:
+
+ _Ebenezer Dorset, Esq.:_
+
+ We have your boy concealed in a place far from Summit. It is useless
+ for you or the most skilful detectives to attempt to find him.
+ Absolutely, the only terms on which you can have him restored to you
+ are these: We demand fifteen hundred dollars in large bills for his
+ return; the money to be left at midnight to-night at the same spot
+ and in the same box as your reply--as hereinafter described. If
+ you agree to these terms, send your answer in writing by a solitary
+ messenger to-night at half-past eight o'clock. After crossing Owl
+ Creek, on the road to Poplar Cove, there are three large trees about
+ a hundred yards apart, close to the fence of the wheat field on the
+ right-hand side. At the bottom of the fence-post, opposite the
+ third tree, will be found a small pasteboard box.
+
+ The messenger will place the answer in this box and return
+ immediately to Summit.
+
+ If you attempt any treachery or fail to comply with our demand as
+ stated, you will never see your boy again.
+
+ If you pay the money as demanded, he will be returned to you safe
+ and well within three hours. These terms are final, and if you do
+ not accede to them no further communication will be attempted.
+
+ TWO DESPERATE MEN.
+
+I addressed this letter to Dorset, and put it in my pocket. As I was
+about to start, the kid comes up to me and says:
+
+"Aw, Snake-eye, you said I could play the Black Scout while you was
+gone."
+
+"Play it, of course," says I. "Mr. Bill will play with you. What
+kind of a game is it?"
+
+"I'm the Black Scout," says Red Chief, "and I have to ride to the
+stockade to warn the settlers that the Indians are coming. I'm tired
+of playing Indian myself. I want to be the Black Scout."
+
+"All right," says I. "It sounds harmless to me. I guess Mr. Bill will
+help you foil the pesky savages."
+
+"What am I to do?" asks Bill, looking at the kid suspiciously.
+
+"You are the hoss," says Black Scout. "Get down on your hands and
+knees. How can I ride to the stockade without a hoss?"
+
+"You'd better keep him interested," said I, "till we get the scheme
+going. Loosen up."
+
+Bill gets down on his all fours, and a look comes in his eye like a
+rabbit's when you catch it in a trap.
+
+"How far is it to the stockade, kid?" he asks, in a husky manner of
+voice.
+
+"Ninety miles," says the Black Scout. "And you have to hump yourself
+to get there on time. Whoa, now!"
+
+The Black Scout jumps on Bill's back and digs his heels in his side.
+
+"For Heaven's sake," says Bill, "hurry back, Sam, as soon as you can.
+I wish we hadn't made the ransom more than a thousand. Say, you quit
+kicking me or I'll get up and warm you good."
+
+I walked over to Poplar Cove and sat around the postoffice and
+store, talking with the chawbacons that came in to trade. One
+whiskerando says that he hears Summit is all upset on account of Elder
+Ebenezer Dorset's boy having been lost or stolen. That was all I
+wanted to know. I bought some smoking tobacco, referred casually to
+the price of black-eyed peas, posted my letter surreptitiously and
+came away. The postmaster said the mail-carrier would come by in an
+hour to take the mail on to Summit.
+
+When I got back to the cave Bill and the boy were not to be found. I
+explored the vicinity of the cave, and risked a yodel or two, but
+there was no response.
+
+So I lighted my pipe and sat down on a mossy bank to await
+developments.
+
+In about half an hour I heard the bushes rustle, and Bill wabbled out
+into the little glade in front of the cave. Behind him was the kid,
+stepping softly like a scout, with a broad grin on his face. Bill
+stopped, took off his hat and wiped his face with a red handkerchief.
+The kid stopped about eight feet behind him.
+
+"Sam," says Bill, "I suppose you'll think I'm a renegade, but I
+couldn't help it. I'm a grown person with masculine proclivities and
+habits of self-defense, but there is a time when all systems of
+egotism and predominance fail. The boy is gone. I have sent him
+home. All is off. There was martyrs in old times," goes on Bill,
+"that suffered death rather than give up the particular graft they
+enjoyed. None of 'em ever was subjugated to such supernatural
+tortures as I have been. I tried to be faithful to our articles of
+depredation; but there came a limit."
+
+"What's the trouble, Bill?" I asks him.
+
+"I was rode," says Bill, "the ninety miles to the stockade, not
+barring an inch. Then, when the settlers was rescued, I was given
+oats. Sand ain't a palatable substitute. And then, for an hour I
+had to try to explain to him why there was nothin' in holes, how
+a road can run both ways and what makes the grass green. I tell
+you, Sam, a human can only stand so much. I takes him by the neck
+of his clothes and drags him down the mountain. On the way he
+kicks my legs black-and-blue from the knees down; and I've got to
+have two or three bites on my thumb and hand cauterized.
+
+"But he's gone"--continues Bill--"gone home. I showed him the
+road to Summit and kicked him about eight feet nearer there at one
+kick. I'm sorry we lose the ransom; but it was either that or Bill
+Driscoll to the madhouse."
+
+Bill is puffing and blowing, but there is a look of ineffable peace
+and growing content on his rose-pink features.
+
+"Bill," says I, "there isn't any heart disease in your family, is
+there?
+
+"No," says Bill, "nothing chronic except malaria and accidents. Why?"
+
+"Then you might turn around," says I, "and have a took behind you."
+
+Bill turns and sees the boy, and loses his complexion and sits down
+plump on the round and begins to pluck aimlessly at grass and little
+sticks. For an hour I was afraid for his mind. And then I told him
+that my scheme was to put the whole job through immediately and that
+we would get the ransom and be off with it by midnight if old Dorset
+fell in with our proposition. So Bill braced up enough to give the
+kid a weak sort of a smile and a promise to play the Russian in a
+Japanese war with him is soon as he felt a little better.
+
+I had a scheme for collecting that ransom without danger of being
+caught by counterplots that ought to commend itself to professional
+kidnappers. The tree under which the answer was to be left--and the
+money later on--was close to the road fence with big, bare fields on
+all sides. If a gang of constables should be watching for any one to
+come for the note they could see him a long way off crossing the
+fields or in the road. But no, sirree! At half-past eight I was up in
+that tree as well hidden as a tree toad, waiting for the messenger to
+arrive.
+
+Exactly on time, a half-grown boy rides up the road on a bicycle,
+locates the pasteboard box at the foot of the fence-post, slips a
+folded piece of paper into it and pedals away again back toward
+Summit.
+
+I waited an hour and then concluded the thing was square. I slid down
+the tree, got the note, slipped along the fence till I struck the
+woods, and was back at the cave in another half an hour. I opened the
+note, got near the lantern and read it to Bill. It was written with a
+pen in a crabbed hand, and the sum and substance of it was this:
+
+ _Two Desperate Men.
+
+ Gentlemen:_ I received your letter to-day by post, in regard to the
+ ransom you ask for the return of my son. I think you are a little
+ high in your demands, and I hereby make you a counter-proposition,
+ which I am inclined to believe you will accept. You bring Johnny
+ home and pay me two hundred and fifty dollars in cash, and I agree
+ to take him off your hands. You had better come at night, for the
+ neighbours believe he is lost, and I couldn't be responsible for
+ what they would do to anybody they saw bringing him back. Very
+ respectfully,
+
+ EBENEZER DORSET.
+
+"Great pirates of Penzance!" says I; "of all the impudent--"
+
+But I glanced at Bill, and hesitated. He had the most appealing look
+in his eyes I ever saw on the face of a dumb or a talking brute.
+
+"Sam," says he, "what's two hundred and fifty dollars, after all?
+We've got the money. One more night of this kid will send me to a bed
+in Bedlam. Besides being a thorough gentleman, I think Mr. Dorset is
+a spendthrift for making us such a liberal offer. You ain't going
+to let the chance go, are you?"
+
+"Tell you the truth, Bill," says I, "this little he ewe lamb has
+somewhat got on my nerves too. We'll take him home, pay the ransom
+and make our get-away."
+
+We took him home that night. We got him to go by telling him that his
+father had bought a silver-mounted rifle and a pair of moccasins for
+him, and we were going to hunt bears the next day.
+
+It was just twelve o'clock when we knocked at Ebenezer's front door.
+Just at the moment when I should have been abstracting the fifteen
+hundred dollars from the box under the tree, according to the original
+proposition, Bill was counting out two hundred and fifty dollars into
+Dorset's hand.
+
+When the kid found out we were going to leave him at home he started
+up a howl like a calliope and fastened himself as tight as a leech to
+Bill's leg. His father peeled him away gradually, like a porous
+plaster.
+
+"How long can you hold him?" asks Bill.
+
+"I'm not as strong as I used to be," says old Dorset, "but I think I
+can promise you ten minutes."
+
+"Enough," says Bill. "In ten minutes I shall cross the Central,
+Southern and Middle Western States, and be legging it trippingly for
+the Canadian border."
+
+And, as dark as it was, and as fat as Bill was, and as good a runner
+as I am, he was a good mile and a half out of Summit before I could
+catch up with him.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+THE MARRY MONTH OF MAY
+
+
+Prithee, smite the poet in the eye when he would sing to you praises
+of the month of May. It is a month presided over by the spirits of
+mischief and madness. Pixies and flibbertigibbets haunt the budding
+woods: Puck and his train of midgets are busy in town and country.
+
+In May nature holds up at us a chiding finger, bidding us remember
+that we are not gods, but overconceited members of her own great
+family. She reminds us that we are brothers to the chowder-doomed
+clam and the donkey; lineal scions of the pansy and the chimpanzee,
+and but cousins-german to the cooing doves, the quacking ducks and the
+housemaids and policemen in the parks.
+
+In May Cupid shoots blindfolded--millionaires marry stenographers;
+wise professors woo white-aproned gum-chewers behind quick-lunch
+counters; schoolma'ams make big bad boys remain after school; lads
+with ladders steal lightly over lawns where Juliet waits in her
+trellissed window with her telescope packed; young couples out for a
+walk come home married; old chaps put on white spats and promenade
+near the Normal School; even married men, grown unwontedly tender and
+sentimental, whack their spouses on the back and growl: "How goes it,
+old girl:"
+
+This May, who is no goddess, but Circe, masquerading at the dance
+given in honour of the fair dbutante, Summer, puts the kibosh on us
+all.
+
+Old Mr. Coulson groaned a little, and then sat up straight in his
+invalid's chair. He had the gout very bad in one foot, a house near
+Gramercy Park, half a million dollars and a daughter. And he had a
+housekeeper, Mrs. Widdup. The fact and the name deserve a sentence
+each. They have it.
+
+When May poked Mr. Coulson he became elder brother to the turtle-dove.
+In the window near which he sat were boxes of jonquils, of hyacinths,
+geraniums and pansies. The breeze brought their odour into the room.
+Immediately there was a well-contested round between the breath of the
+flowers and the able and active effluvium from gout liniment. The
+liniment won easily; but not before the flowers got an uppercut to
+old Mr. Coulson's nose. The deadly work of the implacable, false
+enchantress May was done.
+
+Across the park to the olfactories of Mr. Coulson came other
+unmistakable, characteristic, copyrighted smells of spring that belong
+to the-big-city-above-the-Subway, alone. The smells of hot asphalt,
+underground caverns, gasoline, patchouli, orange peel, sewer gas,
+Albany grabs, Egyptian cigarettes, mortar and the undried ink on
+newspapers. The inblowing air was sweet and mild. Sparrows wrangled
+happily everywhere outdoors. Never trust May.
+
+Mr. Coulson twisted the ends of his white mustache, cursed his foot,
+and pounded a bell on the table by his side.
+
+In came Mrs. Widdup. She was comely to the eye, fair, flustered,
+forty and foxy.
+
+"Higgins is out, sir," she said, with a smile suggestive of vibratory
+massage. "He went to post a letter. Can I do anything for you, sir?"
+
+"It's time for my aconite," said old Mr. Coulson. "Drop it for me.
+The bottle's there. Three drops. In water. D---- that is, confound
+Higgins! There's nobody in this house cares if I die here in this
+chair for want of attention."
+
+Mrs. Widdup sighed deeply.
+
+"Don't be saying that, sir," she said. "There's them that would care
+more than any one knows. Thirteen drops, you said, sir?"
+
+"Three," said old man Coulson.
+
+He took his dose and then Mrs. Widdup's hand. She blushed. Oh, yes,
+it can be done. Just hold your breath and compress the diaphragm.
+
+"Mrs. Widdup," said Mr. Coulson, "the springtime's full upon us."
+
+"Ain't that right?" said Mrs. Widdup. "The air's real warm. And
+there's bock-beer signs on every corner. And the park's all yaller and
+pink and blue with flowers; and I have such shooting pains up my legs
+and body."
+
+"'In the spring,'" quoted Mr. Coulson, curling his mustache, "'a y----
+that is, a man's--fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.'"
+
+"Lawsy, now!" exclaimed Mrs. Widdup; "ain't that right? Seems like
+it's in the air."
+
+"'In the spring,'" continued old Mr. Coulson, "'a livelier iris shines
+upon the burnished dove.'"
+
+"They do be lively, the Irish," sighed Mrs. Widdup pensively.
+
+"Mrs. Widdup," said Mr. Coulson, making a face at a twinge of his gouty
+foot, "this would be a lonesome house without you. I'm an--that is,
+I'm an elderly man--but I'm worth a comfortable lot of money. If half
+a million dollars' worth of Government bonds and the true affection of
+a heart that, though no longer beating with the first ardour of youth,
+can still throb with genuine--"
+
+The loud noise of an overturned chair near the portires of the
+adjoining room interrupted the venerable and scarcely suspecting
+victim of May.
+
+In stalked Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson, bony, durable, tall,
+high-nosed, frigid, well-bred, thirty-five, in-the-neighbourhood-of-
+Gramercy-Parkish. She put up a lorgnette. Mrs. Widdup hastily
+stooped and arranged the bandages on Mr. Coulson's gouty foot.
+
+"I thought Higgins was with you," said Miss Van Meeker Constantia.
+
+"Higgins went out," explained her father, "and Mrs. Widdup answered
+the bell. That is better now, Mrs. Widdup, thank you. No; there is
+nothing else I require."
+
+The housekeeper retired, pink under the cool, inquiring stare of Miss
+Coulson.
+
+"This spring weather is lovely, isn't it, daughter?" said the old man,
+consciously conscious.
+
+"That's just it," replied Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson, somewhat
+obscurely. "When does Mrs. Widdup start on her vacation, papa?"
+
+"I believe she said a week from to-day," said Mr. Coulson.
+
+Miss Van Meeker Constantia stood for a minute at the window gazing,
+toward the little park, flooded with the mellow afternoon sunlight.
+With the eye of a botanist she viewed the flowers--most potent
+weapons of insidious May. With the cool pulses of a virgin of
+Cologne she withstood the attack of the ethereal mildness. The arrows
+of the pleasant sunshine fell back, frostbitten, from the cold panoply
+of her unthrilled bosom. The odour of the flowers waked no soft
+sentiments in the unexplored recesses of her dormant heart. The chirp
+of the sparrows gave her a pain. She mocked at May.
+
+But although Miss Coulson was proof against the season, she was
+keen enough to estimate its power. She knew that elderly men and
+thick-waisted women jumped as educated fleas in the ridiculous train
+of May, the merry mocker of the months. She had heard of foolish old
+gentlemen marrying their housekeepers before. What a humiliating
+thing, after all, was this feeling called love!
+
+The next morning at 8 o'clock, when the iceman called, the cook told
+him that Miss Coulson wanted to see him in the basement.
+
+"Well, ain't I the Olcott and Depew; not mentioning the first name at
+all?" said the iceman, admiringly, of himself.
+
+As a concession he rolled his sleeves down, dropped his icehooks on a
+syringa and went back. When Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson
+addressed him he took off his hat.
+
+"There is a rear entrance to this basement," said Miss Coulson, "which
+can be reached by driving into the vacant lot next door, where they
+are excavating for a building. I want you to bring in that way within
+two hours 1,000 pounds of ice. You may have to bring another man or
+two to help you. I will show you where I want it placed. I also want
+1,000 pounds a day delivered the same way for the next four days.
+Your company may charge the ice on our regular bill. This is for your
+extra trouble."
+
+Miss Coulson tendered a ten-dollar bill. The iceman bowed, and held
+his hat in his two hands behind him.
+
+"Not if you'll excuse me, lady. It'll be a pleasure to fix things up
+for you any way you please."
+
+Alas for May!
+
+About noon Mr. Coulson knocked two glasses off his table, broke the
+spring of his bell and yelled for Higgins at the same time.
+
+"Bring an axe," commanded Mr. Coulson, sardonically, "or send out
+for a quart of prussic acid, or have a policeman come in and shoot me.
+I'd rather that than be frozen to death."
+
+"It does seem to be getting cool, Sir," said Higgins. "I hadn't
+noticed it before. I'll close the window, Sir."
+
+"Do," said Mr. Coulson. "They call this spring, do they? If it keeps
+up long I'll go back to Palm Beach. House feels like a morgue."
+
+Later Miss Coulson dutifully came in to inquire how the gout was
+progressing.
+
+"'Stantia," said the old man, "how is the weather outdoors?"
+
+"Bright," answered Miss Coulson, "but chilly."
+
+"Feels like the dead of winter to me," said Mr. Coulson.
+
+"An instance," said Constantia, gazing abstractedly out the window,
+"of 'winter lingering in the lap of spring,' though the metaphor is
+not in the most refined taste."
+
+A little later she walked down by the side of the little park and on
+westward to Broadway to accomplish a little shopping.
+
+A little later than that Mrs. Widdup entered the invalid's room.
+
+"Did you ring, Sir?" she asked, dimpling in many places. "I asked
+Higgins to go to the drug store, and I thought I heard your bell."
+
+"I did not," said Mr. Coulson.
+
+"I'm afraid," said Mrs. Widdup, "I interrupted you sir, yesterday when
+you were about to say something."
+
+"How comes it, Mrs. Widdup," said old man Coulson sternly, "that I
+find it so cold in this house?"
+
+"Cold, Sir?" said the housekeeper, "why, now, since you speak of it
+it do seem cold in this room. But, outdoors it's as warm and fine
+as June, sir. And how this weather do seem to make one's heart jump
+out of one's shirt waist, sir. And the ivy all leaved out on the side
+of the house, and the hand-organs playing, and the children dancing on
+the sidewalk--'tis a great time for speaking out what's in the
+heart. You were saying yesterday, sir--"
+
+"Woman!" roared Mr. Coulson; "you are a fool. I pay you to take care
+of this house. I am freezing to death in my own room, and you come in
+and drivel to me about ivy and hand-organs. Get me an overcoat at
+once. See that all doors and windows are closed below. An old, fat,
+irresponsible, one-sided object like you prating about springtime
+and flowers in the middle of winter! When Higgins comes back, tell him
+to bring me a hot rum punch. And now get out!"
+
+But who shall shame the bright face of May? Rogue though she be and
+disturber of sane men's peace, no wise virgins cunning nor cold
+storage shall make her bow her head in the bright galaxy of months.
+
+Oh, yes, the story was not quite finished.
+
+A night passed, and Higgins helped old man Coulson in the morning to
+his chair by the window. The cold of the room was gone. Heavenly
+odours and fragrant mildness entered.
+
+In hurried Mrs. Widdup, and stood by his chair. Mr. Coulson reached
+his bony hand and grasped her plump one.
+
+"Mrs. Widdup," he said, "this house would be no home without you. I
+have half a million dollars. If that and the true affection of a
+heart no longer in its youthful prime, but still not cold, could--"
+
+"I found out what made it cold," said Mrs. Widdup, leanin' against his
+chair. "'Twas ice--tons of it--in the basement and in the furnace
+room, everywhere. I shut off the registers that it was coming through
+into your room, Mr. Coulson, poor soul! And now it's Maytime again."
+
+"A true heart," went on old man Coulson, a little wanderingly, "that
+the springtime has brought to life again, and--but what will my
+daughter say, Mrs. Widdup?"
+
+"Never fear, sir," said Mrs. Widdup, cheerfully. "Miss Coulson, she
+ran away with the iceman last night, sir!"
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+A TECHNICAL ERROR
+
+
+I never cared especially for feuds, believing them to be even more
+overrated products of our country than grapefruit, scrapple, or
+honeymoons. Nevertheless, if I may be allowed, I will tell you of an
+Indian Territory feud of which I was press-agent, camp-follower, and
+inaccessory during the fact.
+
+I was on a visit to Sam Durkee's ranch, where I had a great time
+falling off unmanicured ponies and waving my bare hand at the lower
+jaws of wolves about two miles away. Sam was a hardened person of
+about twenty-five, with a reputation for going home in the dark with
+perfect equanimity, though often with reluctance.
+
+Over in the Creek Nation was a family bearing the name of Tatum. I
+was told that the Durkees and Tatums had been feuding for years.
+Several of each family had bitten the grass, and it was expected that
+more Nebuchadnezzars would follow. A younger generation of each
+family was growing up, and the grass was keeping pace with them. But I
+gathered that they had fought fairly; that they had not lain in
+cornfields and aimed at the division of their enemies' suspenders in
+the back--partly, perhaps, because there were no cornfields, and
+nobody wore more than one suspender. Nor had any woman or child of
+either house ever been harmed. In those days--and you will find it
+so yet--their women were safe.
+
+Sam Durkee had a girl. (If it were an all-fiction magazine that I
+expect to sell this story to, I should say, "Mr. Durkee rejoiced in a
+fiance.") Her name was Ella Baynes. They appeared to be devoted to
+each other, and to have perfect confidence in each other, as all
+couples do who are and have or aren't and haven't. She was tolerably
+pretty, with a heavy mass of brown hair that helped her along. He
+introduced me to her, which seemed not to lessen her preference for
+him; so I reasoned that they were surely soul-mates.
+
+Miss Baynes lived in Kingfisher, twenty miles from the ranch. Sam
+lived on a gallop between the two places.
+
+One day there came to Kingfisher a courageous young man, rather small,
+with smooth face and regular features. He made many inquiries about
+the business of the town, and especially of the inhabitants
+cognominally. He said he was from Muscogee, and he looked it, with
+his yellow shoes and crocheted four-in-hand. I met him once when I
+rode in for the mail. He said his name was Beverly Travers, which
+seemed rather improbable.
+
+There were active times on the ranch, just then, and Sam was too busy
+to go to town often. As an incompetent and generally worthless guest,
+it devolved upon me to ride in for little things such as post cards,
+barrels of flour, baking-powder, smoking-tobacco, and--letters from
+Ella.
+
+One day, when I was messenger for half a gross of cigarette papers
+and a couple of wagon tires, I saw the alleged Beverly Travers in a
+yellow-wheeled buggy with Ella Baynes, driving about town as
+ostentatiously as the black, waxy mud would permit. I knew that
+this information would bring no balm of Gilead to Sam's soul, so I
+refrained from including it in the news of the city that I retailed
+on my return. But on the next afternoon an elongated ex-cowboy of
+the name of Simmons, an old-time pal of Sam's, who kept a feed store
+in Kingfisher, rode out to the ranch and rolled and burned many
+cigarettes before he would talk. When he did make oration, his words
+were these:
+
+"Say, Sam, there's been a description of a galoot miscallin' himself
+Bevel-edged Travels impairing the atmospheric air of Kingfisher for
+the past two weeks. You know who he was? He was not otherwise than
+Ben Tatum, from the Creek Nation, son of old Gopher Tatum that your
+Uncle Newt shot last February. You know what he done this morning?
+He killed your brother Lester--shot him in the co't-house yard."
+
+I wondered if Sam had heard. He pulled a twig from a mesquite bush,
+chewed it gravely, and said:
+
+"He did, did he? He killed Lester?"
+
+"The same," said Simmons. "And he did more. He run away with your
+girl, the same as to say Miss Ella Baynes. I thought you might like
+to know, so I rode out to impart the information."
+
+"I am much obliged, Jim," said Sam, taking the chewed twig from his
+mouth. "Yes, I'm glad you rode Out. Yes, I'm right glad."
+
+"Well, I'll be ridin' back, I reckon. That boy I left in the feed
+store don't know hay from oats. He shot Lester in the back."
+
+"Shot him in the back?"
+
+"Yes, while he was hitchin' his hoss."
+
+"I'm much obliged, Jim."
+
+"I kind of thought you'd like to know as soon as you could."
+
+"Come in and have some coffee before you ride back, Jim?"
+
+"Why, no, I reckon not; I must get back to the store."
+
+"And you say--"
+
+"Yes, Sam. Everybody seen 'em drive away together in a buckboard,
+with a big bundle, like clothes, tied up in the back of it. He was
+drivin' the team he brought over with him from Muscogee. They'll be
+hard to overtake right away."
+
+"And which--"
+
+"I was goin' on to tell you. They left on the Guthrie road; but
+there's no tellin' which forks they'll take--you know that."
+
+"All right, Jim; much obliged."
+
+"You're welcome, Sam."
+
+Simmons rolled a cigarette and stabbed his pony with both heels.
+Twenty yards away he reined up and called back:
+
+"You don't want no--assistance, as you might say?"
+
+"Not any, thanks."
+
+"I didn't think you would. Well, so long!"
+
+Sam took out and opened a bone-handled pocket-knife and scraped a
+dried piece of mud from his left boot. I thought at first he was
+going to swear a vendetta on the blade of it, or recite "The Gipsy's
+Curse." The few feuds I had ever seen or read about usually opened
+that way. This one seemed to be presented with a new treatment.
+Thus offered on the stage, it would have been hissed off, and one of
+Belasco's thrilling melodramas demanded instead.
+
+"I wonder," said Sam, with a profoundly thoughtful expression, "if the
+cook has any cold beans left over!"
+
+He called Wash, the Negro cook, and finding that he had some, ordered
+him to heat up the pot and make some strong coffee. Then we went into
+Sam's private room, where he slept, and kept his armoury, dogs, and the
+saddles of his favourite mounts. He took three or four six-shooters
+out of a bookcase and began to look them over, whistling "The Cowboy's
+Lament" abstractedly. Afterward he ordered the two best horses on the
+ranch saddled and tied to the hitching-post.
+
+Now, in the feud business, in all sections of the country, I have
+observed that in one particular there is a delicate but strict
+etiquette belonging. You must not mention the word or refer to the
+subject in the presence of a feudist. It would be more reprehensible
+than commenting upon the mole on the chin of your rich aunt. I found,
+later on, that there is another unwritten rule, but I think that
+belongs solely to the West.
+
+It yet lacked two hours to supper-time; but in twenty minutes Sam and
+I were plunging deep into the reheated beans, hot coffee, and cold
+beef.
+
+"Nothing like a good meal before a long ride," said Sam. "Eat hearty."
+
+I had a sudden suspicion.
+
+"Why did you have two horses saddled?" I asked.
+
+"One, two--one, two," said Sam. "You can count, can't you?"
+
+His mathematics carried with it a momentary qualm and a lesson. The
+thought had not occurred to him that the thought could possibly occur
+to me not to ride at his side on that red road to revenge and justice.
+It was the higher calculus. I was booked for the trail. I began to
+eat more beans.
+
+In an hour we set forth at a steady gallop eastward. Our horses were
+Kentucky-bred, strengthened by the mesquite grass of the west. Ben
+Tatum's steeds may have been swifter, and he had a good lead; but if
+he had heard the punctual thuds of the hoofs of those trailers of
+ours, born in the heart of feudland, he might have felt that
+retribution was creeping up on the hoof-prints of his dapper nags.
+
+I knew that Ben Tatum's card to play was flight--flight until he
+came within the safer territory of his own henchmen and supporters.
+He knew that the man pursuing him would follow the trail to any end
+where it might lead.
+
+During the ride Sam talked of the prospect for rain, of the price of
+beef, and of the musical glasses. You would have thought he had never
+had a brother or a sweetheart or an enemy on earth. There are some
+subjects too big even for the words in the "Unabridged." Knowing
+this phase of the feud code, but not having practised it sufficiently,
+I overdid the thing by telling some slightly funny anecdotes. Sam
+laughed at exactly the right place--laughed with his mouth. When I
+caught sight of his mouth, I wished I had been blessed with enough
+sense of humour to have suppressed those anecdotes.
+
+Our first sight of them we had in Guthrie. Tired and hungry, we
+stumbled, unwashed, into a little yellow-pine hotel and sat at a
+table. In the opposite corner we saw the fugitives. They were bent
+upon their meal, but looked around at times uneasily.
+
+The girl was dressed in brown--one of these smooth, half-shiny,
+silky-looking affairs with lace collar and cuffs, and what I believe
+they call an accordion-plaited skirt. She wore a thick brown veil down
+to her nose, and a broad-brimmed straw hat with some kind of feathers
+adorning it. The man wore plain, dark clothes, and his hair was
+trimmed very short. He was such a man as you might see anywhere.
+
+There they were--the murderer and the woman he had stolen. There we
+were--the rightful avenger, according to the code, and the
+supernumerary who writes these words.
+
+For one time, at least, in the heart of the supernumerary there rose
+the killing instinct. For one moment he joined the force of
+combatants--orally.
+
+"What are you waiting for, Sam?" I said in a whisper. "Let him have
+it now!"
+
+Sam gave a melancholy sigh.
+
+"You don't understand; but _he_ does," he said. "_He_ knows. Mr.
+Tenderfoot, there's a rule out here among white men in the Nation that
+you can't shoot a man when he's with a woman. I never knew it to be
+broke yet. You _can't_ do it. You've got to get him in a gang of men or
+by himself. That's why. He knows it, too. We all know. So, that's
+Mr. Ben Tatum! One of the 'pretty men'! I'll cut him out of the herd
+before they leave the hotel, and regulate his account!"
+
+After supper the flying pair disappeared quickly. Although Sam haunted
+lobby and stairway and halls half the night, in some mysterious way
+the fugitives eluded him; and in the morning the veiled lady in the
+brown dress with the accordion-plaited skirt and the dapper young man
+with the close-clipped hair, and the buckboard with the prancing nags,
+were gone.
+
+
+It is a monotonous story, that of the ride; so it shall be
+curtailed. Once again we overtook them on a road. We were about
+fifty yards behind. They turned in the buckboard and looked at us;
+then drove on without whipping up their horses. Their safety no
+longer lay in speed. Ben Tatum knew. He knew that the only rock of
+safety left to him was the code. There is no doubt that, had he
+been alone, the matter would have been settled quickly with Sam
+Durkee in the usual way; but he had something at his side that
+kept still the trigger-finger of both. It seemed likely that he
+was no coward.
+
+So, you may perceive that woman, on occasions, may postpone instead of
+precipitating conflict between man and man. But not willingly or
+consciously. She is oblivious of codes.
+
+Five miles farther, we came upon the future great Western city of
+Chandler. The horses of pursuers and pursued were starved and weary.
+There was one hotel that offered danger to man and entertainment to
+beast; so the four of us met again in the dining room at the ringing
+of a bell so resonant and large that it had cracked the welkin long
+ago. The dining room was not as large as the one at Guthrie.
+
+Just as we were eating apple pie--how Ben Davises and tragedy
+impinge upon each other!--I noticed Sam looking with keen
+intentness at our quarry where they were seated at a table across the
+room. The girl still wore the brown dress with lace collar and cuffs,
+and the veil drawn down to her nose. The man bent over his plate,
+with his close cropped head held low.
+
+"There's a code," I heard Sam say, either to me or to himself, "that
+won't let you shoot a man in the company of a woman; but, by thunder,
+there ain't one to keep you from killing a woman in the company of a
+man!"
+
+And, quicker than my mind could follow his argument, he whipped a
+Colt's automatic from under his left arm and pumped six bullets into
+the body that the brown dress covered--the brown dress with the lace
+collar and cuffs and the accordion-plaited skirt.
+
+The young person in the dark sack suit, from whose head and from whose
+life a woman's glory had been clipped, laid her head on her arms
+stretched upon the table; while people came running to raise Ben Tatum
+from the floor in his feminine masquerade that had given Sam the
+opportunity to set aside, technically, the obligations of the code.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE
+
+
+Few young couples in the Big-City-of-Bluff began their married
+existence with greater promise of happiness than did Mr. and Mrs.
+Claude Turpin. They felt no especial animosity toward each other;
+they were comfortably established in a handsome apartment house that
+had a name and accommodations like those of a sleeping-car; they were
+living as expensively as the couple on the next floor above who had
+twice their income; and their marriage had occurred on a wager, a
+ferry-boat and first acquaintance, thus securing a sensational
+newspaper notice with their names attached to pictures of the Queen of
+Roumania and M. Santos-Dumont.
+
+Turpin's income was $200 per month. On pay day, after calculating the
+amounts due for rent, instalments on furniture and piano, gas, and
+bills owed to the florist, confectioner, milliner, tailor, wine
+merchant and cab company, the Turpins would find that they still had
+$200 left to spend. How to do this is one of the secrets of
+metropolitan life.
+
+The domestic life of the Turpins was a beautiful picture to see. But
+you couldn't gaze upon it as you could at an oleograph of "Don't Wake
+Grandma," or "Brooklyn by Moonlight."
+
+You had to blink when looked at it; and you heard a fizzing sound just
+like the machine with a "scope" at the end of it. Yes; there wasn't
+much repose about the picture of the Turpins' domestic life. It was
+something like "Spearing Salmon in the Columbia River," or "Japanese
+Artillery in Action."
+
+Every day was just like another; as the days are in New York. In the
+morning Turpin would take bromo-seltzer, his pocket change from under
+the clock, his hat, no breakfast and his departure for the office. At
+noon Mrs. Turpin would get out of bed and humour, put on a kimono,
+airs, and the water to boil for coffee.
+
+Turpin lunched downtown. He came home at 6 to dress for dinner. They
+always dined out. They strayed from the chop-house to chop-sueydom,
+from terrace to table d'hte, from rathskeller to roadhouse, from caf
+to casino, from Maria's to the Martha Washington. Such is domestic
+life in the great city. Your vine is the mistletoe; your fig tree
+bears dates. Your household gods are Mercury and John Howard Payne.
+For the wedding march you now hear only "Come with the Gypsy Bride."
+You rarely dine at the same place twice in succession. You tire of
+the food; and, besides, you want to give them time for the question of
+that souvenir silver sugar bowl to blow over.
+
+The Turpins were therefore happy. They made many warm and delightful
+friends, some of whom they remembered the next day. Their home life
+was an ideal one, according to the rules and regulations of the Book
+of Bluff.
+
+There came a time when it dawned upon Turpin that his wife was getting
+away with too much money. If you belong to the near-swell class in the
+Big City, and your income is $200 per month, and you find at the end
+of the month, after looking over the bills for current expenses, that
+you, yourself, have spent $150, you very naturally wonder what has
+become of the other $50. So you suspect your wife. And perhaps you
+give her a hint that something needs explanation.
+
+"I say, Vivien," said Turpin, one afternoon when they were enjoying in
+rapt silence the peace and quiet of their cozy apartment, "you've been
+creating a hiatus big enough for a dog to crawl through in this
+month's honorarium. You haven't been paying your dressmaker
+anything on account, have you?"
+
+There was a moment's silence. No sounds could be heard except the
+breathing of the fox terrier, and the subdued, monotonous sizzling of
+Vivien's fulvous locks against the insensate curling irons. Claude
+Turpin, sitting upon a pillow that he had thoughtfully placed upon the
+convolutions of the apartment sofa, narrowly watched the riante,
+lovely face of his wife.
+
+"Claudie, dear," said she, touching her finger to her ruby tongue and
+testing the unresponsive curling irons, "you do me an injustice. Mme.
+Toinette has not seen a cent of mine since the day you paid your
+tailor ten dollars on account."
+
+Turpin's suspicions were allayed for the time. But one day soon there
+came an anonymous letter to him that read:
+
+
+ "Watch your wife. She is blowing in your money secretly. I was
+ a sufferer just as you are. The place is No. 345 Blank Street.
+ A word to the wise, etc.
+ A MAN WHO KNOWS"
+
+
+Turpin took this letter to the captain of police of the precinct that
+he lived in.
+
+"My precinct is as clean as a hound's tooth," said the captain. "The
+lid's shut down as close there as it is over the eye of a Williamsburg
+girl when she's kissed at a party. But if you think there's anything
+queer at the address, I'll go there with ye."
+
+On the next afternoon at 3, Turpin and the captain crept softly up the
+stairs of No. 345 Blank Street. A dozen plain-clothes men, dressed in
+full police uniforms, so as to allay suspicion, waited in the hall
+below.
+
+At the top of the stairs was a door, which was found to be locked.
+The captain took a key from his pocket and unlocked it. The two men
+entered.
+
+They found themselves in a large room, occupied by twenty or
+twenty-five elegantly clothed ladies. Racing charts hung against the
+walls, a ticker clicked in one corner; with a telephone receiver to
+his ear a man was calling out the various positions of the horses in
+a very exciting race. The occupants of the room looked up at the
+intruders; but, as if reassured by the sight of the captain's uniform,
+they reverted their attention to the man at the telephone.
+
+"You see," said the captain to Turpin, "the value of an anonymous
+letter! No high-minded and self-respecting gentleman should
+consider one worthy of notice. Is your wife among this assembly, Mr.
+Turpin?"
+
+"She is not," said Turpin.
+
+"And if she was," continued the captain, "would she be within the
+reach of the tongue of slander? These ladies constitute a Browning
+Society. They meet to discuss the meaning of the great poet. The
+telephone is connected with Boston, whence the parent society
+transmits frequently its interpretations of the poems. Be ashamed of
+yer suspicions, Mr. Turpin."
+
+"Go soak your shield," said Turpin. "Vivien knows how to take care of
+herself in a pool-room. She's not dropping anything on the ponies.
+There must be something queer going on here."
+
+"Nothing but Browning," said the captain. "Hear that?"
+
+"Thanatopsis by a nose," drawled the man at the telephone.
+
+"That's not Browning; that's Longfellow," said Turpin, who sometimes
+read books.
+
+"Back to the pasture!" exclaimed the captain. "Longfellow made the
+pacing-to-wagon record of 7.53 'way back in 1868."
+
+"I believe there's something queer about this joint," repeated Turpin.
+
+"I don't see it," said the captain.
+
+"I know it looks like a pool-room, all right," persisted Turpin, "but
+that's all a blind. Vivien has been dropping a lot of coin somewhere.
+I believe there's some under-handed work going on here."
+
+A number of racing sheets were tacked close together, covering a large
+space on one of the walls. Turpin, suspicious, tore several of them
+down. A door, previously hidden, was revealed. Turpin placed an
+ear to the crack and listened intently. He heard the soft hum of many
+voices, low and guarded laughter, and a sharp, metallic clicking and
+scraping as if from a multitude of tiny but busy objects.
+
+"My God! It is as I feared!" whispered Turpin to himself. "Summon
+your men at once!" he called to the captain. "She is in there, I
+know."
+
+At the blowing of the captain's whistle the uniformed plain-clothes
+men rushed up the stairs into the pool-room. When they saw the
+betting paraphernalia distributed around they halted, surprised and
+puzzled to know why they had been summoned.
+
+But the captain pointed to the locked door and bade them break it
+down. In a few moments they demolished it with the axes they carried.
+Into the other room sprang Claude Turpin, with the captain at his
+heels.
+
+The scene was one that lingered long in Turpin's mind. Nearly a score
+of women--women expensively and fashionably clothed, many beautiful
+and of refined appearance--had been seated at little marble-topped
+tables. When the police burst open the door they shrieked and ran
+here and there like gayly plumed birds that had been disturbed in a
+tropical grove. Some became hysterical; one or two fainted; several
+knelt at the feet of the officers and besought them for mercy on
+account of their families and social position.
+
+A man who had been seated behind a desk had seized a roll of currency
+as large as the ankle of a Paradise Roof Gardens chorus girl and
+jumped out of the window. Half a dozen attendants huddled at one end
+of the room, breathless from fear.
+
+Upon the tables remained the damning and incontrovertible evidences
+of the guilt of the habitues of that sinister room--dish after dish
+heaped high with ice cream, and surrounded by stacks of empty ones,
+scraped to the last spoonful.
+
+"Ladies," said the captain to his weeping circle of prisoners, "I'll
+not hold any of yez. Some of yez I recognize as having fine houses and
+good standing in the community, with hard-working husbands and childer
+at home. But I'll read ye a bit of a lecture before ye go. In the
+next room there's a 20-to-1 shot just dropped in under the wire three
+lengths ahead of the field. Is this the way ye waste your husbands'
+money instead of helping earn it? Home wid yez! The lid's on the
+ice-cream freezer in this precinct."
+
+Claude Turpin's wife was among the patrons of the raided room. He led
+her to their apartment in stern silence. There she wept so
+remorsefully and besought his forgiveness so pleadingly that he forgot
+his just anger, and soon he gathered his penitent golden-haired Vivien
+in his arms and forgave her.
+
+"Darling," she murmured, half sobbingly, as the moonlight drifted
+through the open window, glorifying her sweet, upturned face, "I know
+I done wrong. I will never touch ice cream again. I forgot you were
+not a millionaire. I used to go there every day. But to-day I felt
+some strange, sad presentiment of evil, and I was not myself. I ate
+only eleven saucers."
+
+"Say no more," said Claude, gently as he fondly caressed her waving
+curls.
+
+"And you are sure that you fully forgive me?" asked Vivien, gazing at
+him entreatingly with dewy eyes of heavenly blue.
+
+"Almost sure, little one," answered Claude, stooping and lightly
+touching her snowy forehead with his lips. "I'll let you know
+later on. I've got a month's salary down on Vanilla to win the
+three-year-old steeplechase to-morrow; and if the ice-cream hunch
+is to the good you are It again--see?"
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+THE WHIRLIGIG OF LIFE
+
+
+Justice-of-the-Peace Benaja Widdup sat in the door of his office
+smoking his elder-stem pipe. Half-way to the zenith the Cumberland
+range rose blue-gray in the afternoon haze. A speckled hen swaggered
+down the main street of the "settlement," cackling foolishly.
+
+Up the road came a sound of creaking axles, and then a slow cloud of
+dust, and then a bull-cart bearing Ransie Bilbro and his wife. The
+cart stopped at the Justice's door, and the two climbed down. Ransie
+was a narrow six feet of sallow brown skin and yellow hair. The
+imperturbability of the mountains hung upon him like a suit of armour.
+The woman was calicoed, angled, snuff-brushed, and weary with unknown
+desires. Through it all gleamed a faint protest of cheated youth
+unconscious of its loss.
+
+The Justice of the Peace slipped his feet into his shoes, for the sake
+of dignity, and moved to let them enter.
+
+"We-all," said the woman, in a voice like the wind blowing through pine
+boughs, "wants a divo'ce." She looked at Ransie to see if he noted any
+flaw or ambiguity or evasion or partiality or self-partisanship in her
+statement of their business.
+
+"A divo'ce," repeated Ransie, with a solemn nod. "We-all can't git
+along together nohow. It's lonesome enough fur to live in the
+mount'ins when a man and a woman keers fur one another. But when
+she's a-spittin' like a wildcat or a-sullenin' like a hoot-owl in the
+cabin, a man ain't got no call to live with her."
+
+"When he's a no-'count varmint," said the woman, "without any especial
+warmth, a-traipsin' along of scalawags and moonshiners and a-layin' on
+his back pizen 'ith co'n whiskey, and a-pesterin' folks with a pack o'
+hungry, triflin' houn's to feed!"
+
+"When she keeps a-throwin' skillet lids," came Ransie's antiphony,
+"and slings b'ilin' water on the best coon-dog in the Cumberlands, and
+sets herself agin' cookin' a man's victuals, and keeps him awake o'
+nights accusin' him of a sight of doin's!"
+
+"When he's al'ays a-fightin' the revenues, and gits a hard name in the
+mount'ins fur a mean man, who's gwine to be able fur to sleep o'
+nights?"
+
+The Justice of the Peace stirred deliberately to his duties. He
+placed his one chair and a wooden stool for his petitioners. He
+opened his book of statutes on the table and scanned the index.
+Presently he wiped his spectacles and shifted his inkstand.
+
+"The law and the statutes," said he, "air silent on the subjeck of
+divo'ce as fur as the jurisdiction of this co't air concerned. But,
+accordin' to equity and the Constitution and the golden rule, it's a
+bad barg'in that can't run both ways. If a justice of the peace can
+marry a couple, it's plain that he is bound to be able to divo'ce 'em.
+This here office will issue a decree of divo'ce and abide by the
+decision of the Supreme Co't to hold it good."
+
+Ransie Bilbro drew a small tobacco-bag from his trousers pocket. Out
+of this he shook upon the table a five-dollar note. "Sold a b'arskin
+and two foxes fur that," he remarked. "It's all the money we got."
+
+"The regular price of a divo'ce in this co't," said the Justice, "air
+five dollars." He stuffed the bill into the pocket of his homespun
+vest with a deceptive air of indifference. With much bodily toil
+and mental travail he wrote the decree upon half a sheet of foolscap,
+and then copied it upon the other. Ransie Bilbro and his wife
+listened to his reading of the document that was to give them freedom:
+
+"Know all men by these presents that Ransie Bilbro and his wife,
+Ariela Bilbro, this day personally appeared before me and promises
+that hereinafter they will neither love, honour, nor obey each other,
+neither for better nor worse, being of sound mind and body, and accept
+summons for divorce according to the peace and dignity of the State.
+Herein fail not, so help you God. Benaja Widdup, justice of the peace
+in and for the county of Piedmont, State of Tennessee."
+
+The Justice was about to hand one of the documents to Ransie. The
+voice of Ariela delayed the transfer. Both men looked at her. Their
+dull masculinity was confronted by something sudden and unexpected in
+the woman.
+
+"Judge, don't you give him that air paper yit. 'Tain't all settled,
+nohow. I got to have my rights first. I got to have my ali-money.
+'Tain't no kind of a way to do fur a man to divo'ce his wife 'thout
+her havin' a cent fur to do with. I'm a-layin' off to be a-goin' up
+to brother Ed's up on Hogback Mount'in. I'm bound fur to hev a pa'r
+of shoes and some snuff and things besides. Ef Rance kin affo'd a
+divo'ce, let him pay me ali-money."
+
+Ransie Bilbro was stricken to dumb perplexity. There had been no
+previous hint of alimony. Women were always bringing up startling and
+unlooked-for issues.
+
+Justice Benaja Widdup felt that the point demanded judicial decision.
+The authorities were also silent on the subject of alimony. But the
+woman's feet were bare. The trail to Hogback Mountain was steep and
+flinty.
+
+"Ariela Bilbro," he asked, in official tones, "how much did you 'low
+would be good and sufficient ali-money in the case befo' the co't."
+
+"I 'lowed," she answered, "fur the shoes and all, to say five dollars.
+That ain't much fur ali-money, but I reckon that'll git me to up
+brother Ed's."
+
+"The amount," said the Justice, "air not onreasonable. Ransie Bilbro,
+you air ordered by the co't to pay the plaintiff the sum of five
+dollars befo' the decree of divo'ce air issued."
+
+"I hain't no mo' money," breathed Ransie, heavily. "I done paid you
+all I had."
+
+"Otherwise," said the Justice, looking severely over his spectacles,
+"you air in contempt of co't."
+
+"I reckon if you gimme till to-morrow," pleaded the husband, "I mout
+be able to rake or scrape it up somewhars. I never looked for to be
+a-payin' no ali-money."
+
+"The case air adjourned," said Benaja Widdup, "till to-morrow, when
+you-all will present yo'selves and obey the order of the co't.
+Followin' of which the decrees of divo'ce will be delivered." He sat
+down in the door and began to loosen a shoestring.
+
+"We mout as well go down to Uncle Ziah's," decided Ransie, "and spend
+the night." He climbed into the cart on one side, and Ariela climbed
+in on the other. Obeying the flap of his rope, the little red bull
+slowly came around on a tack, and the cart crawled away in the nimbus
+arising from its wheels.
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup smoked his elder-stem pipe. Late
+in the afternoon he got his weekly paper, and read it until the
+twilight dimmed its lines. Then he lit the tallow candle on his
+table, and read until the moon rose, marking the time for supper. He
+lived in the double log cabin on the slope near the girdled poplar.
+Going home to supper he crossed a little branch darkened by a laurel
+thicket. The dark figure of a man stepped from the laurels and
+pointed a rifle at his breast. His hat was pulled down low, and
+something covered most of his face.
+
+"I want yo' money," said the figure, "'thout any talk. I'm gettin'
+nervous, and my finger's a-wabblin' on this here trigger."
+
+"I've only got f-f-five dollars," said the Justice, producing it
+from his vest pocket.
+
+"Roll it up," came the order, "and stick it in the end of this here
+gun-bar'l."
+
+The bill was crisp and new. Even fingers that were clumsy and
+trembling found little difficulty in making a spill of it and
+inserting it (this with less ease) into the muzzle of the rifle.
+
+"Now I reckon you kin be goin' along," said the robber.
+
+The Justice lingered not on his way.
+
+
+The next day came the little red bull, drawing the cart to the
+office door. Justice Benaja Widdup had his shoes on, for he was
+expecting the visit. In his presence Ransie Bilbro handed to his
+wife a five-dollar bill. The official's eye sharply viewed it.
+It seemed to curl up as though it had been rolled and inserted into
+the end of a gun-barrel. But the Justice refrained from comment.
+It is true that other bills might be inclined to curl. He handed
+each one a decree of divorce. Each stood awkwardly silent, slowly
+folding the guarantee of freedom. The woman cast a shy glance
+full of constraint at Ransie.
+
+"I reckon you'll be goin' back up to the cabin," she said, "along
+'ith the bull-cart. There's bread in the tin box settin' on the
+shelf. I put the bacon in the b'ilin'-pot to keep the hounds from
+gittin' it. Don't forget to wind the clock to-night."
+
+"You air a-goin' to your brother Ed's?" asked Ransie, with fine
+unconcern.
+
+"I was 'lowin' to get along up thar afore night. I ain't sayin' as
+they'll pester theyselves any to make me welcome, but I hain't nowhar
+else fur to go. It's a right smart ways, and I reckon I better be
+goin'. I'll be a-sayin' good-bye, Ranse--that is, if you keer fur to
+say so."
+
+"I don't know as anybody's a hound dog," said Ransie, in a martyr's
+voice, "fur to not want to say good-bye--'less you air so anxious to
+git away that you don't want me to say it."
+
+Ariela was silent. She folded the five-dollar bill and her decree
+carefully, and placed them in the bosom of her dress. Benaja Widdup
+watched the money disappear with mournful eyes behind his spectacles.
+
+And then with his next words he achieved rank (as his thoughts ran)
+with either the great crowd of the world's sympathizers or the little
+crowd of its great financiers.
+
+"Be kind o' lonesome in the old cabin to-night, Ranse," he said.
+
+Ransie Bilbro stared out at the Cumberlands, clear blue now in the
+sunlight. He did not look at Ariela.
+
+"I 'low it might be lonesome," he said; "but when folks gits mad and
+wants a divo'ce, you can't make folks stay."
+
+"There's others wanted a divo'ce," said Ariela, speaking to the wooden
+stool. "Besides, nobody don't want nobody to stay."
+
+"Nobody never said they didn't."
+
+"Nobody never said they did. I reckon I better start on now to
+brother Ed's."
+
+"Nobody can't wind that old clock."
+
+"Want me to go back along 'ith you in the cart and wind it fur you,
+Ranse?"
+
+The mountaineer's countenance was proof against emotion. But he
+reached out a big hand and enclosed Ariela's thin brown one. Her soul
+peeped out once through her impassive face, hallowing it.
+
+"Them hounds shan't pester you no more," said Ransie. "I reckon I
+been mean and low down. You wind that clock, Ariela."
+
+"My heart hit's in that cabin, Ranse," she whispered, "along 'ith you.
+I ai'nt a-goin' to git mad no more. Le's be startin', Ranse, so's we
+kin git home by sundown."
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup interposed as they started for the
+door, forgetting his presence.
+
+"In the name of the State of Tennessee," he said, "I forbid you-all to
+be a-defyin' of its laws and statutes. This co't is mo' than willin'
+and full of joy to see the clouds of discord and misunderstandin'
+rollin' away from two lovin' hearts, but it air the duty of the co't
+to p'eserve the morals and integrity of the State. The co't reminds
+you that you air no longer man and wife, but air divo'ced by regular
+decree, and as such air not entitled to the benefits and 'purtenances
+of the mattermonal estate."
+
+Ariela caught Ransie's arm. Did those words mean that she must lose
+him now when they had just learned the lesson of life?
+
+"But the co't air prepared," went on the Justice, "fur to remove the
+disabilities set up by the decree of divo'ce. The co't air on hand to
+perform the solemn ceremony of marri'ge, thus fixin' things up and
+enablin' the parties in the case to resume the honour'ble and
+elevatin' state of mattermony which they desires. The fee fur
+performin' said ceremony will be, in this case, to wit, five dollars."
+
+Ariela caught the gleam of promise in his words. Swiftly her hand went
+to her bosom. Freely as an alighting dove the bill fluttered to the
+Justice's table. Her sallow cheek coloured as she stood hand in hand
+with Ransie and listened to the reuniting words.
+
+Ransie helped her into the cart, and climbed in beside her. The
+little red bull turned once more, and they set out, hand-clasped, for
+the mountains.
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup sat in his door and took off his
+shoes. Once again he fingered the bill tucked down in his vest
+pocket. Once again he smoked his elder-stem pipe. Once again the
+speckled hen swaggered down the main street of the "settlement,"
+cackling foolishly.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+A SACRIFICE HIT
+
+
+The editor of the _Hearthstone Magazine_ has his own ideas about the
+selection of manuscript for his publication. His theory is no secret;
+in fact, he will expound it to you willingly sitting at his mahogany
+desk, smiling benignantly and tapping his knee gently with his
+gold-rimmed eye-glasses.
+
+"The _Hearthstone_," he will say, "does not employ a staff of
+readers. We obtain opinions of the manuscripts submitted to us
+directly from types of the various classes of our readers."
+
+That is the editor's theory; and this is the way he carries it out:
+
+When a batch of MSS. is received the editor stuffs every one of his
+pockets full of them and distributes them as he goes about during the
+day. The office employees, the hall porter, the janitor, the elevator
+man, messenger boys, the waiters at the caf where the editor has
+luncheon, the man at the news-stand where he buys his evening paper,
+the grocer and milkman, the guard on the 5.30 uptown elevated train,
+the ticket-chopper at Sixty ----th street, the cook and maid at his
+home--these are the readers who pass upon MSS. sent in to the
+_Hearthstone Magazine_. If his pockets are not entirely emptied by
+the time he reaches the bosom of his family the remaining ones are
+handed over to his wife to read after the baby goes to sleep. A few
+days later the editor gathers in the MSS. during his regular rounds
+and considers the verdict of his assorted readers.
+
+This system of making up a magazine has been very successful; and the
+circulation, paced by the advertising rates, is making a wonderful
+record of speed.
+
+The _Hearthstone_ Company also publishes books, and its imprint is to
+be found on several successful works--all recommended, says the
+editor, by the _Hearthstone's_ army of volunteer readers. Now and
+then (according to talkative members of the editorial staff) the
+_Hearthstone_ has allowed manuscripts to slip through its fingers on
+the advice of its heterogeneous readers, that afterward proved to be
+famous sellers when brought out by other houses.
+
+For instance (the gossips say), "The Rise and Fall of Silas Latham"
+was unfavourably passed upon by the elevator-man; the office-boy
+unanimously rejected "The Boss"; "In the Bishop's Carriage" was
+contemptuously looked upon by the street-car conductor; "The
+Deliverance" was turned down by a clerk in the subscription department
+whose wife's mother had just begun a two-months' visit at his home;
+"The Queen's Quair" came back from the janitor with the comment: "So
+is the book."
+
+But nevertheless the _Hearthstone_ adheres to its theory and system,
+and it will never lack volunteer readers; for each one of the widely
+scattered staff, from the young lady stenographer in the editorial
+office to the man who shovels in coal (whose adverse decision lost to
+the _Hearthstone_ Company the manuscript of "The Under World"), has
+expectations of becoming editor of the magazine some day.
+
+This method of the _Hearthstone_ was well known to Allen Slayton when
+he wrote his novelette entitled "Love Is All." Slayton had hung about
+the editorial offices of all the magazines so persistently that he was
+acquainted with the inner workings of every one in Gotham.
+
+He knew not only that the editor of the Hearthstone handed his MSS.
+around among different types of people for reading, but that the
+stories of sentimental love-interest went to Miss Puffkin, the
+editor's stenographer. Another of the editor's peculiar customs was to
+conceal invariably the name of the writer from his readers of MSS. so
+that a glittering name might not influence the sincerity of their
+reports.
+
+Slayton made "Love Is All" the effort of his life. He gave it six
+months of the best work of his heart and brain. It was a pure
+love-story, fine, elevated, romantic, passionate--a prose poem that
+set the divine blessing of love (I am transposing from the manuscript)
+high above all earthly gifts and honours, and listed it in the
+catalogue of heaven's choicest rewards. Slayton's literary ambition
+was intense. He would have sacrificed all other worldly possessions
+to have gained fame in his chosen art. He would almost have cut off
+his right hand, or have offered himself to the knife of the
+appendicitis fancier to have realized his dream of seeing one of his
+efforts published in the _Hearthstone_.
+
+Slayton finished "Love Is All," and took it to the _Hearthstone_ in
+person. The office of the magazine was in a large, conglomerate
+building, presided under by a janitor.
+
+As the writer stepped inside the door on his way to the elevator a
+potato masher flew through the hall, wrecking Slayton's hat, and
+smashing the glass of the door. Closely following in the wake of the
+utensil flew the janitor, a bulky, unwholesome man, suspenderless and
+sordid, panic-stricken and breathless. A frowsy, fat woman with
+flying hair followed the missile. The janitor's foot slipped on the
+tiled floor, he fell in a heap with an exclamation of despair. The
+woman pounced upon him and seized his hair. The man bellowed lustily.
+
+Her vengeance wreaked, the virago rose and stalked triumphant as
+Minerva, back to some cryptic domestic retreat at the rear. The
+janitor got to his feet, blown and humiliated.
+
+"This is married life," he said to Slayton, with a certain bruised
+humour. "That's the girl I used to lay awake of nights thinking
+about. Sorry about your hat, mister. Say, don't snitch to the tenants
+about this, will yer? I don't want to lose me job."
+
+Slayton took the elevator at the end of the hall and went up to the
+offices of the _Hearthstone_. He left the MS. of "Love Is All" with
+the editor, who agreed to give him an answer as to its availability
+at the end of a week.
+
+Slayton formulated his great winning scheme on his way down. It
+struck him with one brilliant flash, and he could not refrain from
+admiring his own genius in conceiving the idea. That very night he
+set about carrying it into execution.
+
+Miss Puffkin, the _Hearthstone_ stenographer, boarded in the same house
+with the author. She was an oldish, thin, exclusive, languishing,
+sentimental maid; and Slayton had been introduced to her some time
+before.
+
+The writer's daring and self-sacrificing project was this: He knew
+that the editor of the _Hearthstone_ relied strongly upon Miss
+Puffkin's judgment in the manuscript of romantic and sentimental
+fiction. Her taste represented the immense average of mediocre women
+who devour novels and stories of that type. The central idea and
+keynote of "Love Is All" was love at first sight--the enrapturing,
+irresistible, soul-thrilling feeling that compels a man or a woman
+to recognize his or her spirit-mate as soon as heart speaks to heart.
+Suppose he should impress this divine truth upon Miss Puffkin
+personally!--would she not surely indorse her new and rapturous
+sensations by recommending highly to the editor of the _Hearthstone_
+the novelette "Love Is All"?
+
+Slayton thought so. And that night he took Miss Puffkin to the
+theatre. The next night he made vehement love to her in the dim
+parlour of the boarding-house. He quoted freely from "Love Is All";
+and he wound up with Miss Puffkin's head on his shoulder, and visions
+of literary fame dancing in his head.
+
+But Slayton did not stop at love-making. This, he said to himself,
+was the turning point of his life; and, like a true sportsman, he
+"went the limit." On Thursday night he and Miss Puffkin walked over
+to the Big Church in the Middle of the Block and were married.
+
+Brave Slayton! Chteaubriand died in a garret, Byron courted a widow,
+Keats starved to death, Poe mixed his drinks, De Quincey hit the pipe,
+Ade lived in Chicago, James kept on doing it, Dickens wore white
+socks, De Maupassant wore a strait-jacket, Tom Watson became a
+Populist, Jeremiah wept, all these authors did these things for the
+sake of literature, but thou didst cap them all; thou marriedst a wife
+for to carve for thyself a niche in the temple of fame!
+
+On Friday morning Mrs. Slayton said she would go over to the
+_Hearthstone_ office, hand in one or two manuscripts that the editor
+had given to her to read, and resign her position as stenographer.
+
+"Was there anything--er--that--er--you particularly fancied
+in the stories you are going to turn in?" asked Slayton with a
+thumping heart.
+
+"There was one--a novelette, that I liked so much," said his wife. "I
+haven't read anything in years that I thought was half as nice and
+true to life."
+
+That afternoon Slayton hurried down to the _Hearthstone_ office. He
+felt that his reward was close at hand. With a novelette in the
+_Hearthstone_, literary reputation would soon be his.
+
+The office boy met him at the railing in the outer office. It was not
+for unsuccessful authors to hold personal colloquy with the editor
+except at rare intervals.
+
+Slayton, hugging himself internally, was nursing in his heart the
+exquisite hope of being able to crush the office boy with his
+forthcoming success.
+
+He inquired concerning his novelette. The office boy went into the
+sacred precincts and brought forth a large envelope, thick with more
+than the bulk of a thousand checks.
+
+"The boss told me to tell you he's sorry," said the boy, "but your
+manuscript ain't available for the magazine."
+
+Slayton stood, dazed. "Can you tell me," he stammered, "whether or
+no Miss Puff--that is my--I mean Miss Puffkin--handed in a novelette
+this morning that she had been asked to read?"
+
+"Sure she did," answered the office boy wisely. "I heard the old man
+say that Miss Puffkin said it was a daisy. The name of it was,
+'Married for the Mazuma, or a Working Girl's Triumph.'"
+
+"Say, you!" said the office boy confidentially, "your name's Slayton,
+ain't it? I guess I mixed cases on you without meanin' to do it. The
+boss give me some manuscript to hand around the other day and I got
+the ones for Miss Puffkin and the janitor mixed. I guess it's all
+right, though."
+
+And then Slayton looked closer and saw on the cover of his manuscript,
+under the title "Love Is All," the janitor's comment scribbled with a
+piece of charcoal:
+
+"The ---- you say!"
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+THE ROADS WE TAKE
+
+
+Twenty miles west of Tucson, the "Sunset Express" stopped at a tank to
+take on water. Besides the aqueous addition the engine of that famous
+flyer acquired some other things that were not good for it.
+
+While the fireman was lowering the feeding hose, Bob Tidball, "Shark"
+Dodson and a quarter-bred Creek Indian called John Big Dog climbed on
+the engine and showed the engineer three round orifices in pieces of
+ordnance that they carried. These orifices so impressed the engineer
+with their possibilities that he raised both hands in a gesture such
+as accompanies the ejaculation "Do tell!"
+
+At the crisp command of Shark Dodson, who was leader of the attacking
+force the engineer descended to the ground and uncoupled the engine
+and tender. Then John Big Dog, perched upon the coal, sportively held
+two guns upon the engine driver and the fireman, and suggested that
+they run the engine fifty yards away and there await further orders.
+
+Shark Dodson and Bob Tidball, scorning to put such low-grade ore as
+the passengers through the mill, struck out for the rich pocket of the
+express car. They found the messenger serene in the belief that the
+"Sunset Express" was taking on nothing more stimulating and dangerous
+than aqua pura. While Bob was knocking this idea out of his head with
+the butt-end of his six-shooter Shark Dodson was already dosing the
+express-car safe with dynamite.
+
+The safe exploded to the tune of $30,000, all gold and currency. The
+passengers thrust their heads casually out of the windows to look for
+the thunder-cloud. The conductor jerked at the bell-rope, which
+sagged down loose and unresisting, at his tug. Shark Dodson and Bob
+Tidball, with their booty in a stout canvas bag, tumbled out of the
+express car and ran awkwardly in their high-heeled boots to the
+engine.
+
+The engineer, sullenly angry but wise, ran the engine, according to
+orders, rapidly away from the inert train. But before this was
+accomplished the express messenger, recovered from Bob Tidball's
+persuader to neutrality, jumped out of his car with a Winchester rifle
+and took a trick in the game. Mr. John Big Dog, sitting on the coal
+tender, unwittingly made a wrong lead by giving an imitation of a
+target, and the messenger trumped him. With a ball exactly between
+his shoulder blades the Creek chevalier of industry rolled off to
+the ground, thus increasing the share of his comrades in the loot by
+one-sixth each.
+
+Two miles from the tank the engineer was ordered to stop.
+
+The robbers waved a defiant adieu and plunged down the steep slope
+into the thick woods that lined the track. Five minutes of crashing
+through a thicket of chaparral brought them to open woods, where three
+horses were tied to low-hanging branches. One was waiting for John
+Big Dog, who would never ride by night or day again. This animal the
+robbers divested of saddle and bridle and set free. They mounted the
+other two with the bag across one pommel, and rode fast and with
+discretion through the forest and up a primeval, lonely gorge. Here
+the animal that bore Bob Tidball slipped on a mossy boulder and broke
+a foreleg. They shot him through the head at once and sat down to
+hold a council of flight. Made secure for the present by the tortuous
+trail they had travelled, the question of time was no longer so big.
+Many miles and hours lay between them and the spryest posse that could
+follow. Shark Dodson's horse, with trailing rope and dropped bridle,
+panted and cropped thankfully of the grass along the stream in the
+gorge. Bob Tidball opened the sack, drew out double handfuls of the
+neat packages of currency and the one sack of gold and chuckled with
+the glee of a child.
+
+"Say, you old double-decked pirate," he called joyfully to Dodson,
+"you said we could do it--you got a head for financing that knocks
+the horns off of anything in Arizona."
+
+"What are we going to do about a hoss for you, Bob? We ain't got long
+to wait here. They'll be on our trail before daylight in the
+mornin'."
+
+"Oh, I guess that cayuse of yourn'll carry double for a while,"
+answered the sanguine Bob. "We'll annex the first animal we come
+across. By jingoes, we made a haul, didn't we? Accordin' to the
+marks on this money there's $30,000--$15,000 apiece!"
+
+"It's short of what I expected," said Shark Dodson, kicking softly at
+the packages with the toe of his boot. And then he looked pensively at
+the wet sides of his tired horse.
+
+"Old Bolivar's mighty nigh played out," he said, slowly. "I wish that
+sorrel of yours hadn't got hurt."
+
+"So do I," said Bob, heartily, "but it can't be helped. Bolivar's got
+plenty of bottom--he'll get us both far enough to get fresh mounts.
+Dang it, Shark, I can't help thinkin' how funny it is that an
+Easterner like you can come out here and give us Western fellows cards
+and spades in the desperado business. What part of the East was you
+from, anyway?"
+
+"New York State," said Shark Dodson, sitting down on a boulder and
+chewing a twig. "I was born on a farm in Ulster County. I ran away
+from home when I was seventeen. It was an accident my coming West. I
+was walkin' along the road with my clothes in a bundle, makin' for New
+York City. I had an idea of goin' there and makin' lots of money. I
+always felt like I could do it. I came to a place one evenin' where
+the road forked and I didn't know which fork to take. I studied about
+it for half an hour, and then I took the left-hand. That night I run
+into the camp of a Wild West show that was travellin' among the little
+towns, and I went West with it. I've often wondered if I wouldn't
+have turned out different if I'd took the other road."
+
+"Oh, I reckon you'd have ended up about the same," said Bob Tidball,
+cheerfully philosophical. "It ain't the roads we take; it's what's
+inside of us that makes us turn out the way we do."
+
+Shark Dodson got up and leaned against a tree.
+
+"I'd a good deal rather that sorrel of yourn hadn't hurt himself,
+Bob," he said again, almost pathetically.
+
+"Same here," agreed Bob; "he was sure a first-rate kind of a crowbait.
+But Bolivar, he'll pull us through all right. Reckon we'd better be
+movin' on, hadn't we, Shark? I'll bag this boodle ag'in and we'll hit
+the trail for higher timber."
+
+Bob Tidball replaced the spoil in the bag and tied the mouth of it
+tightly with a cord. When he looked up the most prominent object that
+he saw was the muzzle of Shark Dodson's .45 held upon him without a
+waver.
+
+"Stop your funnin'," said Bob, with a grin. "We got to be hittin' the
+breeze."
+
+"Set still," said Shark. "You ain't goin' to hit no breeze, Bob. I
+hate to tell you, but there ain't any chance for but one of us.
+Bolivar, he's plenty tired, and he can't carry double."
+
+"We been pards, me and you, Shark Dodson, for three year," Bob said
+quietly. "We've risked our lives together time and again. I've
+always give you a square deal, and I thought you was a man. I've
+heard some queer stories about you shootin' one or two men in a
+peculiar way, but I never believed 'em. Now if you're just havin' a
+little fun with me, Shark, put your gun up, and we'll get on Bolivar
+and vamose. If you mean to shoot--shoot, you blackhearted son of a
+tarantula!"
+
+Shark Dodson's face bore a deeply sorrowful look. "You don't know how
+bad I feel," he sighed, "about that sorrel of yourn breakin' his leg,
+Bob."
+
+The expression on Dodson's face changed in an instant to one of cold
+ferocity mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed
+itself for a moment like an evil face in the window of a reputable
+house.
+
+Truly Bob Tidball was never to "hit the breeze" again. The deadly .45
+of the false friend cracked and filled the gorge with a roar that the
+walls hurled back with indignant echoes. And Bolivar, unconscious
+accomplice, swiftly bore away the last of the holders-up of the
+"Sunset Express," not put to the stress of "carrying double."
+
+But as "Shark" Dodson galloped away the woods seemed to fade from his
+view; the revolver in his right hand turned to the curved arm of a
+mahogany chair; his saddle was strangely upholstered, and he opened
+his eyes and saw his feet, not in stirrups, but resting quietly on the
+edge of a quartered-oak desk.
+
+
+I am telling you that Dodson, of the firm of Dodson & Decker, Wall
+Street brokers, opened his eyes. Peabody, the confidential clerk, was
+standing by his chair, hesitating to speak. There was a confused hum
+of wheels below, and the sedative buzz of an electric fan.
+
+"Ahem! Peabody," said Dodson, blinking. "I must have fallen asleep.
+I had a most remarkable dream. What is it, Peabody?"
+
+"Mr. Williams, sir, of Tracy & Williams, is outside. He has come to
+settle his deal in X. Y. Z. The market caught him short, sir, if you
+remember."
+
+"Yes, I remember. What is X. Y. Z. quoted at to-day, Peabody?"
+
+"One eighty-five, sir."
+
+"Then that's his price."
+
+"Excuse me," said Peabody, rather nervously "for speaking of it, but
+I've been talking to Williams. He's an old friend of yours, Mr.
+Dodson, and you practically have a corner in X. Y. Z. I thought you
+might--that is, I thought you might not remember that he sold you
+the stock at 98. If he settles at the market price it will take every
+cent he has in the world and his home too to deliver the shares."
+
+The expression on Dodson's face changed in an instant to one of cold
+ferocity mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed
+itself for a moment like an evil face in the window of a reputable
+house.
+
+"He will settle at one eighty-five," said Dodson. "Bolivar cannot
+carry double."
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+A BLACKJACK BARGAINER
+
+
+The most disreputable thing in Yancey Goree's law office was Goree
+himself, sprawled in his creaky old arm-chair. The rickety little
+office, built of red brick, was set flush with the street--the main
+street of the town of Bethel.
+
+Bethel rested upon the foot-hills of the Blue Ridge. Above it the
+mountains were piled to the sky. Far below it the turbid Catawba
+gleamed yellow along its disconsolate valley.
+
+The June day was at its sultriest hour. Bethel dozed in the tepid
+shade. Trade was not. It was so still that Goree, reclining in his
+chair, distinctly heard the clicking of the chips in the grand-jury
+room, where the "court-house gang" was playing poker. From the open
+back door of the office a well-worn path meandered across the grassy
+lot to the court-house. The treading out of that path had cost Goree
+all he ever had--first inheritance of a few thousand dollars, next
+the old family home, and, latterly the last shreds of his self-respect
+and manhood. The "gang" had cleaned him out. The broken gambler had
+turned drunkard and parasite; he had lived to see this day come when
+the men who had stripped him denied him a seat at the game. His word
+was no longer to be taken. The daily bouts at cards had arranged
+itself accordingly, and to him was assigned the ignoble part of the
+onlooker. The sheriff, the county clerk, a sportive deputy, a gay
+attorney, and a chalk-faced man hailing "from the valley," sat at
+table, and the sheared one was thus tacitly advised to go and grow
+more wool.
+
+Soon wearying of his ostracism, Goree had departed for his office,
+muttering to himself as he unsteadily traversed the unlucky pathway.
+After a drink of corn whiskey from a demijohn under the table, he had
+flung himself into the chair, staring, in a sort of maudlin apathy,
+out at the mountains immersed in the summer haze. The little white
+patch he saw away up on the side of Blackjack was Laurel, the village
+near which he had been born and bred. There, also, was the birthplace
+of the feud between the Gorees and the Coltranes. Now no direct heir
+of the Gorees survived except this plucked and singed bird of
+misfortune. To the Coltranes, also, but one male supporter was left
+--Colonel Abner Coltrane, a man of substance and standing, a member
+of the State Legislature, and a contemporary with Goree's father. The
+feud had been a typical one of the region; it had left a red record of
+hate, wrong and slaughter.
+
+But Yancey Goree was not thinking of feuds. His befuddled brain was
+hopelessly attacking the problem of the future maintenance of himself
+and his favourite follies. Of late, old friends of the family had
+seen to it that he had whereof to eat and a place to sleep--but whiskey
+they would not buy for him, and he must have whiskey. His law business
+was extinct; no case had been intrusted to him in two years. He had
+been a borrower and a sponge, and it seemed that if he fell no lower
+it would be from lack of opportunity. One more chance--he was saying
+to himself--if he had one more stake at the game, he thought he could
+win; but he had nothing left to sell, and his credit was more than
+exhausted.
+
+He could not help smiling, even in his misery, as he thought of the
+man to whom, six months before, he had sold the old Goree homestead.
+There had come from "back yan'" in the mountains two of the strangest
+creatures, a man named Pike Garvey and his wife. "Back yan'," with a
+wave of the hand toward the hills, was understood among the
+mountaineers to designate the remotest fastnesses, the unplumbed
+gorges, the haunts of lawbreakers, the wolf's den, and the boudoir of
+the bear. In the cabin far up on Blackjack's shoulder, in the wildest
+part of these retreats, this odd couple had lived for twenty years.
+They had neither dog nor children to mitigate the heavy silence of the
+hills. Pike Garvey was little known in the settlements, but all who
+had dealt with him pronounced him "crazy as a loon." He acknowledged
+no occupation save that of a squirrel hunter, but he "moonshined"
+occasionally by way of diversion. Once the "revenues" had dragged him
+from his lair, fighting silently and desperately like a terrier, and
+he had been sent to state's prison for two years. Released, he popped
+back into his hole like an angry weasel.
+
+Fortune, passing over many anxious wooers, made a freakish flight into
+Blackjack's bosky pockets to smile upon Pike and his faithful partner.
+
+One day a party of spectacled, knickerbockered, and altogether absurd
+prospectors invaded the vicinity of the Garvey's cabin. Pike lifted
+his squirrel rifle off the hooks and took a shot at them at long range
+on the chance of their being revenues. Happily he missed, and the
+unconscious agents of good luck drew nearer, disclosing their
+innocence of anything resembling law or justice. Later on, they
+offered the Garveys an enormous quantity of ready, green, crisp money
+for their thirty-acre patch of cleared land, mentioning, as an excuse
+for such a mad action, some irrelevant and inadequate nonsense about a
+bed of mica underlying the said property.
+
+When the Garveys became possessed of so many dollars that they
+faltered in computing them, the deficiencies of life on Blackjack
+began to grow prominent. Pike began to talk of new shoes, a hogshead
+of tobacco to set in the corner, a new lock to his rifle; and, leading
+Martella to a certain spot on the mountain-side, he pointed out to her
+how a small cannon--doubtless a thing not beyond the scope of their
+fortune in price--might be planted so as to command and defend the
+sole accessible trail to the cabin, to the confusion of revenues and
+meddling strangers forever.
+
+But Adam reckoned without his Eve. These things represented to him
+the applied power of wealth, but there slumbered in his dingy cabin an
+ambition that soared far above his primitive wants. Somewhere in Mrs.
+Garvey's bosom still survived a spot of femininity unstarved by twenty
+years of Blackjack. For so long a time the sounds in her ears had
+been the scaly-barks dropping in the woods at noon, and the wolves
+singing among the rocks at night, and it was enough to have purged her
+of vanities. She had grown fat and sad and yellow and dull. But when
+the means came, she felt a rekindled desire to assume the perquisites
+of her sex--to sit at tea tables; to buy futile things; to whitewash
+the hideous veracity of life with a little form and ceremony. So she
+coldly vetoed Pike's proposed system of fortifications, and
+announced that they would descend upon the world, and gyrate socially.
+
+And thus, at length, it was decided, and the thing done. The village
+of Laurel was their compromise between Mrs. Garvey's preference for
+one of the large valley towns and Pike's hankering for primeval
+solitudes. Laurel yielded a halting round of feeble social
+distractions comportable with Martella's ambitions, and was not
+entirely without recommendation to Pike, its contiguity to the
+mountains presenting advantages for sudden retreat in case fashionable
+society should make it advisable.
+
+Their descent upon Laurel had been coincident with Yancey Goree's
+feverish desire to convert property into cash, and they bought the old
+Goree homestead, paying four thousand dollars ready money into the
+spendthrift's shaking hands.
+
+Thus it happened that while the disreputable last of the Gorees
+sprawled in his disreputable office, at the end of his row, spurned by
+the cronies whom he had gorged, strangers dwelt in the halls of his
+fathers.
+
+A cloud of dust was rolling, slowly up the parched street, with
+something travelling in the midst of it. A little breeze wafted the
+cloud to one side, and a new, brightly painted carryall, drawn by a
+slothful gray horse, became visible. The vehicle deflected from the
+middle of the street as it neared Goree's office, and stopped in the
+gutter directly in front of his door.
+
+On the front seat sat a gaunt, tall man, dressed in black broadcloth,
+his rigid hands incarcerated in yellow kid gloves. On the back seat
+was a lady who triumphed over the June heat. Her stout form was
+armoured in a skin-tight silk dress of the description known as
+"changeable," being a gorgeous combination of shifting hues. She sat
+erect, waving a much-ornamented fan, with her eyes fixed stonily far
+down the street. However Martella Garvey's heart might be rejoicing
+at the pleasures of her new life, Blackjack had done his work with her
+exterior. He had carved her countenance to the image of emptiness and
+inanity; had imbued her with the stolidity of his crags, and the
+reserve of his hushed interiors. She always seemed to hear, whatever
+her surroundings were, the scaly-barks falling and pattering down the
+mountain-side. She could always hear the awful silence of Blackjack
+sounding through the stillest of nights.
+
+Goree watched this solemn equipage, as it drove to his door, with only
+faint interest; but when the lank driver wrapped the reins about his
+whip, awkwardly descended, and stepped into the office, he rose
+unsteadily to receive him, recognizing Pike Garvey, the new, the
+transformed, the recently civilized.
+
+The mountaineer took the chair Goree offered him. They who cast doubts
+upon Garvey's soundness of mind had a strong witness in the man's
+countenance. His face was too long, a dull saffron in hue, and
+immobile as a statue's. Pale-blue, unwinking round eyes without
+lashes added to the singularity of his gruesome visage. Goree was at a
+loss to account for the visit.
+
+"Everything all right at Laurel, Mr. Garvey?" he inquired.
+
+"Everything all right, sir, and mighty pleased is Missis Garvey and me
+with the property. Missis Garvey likes yo' old place, and she likes
+the neighbourhood. Society is what she 'lows she wants, and she is
+gettin' of it. The Rogerses, the Hapgoods, the Pratts and the Troys
+hev been to see Missis Garvey, and she hev et meals to most of thar
+houses. The best folks hev axed her to differ'nt kinds of doin's. I
+cyan't say, Mr. Goree, that sech things suits me--fur me, give me
+them thar." Garvey's huge, yellow-gloved hand flourished in the
+direction of the mountains. "That's whar I b'long, 'mongst the wild
+honey bees and the b'ars. But that ain't what I come fur to say, Mr.
+Goree. Thar's somethin' you got what me and Missis Garvey wants to
+buy."
+
+"Buy!" echoed Goree. "From me?" Then he laughed harshly. "I reckon
+you are mistaken about that. I reckon you are mistaken about that. I
+sold out to you, as you yourself expressed it, 'lock, stock and
+barrel.' There isn't even a ramrod left to sell."
+
+"You've got it; and we 'uns want it. 'Take the money,' says Missis
+Garvey, 'and buy it fa'r and squar'.'"
+
+Goree shook his head. "The cupboard's bare," he said.
+
+"We've riz," pursued the mountaineer, undeflected from his object, "a
+heap. We was pore as possums, and now we could hev folks to dinner
+every day. We been recognized, Missis Garvey says, by the best
+society. But there's somethin' we need we ain't got. She says it
+ought to been put in the 'ventory ov the sale, but it tain't thar.
+'Take the money, then,' says she, 'and buy it fa'r and squar'."'
+
+"Out with it," said Goree, his racked nerves growing impatient.
+
+Garvey threw his slouch hat upon the table, and leaned forward, fixing
+his unblinking eyes upon Goree's.
+
+"There's a old feud," he said distinctly and slowly, "'tween you 'uns
+and the Coltranes."
+
+Goree frowned ominously. To speak of his feud to a feudist is a
+serious breach of the mountain etiquette. The man from "back yan'"
+knew it as well as the lawyer did.
+
+"Na offense," he went on "but purely in the way of business. Missis
+Garvey hev studied all about feuds. Most of the quality folks in the
+mountains hev 'em. The Settles and the Goforths, the Rankins and the
+Boyds, the Silers and the Galloways, hev all been cyarin' on feuds
+f'om twenty to a hundred year. The last man to drap was when yo'
+uncle, Jedge Paisley Goree, 'journed co't and shot Len Coltrane f'om
+the bench. Missis Garvey and me, we come f'om the po' white trash.
+Nobody wouldn't pick a feud with we 'uns, no mo'n with a fam'ly of
+tree-toads. Quality people everywhar, says Missis Garvey, has feuds.
+We 'uns ain't quality, but we're buyin' into it as fur as we can.
+'Take the money, then,' says Missis Garvey, 'and buy Mr. Goree's feud,
+fa'r and squar'.'"
+
+The squirrel hunter straightened a leg half across the room, drew a
+roll of bills from his pocket, and threw them on the table.
+
+"Thar's two hundred dollars, Mr. Goree; what you would call a fa'r
+price for a feud that's been 'lowed to run down like yourn hev.
+Thar's only you left to cyar' on yo' side of it, and you'd make mighty
+po' killin'. I'll take it off yo' hands, and it'll set me and Missis
+Garvey up among the quality. Thar's the money."
+
+The little roll of currency on the table slowly untwisted itself,
+writhing and jumping as its folds relaxed. In the silence that
+followed Garvey's last speech the rattling of the poker chips in the
+court-house could be plainly heard. Goree knew that the sheriff had
+just won a pot, for the subdued whoop with which he always greeted
+a victory floated across the square upon the crinkly heat waves.
+Beads of moisture stood on Goree's brow. Stooping, he drew the
+wicker-covered demijohn from under the table, and filled a tumbler
+from it.
+
+"A little corn liquor, Mr. Garvey? Of course you are joking about--
+what you spoke of? Opens quite a new market, doesn't it? Feuds.
+Prime, two-fifty to three. Feuds, slightly damaged--two hundred, I
+believe you said, Mr. Garvey?"
+
+Goree laughed self-consciously.
+
+The mountaineer took the glass Goree handed him, and drank the whisky
+without a tremor of the lids of his staring eyes. The lawyer
+applauded the feat by a look of envious admiration. He poured his own
+drink, and took it like a drunkard, by gulps, and with shudders at the
+smell and taste.
+
+"Two hundred," repeated Garvey. "Thar's the money."
+
+A sudden passion flared up in Goree's brain. He struck the table with
+his fist. One of the bills flipped over and touched his hand. He
+flinched as if something had stung him.
+
+"Do you come to me," he shouted, "seriously with such a ridiculous,
+insulting, darned-fool proposition?"
+
+"It's fa'r and squar'," said the squirrel hunter, but he reached out
+his hand as if to take back the money; and then Goree knew that his
+own flurry of rage had not been from pride or resentment, but from
+anger at himself, knowing that he would set foot in the deeper depths
+that were being opened to him. He turned in an instant from an
+outraged gentleman to an anxious chafferer recommending his goods.
+
+"Don't be in a hurry, Garvey," he said, his face crimson and his
+speech thick. "I accept your p-p-proposition, though it's dirt cheap
+at two hundred. A t-trade's all right when both p-purchaser and
+b-buyer are s-satisfied. Shall I w-wrap it up for you, Mr. Garvey?"
+
+Garvey rose, and shook out his broadcloth. "Missis Garvey will be
+pleased. You air out of it, and it stands Coltrane and Garvey. Just
+a scrap ov writin', Mr. Goree, you bein' a lawyer, to show we traded."
+
+Goree seized a sheet of paper and a pen. The money was clutched in
+his moist hand. Everything else suddenly seemed to grow trivial and
+light.
+
+"Bill of sale, by all means. 'Right, title, and interest in and to'
+. . . 'forever warrant and--' No, Garvey, we'll have to leave out that
+'defend,'" said Goree with a loud laugh. "You'll have to defend this
+title yourself."
+
+The mountaineer received the amazing screed that the lawyer handed
+him, folded it with immense labour, and laced it carefully in his
+pocket.
+
+Goree was standing near the window. "Step here," he said, raising his
+finger, "and I'll show you your recently purchased enemy. There he
+goes, down the other side of the street."
+
+The mountaineer crooked his long frame to look through the window in
+the direction indicated by the other. Colonel Abner Coltrane, an
+erect, portly gentleman of about fifty, wearing the inevitable long,
+double-breasted frock coat of the Southern lawmaker, and an old high
+silk hat, was passing on the opposite sidewalk. As Garvey looked,
+Goree glanced at his face. If there be such a thing as a yellow wolf,
+here was its counterpart. Garvey snarled as his unhuman eyes followed
+the moving figure, disclosing long, amber-coloured fangs.
+
+"Is that him? Why, that's the man who sent me to the pen'tentiary
+once!"
+
+"He used to be district attorney," said Goree carelessly. "And, by
+the way, he's a first-class shot."
+
+"I kin hit a squirrel's eye at a hundred yard," said Garvey. "So that
+thar's Coltrane! I made a better trade than I was thinkin'. I'll
+take keer ov this feud, Mr. Goree, better'n you ever did!"
+
+He moved toward the door, but lingered there, betraying a slight
+perplexity.
+
+"Anything else to-day?" inquired Goree with frothy sarcasm. "Any
+family traditions, ancestral ghosts, or skeletons in the closet?
+Prices as low as the lowest."
+
+"Thar was another thing," replied the unmoved squirrel hunter, "that
+Missis Garvey was thinkin' of. 'Tain't so much in my line as t'other,
+but she wanted partic'lar that I should inquire, and ef you was
+willin', 'pay fur it,' she says, 'fa'r and squar'.' Thar's a buryin'
+groun', as you know, Mr. Goree, in the yard of yo' old place, under
+the cedars. Them that lies thar is yo' folks what was killed by the
+Coltranes. The monyments has the names on 'em. Missis Garvey says a
+fam'ly buryin' groun' is a sho' sign of quality. She says ef we git
+the feud, thar's somethin' else ought to go with it. The names on
+them monyments is 'Goree,' but they can be changed to ourn by--"
+
+"Go! Go!" screamed Goree, his face turning purple. He stretched out
+both hands toward the mountaineer, his fingers hooked and shaking.
+"Go, you ghoul! Even a Ch-Chinaman protects the g-graves of his
+ancestors--go!"
+
+The squirrel hunter slouched out of the door to his carryall. While
+he was climbing over the wheel Goree was collecting, with feverish
+celerity, the money that had fallen from his hand to the floor. As
+the vehicle slowly turned about, the sheep, with a coat of newly
+grown wool, was hurrying, in indecent haste, along the path to the
+court-house.
+
+At three o'clock in the morning they brought him back to his office,
+shorn and unconscious. The sheriff, the sportive deputy, the county
+clerk, and the gay attorney carried him, the chalk-faced man "from the
+valley" acting as escort.
+
+"On the table," said one of them, and they deposited him there among
+the litter of his unprofitable books and papers.
+
+"Yance thinks a lot of a pair of deuces when he's liquored up," sighed
+the sheriff reflectively.
+
+"Too much," said the gay attorney. "A man has no business to play
+poker who drinks as much as he does. I wonder how much he dropped
+to-night."
+
+"Close to two hundred. What I wonder is whar he got it. Yance ain't
+had a cent fur over a month, I know."
+
+"Struck a client, maybe. Well, let's get home before daylight. He'll
+be all right when he wakes up, except for a sort of beehive about the
+cranium."
+
+The gang slipped away through the early morning twilight. The next
+eye to gaze upon the miserable Goree was the orb of day. He peered
+through the uncurtained window, first deluging the sleeper in a flood
+of faint gold, but soon pouring upon the mottled red of his flesh a
+searching, white, summer heat. Goree stirred, half unconsciously,
+among the table's dbris, and turned his face from the window. His
+movement dislodged a heavy law book, which crashed upon the floor.
+Opening his eyes, he saw, bending over him, a man in a black frock
+coat. Looking higher, he discovered a well-worn silk hat, and beneath
+it the kindly, smooth face of Colonel Abner Coltrane.
+
+A little uncertain of the outcome, the colonel waited for the other to
+make some sign of recognition. Not in twenty years had male members
+of these two families faced each other in peace. Goree's eyelids
+puckered as he strained his blurred sight toward this visitor, and
+then he smiled serenely.
+
+"Have you brought Stella and Lucy over to play?" he said calmly.
+
+"Do you know me, Yancey?" asked Coltrane.
+
+"Of course I do. You brought me a whip with a whistle in the end."
+
+So he had--twenty-four years ago; when Yancey's father was his best
+friend.
+
+Goree's eyes wandered about the room. The colonel understood. "Lie
+still, and I'll bring you some," said he. There was a pump in the yard
+at the rear, and Goree closed his eyes, listening with rapture to the
+click of its handle, and the bubbling of the falling stream. Coltrane
+brought a pitcher of the cool water, and held it for him to drink.
+Presently Goree sat up--a most forlorn object, his summer suit of flax
+soiled and crumpled, his discreditable head tousled and unsteady. He
+tried to wave one of his hands toward the colonel.
+
+"Ex-excuse--everything, will you?" he said. "I must have drunk too
+much whiskey last night, and gone to bed on the table." His brows
+knitted into a puzzled frown.
+
+"Out with the boys awhile?" asked Coltrane kindly.
+
+"No, I went nowhere. I haven't had a dollar to spend in the last two
+months. Struck the demijohn too often, I reckon, as usual."
+
+Colonel Coltrane touched him on the shoulder.
+
+"A little while ago, Yancey," he began, "you asked me if I had brought
+Stella and Lucy over to play. You weren't quite awake then, and must
+have been dreaming you were a boy again. You are awake now, and I
+want you to listen to me. I have come from Stella and Lucy to their
+old playmate, and to my old friend's son. They know that I am going
+to bring you home with me, and you will find them as ready with a
+welcome as they were in the old days. I want you to come to my house
+and stay until you are yourself again, and as much longer as you will.
+We heard of your being down in the world, and in the midst of
+temptation, and we agreed that you should come over and play at our
+house once more. Will you come, my boy? Will you drop our old family
+trouble and come with me?"
+
+"Trouble!" said Goree, opening his eyes wide. "There was never any
+trouble between us that I know of. I'm sure we've always been the
+best friends. But, good Lord, Colonel, how could I go to your home as
+I am--a drunken wretch, a miserable, degraded spendthrift and
+gambler--"
+
+He lurched from the table into his armchair, and began to weep maudlin
+tears, mingled with genuine drops of remorse and shame. Coltrane
+talked to him persistently and reasonably, reminding him of the
+simple mountain pleasures of which he had once been so fond, and
+insisting upon the genuineness of the invitation.
+
+Finally he landed Goree by telling him he was counting upon his help
+in the engineering and transportation of a large amount of felled
+timber from a high mountain-side to a waterway. He knew that Goree
+had once invented a device for this purpose--a series of slides and
+chutes upon which he had justly prided himself. In an instant the
+poor fellow, delighted at the idea of his being of use to any one, had
+paper spread upon the table, and was drawing rapid but pitifully shaky
+lines in demonstration of what he could and would do.
+
+The man was sickened of the husks; his prodigal heart was turning
+again toward the mountains. His mind was yet strangely clogged, and
+his thoughts and memories were returning to his brain one by one, like
+carrier pigeons over a stormy sea. But Coltrane was satisfied with
+the progress he had made.
+
+Bethel received the surprise of its existence that afternoon when a
+Coltrane and a Goree rode amicably together through the town. Side by
+side they rode, out from the dusty streets and gaping townspeople,
+down across the creek bridge, and up toward the mountain. The
+prodigal had brushed and washed and combed himself to a more decent
+figure, but he was unsteady in the saddle, and he seemed to be deep in
+the contemplation of some vexing problem. Coltrane left him in his
+mood, relying upon the influence of changed surroundings to restore
+his equilibrium.
+
+Once Goree was seized with a shaking fit, and almost came to a
+collapse. He had to dismount and rest at the side of the road. The
+colonel, foreseeing such a condition, had provided a small flask of
+whisky for the journey but when it was offered to him Goree refused it
+almost with violence, declaring he would never touch it again. By and
+by he was recovered, and went quietly enough for a mile or two. Then
+he pulled up his horse suddenly, and said:
+
+"I lost two hundred dollars last night, playing poker. Now, where did
+I get that money?"
+
+"Take it easy, Yancey. The mountain air will soon clear it up. We'll
+go fishing, first thing, at the Pinnacle Falls. The trout are jumping
+there like bullfrogs. We'll take Stella and Lucy along, and have a
+picnic on Eagle Rock. Have you forgotten how a hickory-cured-ham
+sandwich tastes, Yancey, to a hungry fisherman?"
+
+Evidently the colonel did not believe the story of his lost wealth; so
+Goree retired again into brooding silence.
+
+By late Afternoon they had travelled ten of the twelve miles between
+Bethel and Laurel. Half a mile this side of Laurel lay the old Goree
+place; a mile or two beyond the village lived the Coltranes. The road
+was now steep and laborious, but the compensations were many. The
+tilted aisles of the forest were opulent with leaf and bird and bloom.
+The tonic air put to shame the pharmacopia. The glades were dark
+with mossy shade, and bright with shy rivulets winking from the ferns
+and laurels. On the lower side they viewed, framed in the near
+foliage, exquisite sketches of the far valley swooning in its opal
+haze.
+
+Coltrane was pleased to see that his companion was yielding to the
+spell of the hills and woods. For now they had but to skirt the base
+of Painter's Cliff; to cross Elder Branch and mount the hill beyond,
+and Goree would have to face the squandered home of his fathers. Every
+rock he passed, every tree, every foot of the rocky way, was familiar
+to him. Though he had forgotten the woods, they thrilled him like the
+music of "Home, Sweet Home."
+
+They rounded the cliff, descended into Elder Branch, and paused there
+to let the horses drink and splash in the swift water. On the right
+was a rail fence that cornered there, and followed the road and
+stream. Inclosed by it was the old apple orchard of the home place;
+the house was yet concealed by the brow of the steep hill. Inside and
+along the fence, pokeberries, elders, sassafras, and sumac grew high
+and dense. At a rustle of their branches, both Goree and Coltrane
+glanced up, and saw a long, yellow, wolfish face above the fence,
+staring at them with pale, unwinking eyes. The head quickly
+disappeared; there was a violent swaying of the bushes, and an
+ungainly figure ran up through the apple orchard in the direction of
+the house, zig-zagging among the trees.
+
+"That's Garvey," said Coltrane; "the man you sold out to. There's no
+doubt but he's considerably cracked. I had to send him up for
+moonshining once, several years ago, in spite of the fact that I
+believed him irresponsible. Why, what's the matter, Yancey?"
+
+Goree was wiping his forehead, and his face had lost its colour. "Do
+I look queer, too?" he asked, trying to smile. "I'm just remembering
+a few more things." Some of the alcohol had evaporated from his brain.
+"I recollect now where I got that two hundred dollars."
+
+"Don't think of it," said Coltrane cheerfully. "Later on we'll figure
+it all out together."
+
+They rode out of the branch, and when they reached the foot of the
+hill Goree stopped again.
+
+"Did you ever suspect I was a very vain kind of fellow, Colonel?" he
+asked. "Sort of foolish proud about appearances?"
+
+The colonel's eyes refused to wander to the soiled, sagging suit of
+flax and the faded slouch hat.
+
+"It seems to me," he replied, mystified, but humouring him, "I
+remember a young buck about twenty, with the tightest coat, the
+sleekest hair, and the prancingest saddle horse in the Blue Ridge."
+
+"Right you are," said Goree eagerly. "And it's in me yet, though it
+don't show. Oh, I'm as vain as a turkey gobbler, and as proud as
+Lucifer. I'm going to ask you to indulge this weakness of mine in a
+little matter."
+
+"Speak out, Yancey. We'll create you Duke of Laurel and Baron of Blue
+Ridge, if you choose; and you shall have a feather out of Stella's
+peacock's tail to wear in your hat."
+
+"I'm in earnest. In a few minutes we'll pass the house up there on
+the hill where I was born, and where my people have lived for nearly a
+century. Strangers live there now--and look at me! I am about to
+show myself to them ragged and poverty-stricken, a wastrel and a
+beggar. Colonel Coltrane, I'm ashamed to do it. I want you to let me
+wear your coat and hat until we are out of sight beyond. I know you
+think it a foolish pride, but I want to make as good a showing as I
+can when I pass the old place."
+
+"Now, what does this mean?" said Coltrane to himself, as he
+compared his companion's sane looks and quiet demeanour with his
+strange request. But he was already unbuttoning the coat, assenting
+readily, as if the fancy were in no wise to be considered strange.
+
+The coat and hat fitted Goree well. He buttoned the former about him
+with a look of satisfaction and dignity. He and Coltrane were nearly
+the same size--rather tall, portly, and erect. Twenty-five years
+were between them, but in appearance they might have been brothers.
+Goree looked older than his age; his face was puffy and lined; the
+colonel had the smooth, fresh complexion of a temperate liver. He put
+on Goree's disreputable old flax coat and faded slouch hat.
+
+"Now," said Goree, taking up the reins, "I'm all right. I want you to
+ride about ten feet in the rear as we go by, Colonel, so that they can
+get a good look at me. They'll see I'm no back number yet, by any
+means. I guess I'll show up pretty well to them once more, anyhow.
+Let's ride on."
+
+He set out up the hill at a smart trot, the colonel following, as he
+had been requested.
+
+Goree sat straight in the saddle, with head erect, but his eyes were
+turned to the right, sharply scanning every shrub and fence and
+hiding-place in the old homestead yard. Once he muttered to himself,
+"Will the crazy fool try it, or did I dream half of it?"
+
+It was when he came opposite the little family burying ground that he
+saw what he had been looking for--a puff of white smoke, coming from
+the thick cedars in one corner. He toppled so slowly to the left that
+Coltrane had time to urge his horse to that side, and catch him with
+one arm.
+
+The squirrel hunter had not overpraised his aim. He had sent the
+bullet where he intended, and where Goree had expected that it would
+pass--through the breast of Colonel Abner Coltrane's black frock
+coat.
+
+Goree leaned heavily against Coltrane, but he did not fall. The
+horses kept pace, side by side, and the Colonel's arm kept him steady.
+The little white houses of Laurel shone through the trees, half a mile
+away. Goree reached out one hand and groped until it rested upon
+Coltrane's fingers, which held his bridle.
+
+"Good friend," he said, and that was all.
+
+Thus did Yancey Goree, as he rode past his old home, make, considering
+all things, the best showing that was in his power.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+THE SONG AND THE SERGEANT
+
+
+Half a dozen people supping at a table in one of the upper-Broadway
+all-night restaurants were making too much noise. Three times the
+manager walked past them with a politely warning glance; but their
+argument had waxed too warm to be quelled by a manager's gaze. It was
+midnight, and the restaurant was filled with patrons from the theatres
+of that district. Some among the dispersed audiences must have
+recognized among the quarrelsome sextet the faces of the players
+belonging to the Carroll Comedy Company.
+
+Four of the six made up the company. Another was the author of the
+comedietta, "A Gay Coquette," which the quartette of players had been
+presenting with fair success at several vaudeville houses in the city.
+The sixth at the table was a person inconsequent in the realm of art,
+but one at whose bidding many lobsters had perished.
+
+Loudly the six maintained their clamorous debate. No one of the Party
+was silent except when answers were stormed from him by the excited
+ones. That was the comedian of "A Gay Coquette." He was a young man
+with a face even too melancholy for his profession.
+
+The oral warfare of four immoderate tongues was directed at Miss
+Clarice Carroll, the twinkling star of the small aggregation.
+Excepting the downcast comedian, all members of the party united in
+casting upon her with vehemence the blame of some momentous
+misfortune. Fifty times they told her: "It is your fault, Clarice--it
+is you alone who spoilt the scene. It is only of late that you have
+acted this way. At this rate the sketch will have to be taken off."
+
+Miss Carroll was a match for any four. Gallic ancestry gave her a
+vivacity that could easily mount to fury. Her large eyes flashed a
+scorching denial at her accusers. Her slender, eloquent arms
+constantly menaced the tableware. Her high, clear soprano voice rose
+to what would have been a scream had it not possessed so pure a
+musical quality. She hurled back at the attacking four their
+denunciations in tones sweet, but of too great carrying power for a
+Broadway restaurant.
+
+Finally they exhausted her patience both as a woman and an artist.
+She sprang up like a panther, managed to smash half a dozen plates and
+glasses with one royal sweep of her arm, and defied her critics. They
+rose and wrangled more loudly. The comedian sighed and looked a
+trifle sadder and disinterested. The manager came tripping and
+suggested peace. He was told to go to the popular synonym for war so
+promptly that the affair might have happened at The Hague.
+
+Thus was the manager angered. He made a sign with his hand and a
+waiter slipped out of the door. In twenty minutes the party of six
+was in a police station facing a grizzled and philosophical desk
+sergeant.
+
+"Disorderly conduct in a restaurant," said the policeman who had
+brought the party in.
+
+The author of "A Gay Coquette" stepped to the front. He wore
+nose-glasses and evening clothes, even if his shoes had been tans
+before they met the patent-leather-polish bottle.
+
+"Mr. Sergeant," said he, out of his throat, like Actor Irving, "I
+would like to protest against this arrest. The company of actors who
+are performing in a little play that I have written, in company with a
+friend and myself were having a little supper. We became deeply
+interested in the discussion as to which one of the cast is
+responsible for a scene in the sketch that lately has fallen so flat
+that the piece is about to become a failure. We may have been rather
+noisy and intolerant of interruption by the restaurant people; but the
+matter was of considerable importance to all of us. You see that we
+are sober and are not the kind of people who desire to raise
+disturbances. I hope that the case will not be pressed and that we may
+be allowed to go."
+
+"Who makes the charge?" asked the sergeant.
+
+"Me," said a white-aproned voice in the rear. "De restaurant sent me
+to. De gang was raisin' a rough-house and breakin' dishes."
+
+"The dishes were paid for," said the playwright. "They were not broken
+purposely. In her anger, because we remonstrated with her for
+spoiling the scene, Miss--"
+
+"It's not true, sergeant," cried the clear voice of Miss Clarice
+Carroll. In a long coat of tan silk and a red-plumed hat, she
+bounded before the desk.
+
+"It's not my fault," she cried indignantly. "How dare they say such
+a thing! I've played the title rle ever since it was staged, and if
+you want to know who made it a success, ask the public--that's all."
+
+"What Miss Carroll says is true in part," said the author. "For five
+months the comedietta was a drawing-card in the best houses. But
+during the last two weeks it has lost favour. There is one scene in
+it in which Miss Carroll made a big hit. Now she hardly gets a hand
+out of it. She spoils it by acting it entirely different from her old
+way."
+
+"It is not my fault," reiterated the actress.
+
+"There are only two of you on in the scene," argued the playwright
+hotly, "you and Delmars, here--"
+
+"Then it's his fault," declared Miss Carroll, with a lightning glance
+of scorn from her dark eyes. The comedian caught it, and gazed with
+increased melancholy at the panels of the sergeant's desk.
+
+The night was a dull one in that particular police station.
+
+The sergeant's long-blunted curiosity awoke a little.
+
+"I've heard you," he said to the author. And then he addressed the
+thin-faced and ascetic-looking lady of the company who played "Aunt
+Turnip-top" in the little comedy.
+
+"Who do you think spoils the scene you are fussing about?" he asked.
+
+"I'm no knocker," said that lady, "and everybody knows it. So, when I
+say that Clarice falls down every time in that scene I'm judging her
+art and not herself. She was great in it once. She does it something
+fierce now. It'll dope the show if she keeps it up."
+
+The sergeant looked at the comedian.
+
+"You and the lady have this scene together, I understand. I suppose
+there's no use asking you which one of you queers it?"
+
+The comedian avoided the direct rays from the two fixed stars of Miss
+Carroll's eyes.
+
+"I don't know," he said, looking down at his patent-leather toes.
+
+"Are you one of the actors?" asked the sergeant of a dwarfish youth
+with a middle-aged face.
+
+"Why, say!" replied the last Thespian witness, "you don't notice any
+tin spear in my hands, do you? You haven't heard me shout: 'See, the
+Emperor comes!' since I've been in here, have you? I guess I'm on the
+stage long enough for 'em not to start a panic by mistaking me for a
+thin curl of smoke rising above the footlights."
+
+"In your opinion, if you've got one," said the sergeant, "is the frost
+that gathers on the scene in question the work of the lady or the
+gentleman who takes part in it?"
+
+The middle-aged youth looked pained.
+
+"I regret to say," he answered, "that Miss Carroll seems to have
+lost her grip on that scene. She's all right in the rest of the
+play, but--but I tell you, sergeant, she can do it--she has done
+it equal to any of 'em--and she can do it again."
+
+Miss Carroll ran forward, glowing and palpitating.
+
+"Thank you, Jimmy, for the first good word I've had in many a day,"
+she cried. And then she turned her eager face toward the desk.
+
+"I'll show you, sergeant, whether I am to blame. I'll show them
+whether I can do that scene. Come, Mr. Delmars; let us begin. You
+will let us, won't you, sergeant?"
+
+"How long will it take?" asked the sergeant, dubiously.
+
+"Eight minutes," said the playwright. "The entire play consumes but
+thirty."
+
+"You may go ahead," said the sergeant. "Most of you seem to side
+against the little lady. Maybe she had a right to crack up a saucer
+or two in that restaurant. We'll see how she does the turn before we
+take that up."
+
+The matron of the police station had been standing near, listening to
+the singular argument. She came nigher and stood near the sergeant's
+chair. Two or three of the reserves strolled in, big and yawning.
+
+"Before beginning the scene," said the playwright, "and assuming that
+you have not seen a production of 'A Gay Coquette,' I will make a
+brief but necessary explanation. It is a musical-farce-comedy--
+burlesque-comedietta. As the title implies, Miss Carroll's rle is
+that of a gay, rollicking, mischievous, heartless coquette. She
+sustains that character throughout the entire comedy part of the
+production. And I have designed the extravaganza features so that she
+may preserve and present the same coquettish idea.
+
+"Now, the scene in which we take exception to Miss Carroll's acting is
+called the 'gorilla dance.' She is costumed to represent a wood nymph,
+and there is a great song-and-dance scene with a gorilla--played by
+Mr. Delmars, the comedian. A tropical-forest stage is set.
+
+"That used to get four and five recalls. The main thing was the
+acting and the dance--it was the funniest thing in New York for five
+months. Delmars's song, 'I'll Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home,' while he
+and Miss Carroll were cutting hide-and-seek capers among the tropical
+plants, was a winner."
+
+"What's the trouble with the scene now?" asked the sergeant.
+
+"Miss Carroll spoils it right in the middle of it," said the
+playwright wrathfully.
+
+With a wide gesture of her ever-moving arms the actress waved back the
+little group of spectators, leaving a space in front of the desk for
+the scene of her vindication or fall. Then she whipped off her long
+tan cloak and tossed it across the arm of the policeman who still
+stood officially among them.
+
+Miss Carroll had gone to supper well cloaked, but in the costume of
+the tropic wood nymph. A skirt of fern leaves touched her knee; she
+was like a humming-bird--green and golden and purple.
+
+And then she danced a fluttering, fantastic dance, so agile and light
+and mazy in her steps that the other three members of the Carroll
+Comedy Company broke into applause at the art of it.
+
+And at the proper time Delmars leaped out at her side, mimicking
+the uncouth, hideous bounds of the gorilla so funnily that the
+grizzled sergeant himself gave a short laugh like the closing of a
+padlock. They danced together the gorilla dance, and won a hand from
+all.
+
+Then began the most fantastic part of the scene--the wooing of the
+nymph by the gorilla. It was a kind of dance itself--eccentric and
+prankish, with the nymph in coquettish and seductive retreat, followed
+by the gorilla as he sang "I'll Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home."
+
+The song was a lyric of merit. The words were non-sense, as befitted
+the play, but the music was worthy of something better. Delmars
+struck into it in a rich tenor that owned a quality that shamed the
+flippant words.
+
+During one verse of the song the wood nymph performed the grotesque
+evolutions designed for the scene. At the middle of the second verse
+she stood still, with a strange look on her face, seeming to gaze
+dreamily into the depths of the scenic forest. The gorilla's last
+leap had brought him to her feet, and there he knelt, holding her
+hand, until he had finished the haunting-lyric that was set in the
+absurd comedy like a diamond in a piece of putty.
+
+When Delmars ceased Miss Carroll started, and covered a sudden flow of
+tears with both hands.
+
+"There!" cried the playwright, gesticulating with violence; "there
+you have it, sergeant. For two weeks she has spoiled that scene in
+just that manner at every performance. I have begged her to consider
+that it is not Ophelia or Juliet that she is playing. Do you wonder
+now at our impatience? Tears for the gorilla song! The play is lost!"
+
+Out of her bewitchment, whatever it was, the wood nymph flared
+suddenly, and pointed a desperate finger at Delmars.
+
+"It is you--you who have done this," she cried wildly. "You never
+sang that song that way until lately. It is your doing."
+
+"I give it up," said the sergeant.
+
+And then the gray-haired matron of the police station came forward
+from behind the sergeant's chair.
+
+"Must an old woman teach you all?" she said. She went up to Miss
+Carroll and took her hand.
+
+"The man's wearing his heart out for you, my dear. Couldn't you tell
+it the first note you heard him sing? All of his monkey flip-flops
+wouldn't have kept it from me. Must you be deaf as well as blind?
+That's why you couldn't act your part, child. Do you love him or must
+he be a gorilla for the rest of his days?"
+
+Miss Carroll whirled around and caught Delmars with a lightning glance
+of her eye. He came toward her, melancholy.
+
+"Did you hear, Mr. Delmars?" she asked, with a catching breath.
+
+"I did," said the comedian. "It is true. I didn't think there was
+any use. I tried to let you know with the song."
+
+"Silly!" said the matron; "why didn't you speak?"
+
+"No, no," cried the wood nymph, "his way was the best. I didn't know,
+but--it was just what I wanted, Bobby."
+
+She sprang like a green grasshopper; and the comedian opened his arms,
+and--smiled.
+
+"Get out of this," roared the desk sergeant to the waiting waiter from
+the restaurant. "There's nothing doing here for you."
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+ONE DOLLAR'S WORTH
+
+
+The judge of the United States court of the district lying along the
+Rio Grande border found the following letter one morning in his mail:
+
+
+ JUDGE:
+ When you sent me up for four years you made a talk.
+ Among other hard things, you called me a rattlesnake.
+ Maybe I am one--anyhow, you hear me rattling now.
+ One year after I got to the pen, my daughter died of--
+ well, they said it was poverty and the disgrace together.
+ You've got a daughter, Judge, and I'm going to make
+ you know how it feels to lose one. And I'm going to
+ bite that district attorney that spoke against me. I'm
+ free now, and I guess I've turned to rattlesnake all right.
+ I feel like one. I don't say much, but this is my rattle.
+ Look out when I strike.
+ Yours respectfully,
+ RATTLESNAKE.
+
+
+Judge Derwent threw the letter carelessly aside. It was nothing new
+to receive such epistles from desperate men whom he had been called
+upon to judge. He felt no alarm. Later on he showed the letter to
+Littlefield, the young district attorney, for Littlefield's name was
+included in the threat, and the judge was punctilious in matters
+between himself and his fellow men.
+
+Littlefield honoured the rattle of the writer, as far as it concerned
+himself, with a smile of contempt; but he frowned a little over the
+reference to the Judge's daughter, for he and Nancy Derwent were to be
+married in the fall.
+
+Littlefield went to the clerk of the court and looked over the records
+with him. They decided that the letter might have been sent by Mexico
+Sam, a half-breed border desperado who had been imprisoned for
+manslaughter four years before. Then official duties crowded the
+matter from his mind, and the rattle of the revengeful serpent was
+forgotten.
+
+Court was in session at Brownsville. Most of the cases to be tried
+were charges of smuggling, counterfeiting, post-office robberies, and
+violations of Federal laws along the border. One case was that of a
+young Mexican, Rafael Ortiz, who had been rounded up by a clever
+deputy marshal in the act of passing a counterfeit silver dollar. He
+had been suspected of many such deviations from rectitude, but this
+was the first time that anything provable had been fixed upon him.
+Ortiz languished cozily in jail, smoking brown cigarettes and waiting
+for trial. Kilpatrick, the deputy, brought the counterfeit dollar and
+handed it to the district attorney in his office in the court-house.
+The deputy and a reputable druggist were prepared to swear that Ortiz
+paid for a bottle of medicine with it. The coin was a poor
+counterfeit, soft, dull-looking, and made principally of lead. It was
+the day before the morning on which the docket would reach the case of
+Ortiz, and the district attorney was preparing himself for trial.
+
+"Not much need of having in high-priced experts to prove the coin's
+queer, is there, Kil?" smiled Littlefield, as he thumped the dollar
+down upon the table, where it fell with no more ring than would have
+come from a lump of putty.
+
+"I guess the Greaser's as good as behind the bars," said the deputy,
+easing up his holsters. "You've got him dead. If it had been just
+one time, these Mexicans can't tell good money from bad; but this
+little yaller rascal belongs to a gang of counterfeiters, I know.
+This is the first time I've been able to catch him doing the trick.
+He's got a girl down there in them Mexican jacals on the river bank.
+I seen her one day when I was watching him. She's as pretty as a red
+heifer in a flower bed."
+
+Littlefield shoved the counterfeit dollar into his pocket, and slipped
+his memoranda of the case into an envelope. Just then a bright,
+winsome face, as frank and jolly as a boy's, appeared in the doorway,
+and in walked Nancy Derwent.
+
+"Oh, Bob, didn't court adjourn at twelve to-day until to-morrow?" she
+asked of Littlefield.
+
+"It did," said the district attorney, "and I'm very glad of it. I've
+got a lot of rulings to look up, and--"
+
+"Now, that's just like you. I wonder you and father don't turn
+to law books or rulings or something! I want you to take me out
+plover-shooting this afternoon. Long Prairie is just alive with them.
+Don't say no, please! I want to try my new twelve-bore hammerless.
+I've sent to the livery stable to engage Fly and Bess for the
+buckboard; they stand fire so nicely. I was sure you would go."
+
+They were to be married in the fall. The glamour was at its
+height. The plovers won the day--or, rather, the afternoon--over
+the calf-bound authorities. Littlefield began to put his papers
+away.
+
+There was a knock at the door. Kilpatrick answered it. A beautiful,
+dark-eyed girl with a skin tinged with the faintest lemon colour
+walked into the room. A black shawl was thrown over her head and
+wound once around her neck.
+
+She began to talk in Spanish, a voluble, mournful stream of melancholy
+music. Littlefield did not understand Spanish. The deputy did, and
+he translated her talk by portions, at intervals holding up his hand
+to check the flow of her words.
+
+"She came to see you, Mr. Littlefield. Her name's Joya Trevias. She
+wants to see you about--well, she's mixed up with that Rafael Ortiz.
+She's his--she's his girl. She says he's innocent. She says she
+made the money and got him to pass it. Don't you believe her, Mr.
+Littlefield. That's the way with these Mexican girls; they'll lie,
+steal, or kill for a fellow when they get stuck on him. Never trust a
+woman that's in love!"
+
+"Mr. Kilpatrick!"
+
+Nancy Derwent's indignant exclamation caused the deputy to flounder
+for a moment in attempting to explain that he had misquoted his own
+sentiments, and then he went on with the translation:
+
+"She says she's willing to take his place in the jail if you'll let
+him out. She says she was down sick with the fever, and the doctor
+said she'd die if she didn't have medicine. That's why he passed the
+lead dollar on the drug store. She says it saved her life. This
+Rafael seems to be her honey, all right; there's a lot of stuff in her
+talk about love and such things that you don't want to hear."
+
+It was an old story to the district attorney.
+
+"Tell her," said he, "that I can do nothing. The case comes up in the
+morning, and he will have to make his fight before the court."
+
+Nancy Derwent was not so hardened. She was looking with sympathetic
+interest at Joya Trevias and at Littlefield alternately. The deputy
+repeated the district attorney's words to the girl. She spoke a
+sentence or two in a low voice, pulled her shawl closely about her
+face, and left the room.
+
+"What did she say then?" asked the district attorney.
+
+"Nothing special," said the deputy. "She said: 'If the life of the
+one'--let's see how it went--'_Si la vida de ella a quien tu amas_
+--if the life of the girl you love is ever in danger, remember Rafael
+Ortiz.'"
+
+Kilpatrick strolled out through the corridor in the direction of the
+marshal's office.
+
+"Can't you do anything for them, Bob?" asked Nancy. "It's such a
+little thing--just one counterfeit dollar--to ruin the happiness
+of two lives! She was in danger of death, and he did it to save her.
+Doesn't the law know the feeling of pity?"
+
+"It hasn't a place in jurisprudence, Nan," said Littlefield,
+"especially _in re_ the district attorney's duty. I'll promise you
+that the prosecution will not be vindictive; but the man is as good as
+convicted when the case is called. Witnesses will swear to his passing
+the bad dollar which I have in my pocket at this moment as 'Exhibit
+A.' There are no Mexicans on the jury, and it will vote Mr. Greaser
+guilty without leaving the box."
+
+
+The plover-shooting was fine that afternoon, and in the excitement of
+the sport the case of Rafael and the grief of Joya Trevias was
+forgotten. The district attorney and Nancy Derwent drove out from
+the town three miles along a smooth, grassy road, and then struck
+across a rolling prairie toward a heavy line of timber on Piedra
+Creek. Beyond this creek lay Long Prairie, the favourite haunt of the
+plover. As they were nearing the creek they heard the galloping of a
+horse to their right, and saw a man with black hair and a swarthy face
+riding toward the woods at a tangent, as if he had come up behind
+them.
+
+"I've seen that fellow somewhere," said Littlefield, who had a memory
+for faces, "but I can't exactly place him. Some ranchman, I suppose,
+taking a short cut home."
+
+They spent an hour on Long Prairie, shooting from the buckboard.
+Nancy Derwent, an active, outdoor Western girl, was pleased with her
+twelve-bore. She had bagged within two brace of her companion's
+score.
+
+They started homeward at a gentle trot. When within a hundred yards
+of Piedra Creek a man rode out of the timber directly toward them.
+
+"It looks like the man we saw coming over," remarked Miss Derwent.
+
+As the distance between them lessened, the district attorney suddenly
+pulled up his team sharply, with his eyes fixed upon the advancing
+horseman. That individual had drawn a Winchester from its scabbard
+on his saddle and thrown it over his arm.
+
+"Now I know you, Mexico Sam!" muttered Littlefield to himself. "It
+was you who shook your rattles in that gentle epistle."
+
+Mexico Sam did not leave things long in doubt. He had a nice eye in
+all matters relating to firearms, so when he was within good rifle
+range, but outside of danger from No. 8 shot, he threw up his
+Winchester and opened fire upon the occupants of the buckboard.
+
+The first shot cracked the back of the seat within the two-inch space
+between the shoulders of Littlefield and Miss Derwent. The next went
+through the dashboard and Littlefield's trouser leg.
+
+The district attorney hustled Nancy out of the buck-board to the
+ground. She was a little pale, but asked no questions. She had the
+frontier instinct that accepts conditions in an emergency without
+superfluous argument. They kept their guns in hand, and Littlefield
+hastily gathered some handfuls of cartridges from the pasteboard box
+on the seat and crowded them into his pockets.
+
+"Keep behind the horses, Nan," he commanded. "That fellow is a ruffian
+I sent to prison once. He's trying to get even. He knows our shot
+won't hurt him at that distance."
+
+"All right, Bob," said Nancy steadily. "I'm not afraid. But you come
+close, too. Whoa, Bess; stand still, now!"
+
+She stroked Bess's mane. Littlefield stood with his gun ready,
+praying that the desperado would come within range.
+
+But Mexico Sam was playing his vendetta along safe lines. He was
+a bird of different feather from the plover. His accurate eye drew
+an imaginary line of circumference around the area of danger from
+bird-shot, and upon this line lie rode. His horse wheeled to the
+right, and as his victims rounded to the safe side of their equine
+breast-work he sent a ball through the district attorney's hat. Once
+he miscalculated in making a dtour, and over-stepped his margin.
+Littlefield's gun flashed, and Mexico Sam ducked his head to the
+harmless patter of the shot. A few of them stung his horse, which
+pranced promptly back to the safety line.
+
+The desperado fired again. A little cry came from Nancy Derwent.
+Littlefield whirled, with blazing eyes, and saw the blood trickling
+down her cheek.
+
+"I'm not hurt, Bob--only a splinter struck me. I think he hit one
+of the wheel-spokes."
+
+"Lord!" groaned Littlefield. "If I only had a charge of buckshot!"
+
+The ruffian got his horse still, and took careful aim. Fly gave a
+snort and fell in the harness, struck in the neck. Bess, now
+disabused of the idea that plover were being fired at, broke her
+traces and galloped wildly away. Mexican Sam sent a ball neatly
+through the fulness of Nancy Derwent's shooting jacket.
+
+"Lie down--lie down!" snapped Littlefield. "Close to the horse--flat
+on the ground--so." He almost threw her upon the grass against the
+back of the recumbent Fly. Oddly enough, at that moment the words
+of the Mexican girl returned to his mind:
+
+"If the life of the girl you love is ever in danger, remember Rafael
+Ortiz."
+
+Littlefield uttered an exclamation.
+
+"Open fire on him, Nan, across the horse's back. Fire as fast as you
+can! You can't hurt him, but keep him dodging shot for one minute
+while I try to work a little scheme."
+
+Nancy gave a quick glance at Littlefield, and saw him take out his
+pocket-knife and open it. Then she turned her face to obey orders,
+keeping up a rapid fire at the enemy.
+
+Mexico Sam waited patiently until this innocuous fusillade ceased.
+He had plenty of time, and he did not care to risk the chance of a
+bird-shot in his eye when it could be avoided by a little caution.
+He pulled his heavy Stetson low down over his face until the shots
+ceased. Then he drew a little nearer, and fired with careful aim at
+what he could see of his victims above the fallen horse.
+
+Neither of them moved. He urged his horse a few steps nearer. He
+saw the district attorney rise to one knee and deliberately level
+his shotgun. He pulled his hat down and awaited the harmless rattle
+of the tiny pellets.
+
+The shotgun blazed with a heavy report. Mexico Sam sighed, turned
+limp all over, and slowly fell from his horse--a dead rattlesnake.
+
+
+At ten o'clock the next morning court opened, and the case of the
+United States versus Rafael Ortiz was called. The district attorney,
+with his arm in a sling, rose and addressed the court.
+
+"May it please your honour," he said, "I desire to enter a _nolle
+pros._ in this case. Even though the defendant should be guilty,
+there is not sufficient evidence in the hands of the government to
+secure a conviction. The piece of counterfeit coin upon the
+identity of which the case was built is not now available as
+evidence. I ask, therefore, that the case be stricken off."
+
+At the noon recess Kilpatrick strolled into the district attorney's
+office.
+
+"I've just been down to take a squint at old Mexico Sam," said the
+deputy. "They've got him laid out. Old Mexico was a tough outfit, I
+reckon. The boys was wonderin' down there what you shot him with.
+Some said it must have been nails. I never see a gun carry anything
+to make holes like he had."
+
+"I shot him," said the district attorney, "with Exhibit A of your
+counterfeiting case. Lucky thing for me--and somebody else--that
+it was as bad money as it was! It sliced up into slugs very nicely.
+Say, Kil, can't you go down to the jacals and find where that Mexican
+girl lives? Miss Derwent wants to know."
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+A NEWSPAPER STORY
+
+
+At 8 A. M. it lay on Giuseppi's news-stand, still damp from the
+presses. Giuseppi, with the cunning of his ilk, philandered on the
+opposite corner, leaving his patrons to help themselves, no doubt on
+a theory related to the hypothesis of the watched pot.
+
+This particular newspaper was, according to its custom and design, an
+educator, a guide, a monitor, a champion and a household counsellor
+and _vade mecum_.
+
+From its many excellencies might be selected three editorials. One
+was in simple and chaste but illuminating language directed to
+parents and teachers, deprecating corporal punishment for children.
+
+Another was an accusive and significant warning addressed to a
+notorious labour leader who was on the point of instigating his
+clients to a troublesome strike.
+
+The third was an eloquent demand that the police force be sustained
+and aided in everything that tended to increase its efficiency as
+public guardians and servants.
+
+Besides these more important chidings and requisitions upon the store
+of good citizenship was a wise prescription or form of procedure laid
+out by the editor of the heart-to-heart column in the specific case
+of a young man who had complained of the obduracy of his lady love,
+teaching him how he might win her.
+
+Again, there was, on the beauty page, a complete answer to a young
+lady inquirer who desired admonition toward the securing of bright
+eyes, rosy cheeks and a beautiful countenance.
+
+One other item requiring special cognizance was a brief "personal,"
+running thus:
+
+
+ DEAR JACK:--Forgive me. You were right. Meet me corner Madison and
+ ----th at 8.30 this morning. We leave at noon. PENITENT.
+
+
+At 8 o'clock a young man with a haggard look and the feverish gleam of
+unrest in his eye dropped a penny and picked up the top paper as he
+passed Giuseppi's stand. A sleepless night had left him a late riser.
+There was an office to be reached by nine, and a shave and a hasty cup
+of coffee to be crowded into the interval.
+
+He visited his barber shop and then hurried on his way. He pocketed
+his paper, meditating a belated perusal of it at the luncheon hour.
+At the next corner it fell from his pocket, carrying with it his pair
+of new gloves. Three blocks he walked, missed the gloves and turned
+back fuming.
+
+Just on the half-hour he reached the corner where lay the gloves and
+the paper. But he strangely ignored that which he had come to seek.
+He was holding two little hands as tightly as ever he could and
+looking into two penitent brown eyes, while joy rioted in his heart.
+
+"Dear Jack," she said, "I knew you would be here on time."
+
+"I wonder what she means by that," he was saying to himself; "but it's
+all right, it's all right."
+
+A big wind puffed out of the west, picked up the paper from the
+sidewalk, opened it out and sent it flying and whirling down a side
+street. Up that street was driving a skittish bay to a spider-wheel
+buggy, the young man who had written to the heart-to-heart editor for
+a recipe that he might win her for whom he sighed.
+
+The wind, with a prankish flurry, flapped the flying newspaper against
+the face of the skittish bay. There was a lengthened streak of bay
+mingled with the red of running gear that stretched itself out for
+four blocks. Then a water-hydrant played its part in the cosmogony,
+the buggy became matchwood as foreordained, and the driver rested very
+quietly where he had been flung on the asphalt in front of a certain
+brownstone mansion.
+
+They came out and had him inside very promptly. And there was one who
+made herself a pillow for his head, and cared for no curious eyes,
+bending over and saying, "Oh, it was you; it was you all the time,
+Bobby! Couldn't you see it? And if you die, why, so must I, and--"
+
+But in all this wind we must hurry to keep in touch with our paper.
+
+Policeman O'Brine arrested it as a character dangerous to traffic.
+Straightening its dishevelled leaves with his big, slow fingers, he
+stood a few feet from the family entrance of the Shandon Bells Caf.
+One headline he spelled out ponderously: "The Papers to the Front in a
+Move to Help the Police."
+
+But, whisht! The voice of Danny, the head bartender, through the
+crack of the door: "Here's a nip for ye, Mike, ould man."
+
+Behind the widespread, amicable columns of the press Policeman O'Brine
+receives swiftly his nip of the real stuff. He moves away, stalwart,
+refreshed, fortified, to his duties. Might not the editor man view
+with pride the early, the spiritual, the literal fruit that had
+blessed his labours.
+
+Policeman O'Brine folded the paper and poked it playfully under the
+arm of a small boy that was passing. That boy was named Johnny, and he
+took the paper home with him. His sister was named Gladys, and she
+had written to the beauty editor of the paper asking for the
+practicable touchstone of beauty. That was weeks ago, and she had
+ceased to look for an answer. Gladys was a pale girl, with dull eyes
+and a discontented expression. She was dressing to go up to the
+avenue to get some braid. Beneath her skirt she pinned two leaves of
+the paper Johnny had brought. When she walked the rustling sound was
+an exact imitation of the real thing.
+
+On the street she met the Brown girl from the flat below and stopped
+to talk. The Brown girl turned green. Only silk at $5 a yard could
+make the sound that she heard when Gladys moved. The Brown girl,
+consumed by jealousy, said something spiteful and went her way, with
+pinched lips.
+
+Gladys proceeded toward the avenue. Her eyes now sparkled like
+jagerfonteins. A rosy bloom visited her cheeks; a triumphant, subtle,
+vivifying, smile transfigured her face. She was beautiful. Could the
+beauty editor have seen her then! There was something in her answer
+in the paper, I believe, about cultivating kind feelings toward others
+in order to make plain features attractive.
+
+The labour leader against whom the paper's solemn and weighty
+editorial injunction was laid was the father of Gladys and Johnny. He
+picked up the remains of the journal from which Gladys had ravished a
+cosmetic of silken sounds. The editorial did not come under his eye,
+but instead it was greeted by one of those ingenious and specious
+puzzle problems that enthrall alike the simpleton and the sage.
+
+The labour leader tore off half of the page, provided himself with
+table, pencil and paper and glued himself to his puzzle.
+
+Three hours later, after waiting vainly for him at the appointed
+place, other more conservative leaders declared and ruled in favour of
+arbitration, and the strike with its attendant dangers was averted.
+Subsequent editions of the paper referred, in coloured inks, to the
+clarion tone of its successful denunciation of the labour leader's
+intended designs.
+
+The remaining leaves of the active journal also went loyally to the
+proving of its potency.
+
+When Johnny returned from school he sought a secluded spot and removed
+the missing columns from the inside of his clothing, where they had
+been artfully distributed so as to successfully defend such areas as
+are generally attacked during scholastic castigations. Johnny
+attended a private school and had had trouble with his teacher. As
+has been said, there was an excellent editorial against corporal
+punishment in that morning's issue, and no doubt it had its effect.
+
+After this can any one doubt the power of the press?
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+TOMMY'S BURGLAR
+
+
+At ten o'clock P. M. Felicia, the maid, left by the basement door with
+the policeman to get a raspberry phosphate around the corner. She
+detested the policeman and objected earnestly to the arrangement.
+She pointed out, not unreasonably, that she might have been allowed to
+fall asleep over one of St. George Rathbone's novels on the third
+floor, but she was overruled. Raspberries and cops were not created
+for nothing.
+
+The burglar got into the house without much difficulty; because we
+must have action and not too much description in a 2,000-word story.
+
+In the dining room he opened the slide of his dark lantern. With a
+brace and centrebit he began to bore into the lock of the silver-closet.
+
+Suddenly a click was heard. The room was flooded with electric light.
+The dark velvet portires parted to admit a fair-haired boy of eight
+in pink pajamas, bearing a bottle of olive oil in his hand.
+
+"Are you a burglar?" he asked, in a sweet, childish voice.
+
+"Listen to that," exclaimed the man, in a hoarse voice. "Am I a
+burglar? Wot do you suppose I have a three-days' growth of bristly
+beard on my face for, and a cap with flaps? Give me the oil, quick,
+and let me grease the bit, so I won't wake up your mamma, who is lying
+down with a headache, and left you in charge of Felicia who has been
+faithless to her trust."
+
+"Oh, dear," said Tommy, with a sigh. "I thought you would be more
+up-to-date. This oil is for the salad when I bring lunch from the
+pantry for you. And mamma and papa have gone to the Metropolitan to
+hear De Reszke. But that isn't my fault. It only shows how long the
+story has been knocking around among the editors. If the author had
+been wise he'd have changed it to Caruso in the proofs."
+
+"Be quiet," hissed the burglar, under his breath. "If you raise an
+alarm I'll wring your neck like a rabbit's."
+
+"Like a chicken's," corrected Tommy. "You had that wrong. You don't
+wring rabbits' necks."
+
+"Aren't you afraid of me?" asked the burglar.
+
+"You know I'm not," answered Tommy. "Don't you suppose I know fact
+from fiction. If this wasn't a story I'd yell like an Indian when I
+saw you; and you'd probably tumble downstairs and get pinched on the
+sidewalk."
+
+"I see," said the burglar, "that you're on to your job. Go on with
+the performance."
+
+Tommy seated himself in an armchair and drew his toes up under him.
+
+"Why do you go around robbing strangers, Mr. Burglar? Have you no
+friends?"
+
+"I see what you're driving at," said the burglar, with a dark frown.
+"It's the same old story. Your innocence and childish insouciance is
+going to lead me back into an honest life. Every time I crack a crib
+where there's a kid around, it happens."
+
+"Would you mind gazing with wolfish eyes at the plate of cold beef
+that the butler has left on the dining table?" said Tommy. "I'm
+afraid it's growing late."
+
+The burglar accommodated.
+
+"Poor man," said Tommy. "You must be hungry. If you will please stand
+in a listless attitude I will get you something to eat."
+
+The boy brought a roast chicken, a jar of marmalade and a bottle of
+wine from the pantry. The burglar seized a knife and fork sullenly.
+
+"It's only been an hour," he grumbled, "since I had a lobster and a
+pint of musty ale up on Broadway. I wish these story writers would
+let a fellow have a pepsin tablet, anyhow, between feeds."
+
+"My papa writes books," remarked Tommy.
+
+The burglar jumped to his feet quickly.
+
+"You said he had gone to the opera," he hissed, hoarsely and with
+immediate suspicion.
+
+"I ought to have explained," said Tommy. "He didn't buy the tickets."
+The burglar sat again and toyed with the wishbone.
+
+"Why do you burgle houses?" asked the boy, wonderingly.
+
+"Because," replied the burglar, with a sudden flow of tears. "God
+bless my little brown-haired boy Bessie at home."
+
+"Ah," said Tommy, wrinkling his nose, "you got that answer in the
+wrong place. You want to tell your hard-luck story before you pull
+out the child stop."
+
+"Oh, yes," said the burglar, "I forgot. Well, once I lived in
+Milwaukee, and--"
+
+"Take the silver," said Tommy, rising from his chair.
+
+"Hold on," said the burglar. "But I moved away. I could find no
+other employment. For a while I managed to support my wife and
+child by passing confederate money; but, alas! I was forced to give
+that up because it did not belong to the union. I became desperate
+and a burglar."
+
+"Have you ever fallen into the hands of the police?" asked Tommy.
+
+"I said 'burglar,' not 'beggar,'" answered the cracksman.
+
+"After you finish your lunch," said Tommy, "and experience the usual
+change of heart, how shall we wind up the story?"
+
+"Suppose," said the burglar, thoughtfully, "that Tony Pastor turns out
+earlier than usual to-night, and your father gets in from 'Parsifal'
+at 10.30. I am thoroughly repentant because you have made me think of
+my own little boy Bessie, and--"
+
+"Say," said Tommy, "haven't you got that wrong?"
+
+"Not on your coloured crayon drawings by B. Cory Kilvert," said the
+burglar. "It's always a Bessie that I have at home, artlessly
+prattling to the pale-cheeked burglar's bride. As I was saying, your
+father opens the front door just as I am departing with admonitions
+and sandwiches that you have wrapped up for me. Upon recognizing me
+as an old Harvard classmate he starts back in--"
+
+"Not in surprise?" interrupted Tommy, with wide, open eyes.
+
+"He starts back in the doorway," continued the burglar. And then he
+rose to his feet and began to shout "Rah, rah, rah! rah, rah, rah!
+rah, rah, rah!"
+
+"Well," said Tommy, wonderingly, "that's the first time I ever knew a
+burglar to give a college yell when he was burglarizing a house, even
+in a story."
+
+"That's one on you," said the burglar, with a laugh. "I was practising
+the dramatization. If this is put on the stage that college touch is
+about the only thing that will make it go."
+
+Tommy looked his admiration.
+
+"You're on, all right," he said.
+
+"And there's another mistake you've made," said the burglar. "You
+should have gone some time ago and brought me the $9 gold piece your
+mother gave you on your birthday to take to Bessie."
+
+"But she didn't give it to me to take to Bessie," said Tommy, pouting.
+
+"Come, come!" said the burglar, sternly. "It's not nice of you to
+take advantage because the story contains an ambiguous sentence. You
+know what I mean. It's mighty little I get out of these fictional
+jobs, anyhow. I lose all the loot, and I have to reform every time;
+and all the swag I'm allowed is the blamed little fol-de-rols and
+luck-pieces that you kids hand over. Why, in one story, all I got was
+a kiss from a little girl who came in on me when I was opening a safe.
+And it tasted of molasses candy, too. I've a good notion to tie this
+table cover over your head and keep on into the silver-closet."
+
+"Oh, no, you haven't," said Tommy, wrapping his arms around his knees.
+"Because if you did no editor would buy the story. You know you've
+got to preserve the unities."
+
+"So've you," said the burglar, rather glumly. "Instead of sitting here
+talking impudence and taking the bread out of a poor man's mouth, what
+you'd like to be doing is hiding under the bed and screeching at the
+top of your voice."
+
+"You're right, old man," said Tommy, heartily. "I wonder what they
+make us do it for? I think the S. P. C. C. ought to interfere. I'm
+sure it's neither agreeable nor usual for a kid of my age to butt in
+when a full-grown burglar is at work and offer him a red sled and a
+pair of skates not to awaken his sick mother. And look how they make
+the burglars act! You'd think editors would know--but what's the
+use?"
+
+The burglar wiped his hands on the tablecloth and arose with a yawn.
+
+"Well, let's get through with it," he said. "God bless you, my little
+boy! you have saved a man from committing a crime this night. Bessie
+shall pray for you as soon as I get home and give her her orders. I
+shall never burglarize another house--at least not until the June
+magazines are out. It'll be your little sister's turn then to run in
+on me while I am abstracting the U. S. 4 per cent. from the tea urn
+and buy me off with her coral necklace and a falsetto kiss."
+
+"You haven't got all the kicks coming to you," sighed Tommy, crawling
+out of his chair. "Think of the sleep I'm losing. But it's tough on
+both of us, old man. I wish you could get out of the story and really
+rob somebody. Maybe you'll have the chance if they dramatize us."
+
+"Never!" said the burglar, gloomily. "Between the box office and my
+better impulses that your leading juveniles are supposed to awaken
+and the magazines that pay on publication, I guess I'll always be
+broke."
+
+"I'm sorry," said Tommy, sympathetically. "But I can't help myself
+any more than you can. It's one of the canons of household fiction
+that no burglar shall be successful. The burglar must be foiled by
+a kid like me, or by a young lady heroine, or at the last moment by
+his old pal, Red Mike, who recognizes the house as one in which he
+used to be the coachman. You have got the worst end of it in any kind
+of a story."
+
+"Well, I suppose I must be clearing out now," said the burglar, taking
+up his lantern and bracebit.
+
+"You have to take the rest of this chicken and the bottle of wine with
+you for Bessie and her mother," said Tommy, calmly.
+
+"But confound it," exclaimed the burglar, in an annoyed tone, "they
+don't want it. I've got five cases of Chteau de Beychsvelle at home
+that was bottled in 1853. That claret of yours is corked. And you
+couldn't get either of them to look at a chicken unless it was stewed
+in champagne. You know, after I get out of the story I don't have so
+many limitations. I make a turn now and then."
+
+"Yes, but you must take them," said Tommy, loading his arms with the
+bundles.
+
+"Bless you, young master!" recited the burglar, obedient. "Second-Story
+Saul will never forget you. And now hurry and let me out, kid. Our
+2,000 words must be nearly up."
+
+Tommy led the way through the hall toward the front door. Suddenly
+the burglar stopped and called to him softly: "Ain't there a cop out
+there in front somewhere sparking the girl?"
+
+"Yes," said Tommy, "but what--"
+
+"I'm afraid he'll catch me," said the burglar. "You mustn't forget
+that this is fiction."
+
+"Great head!" said Tommy, turning. "Come out by the back door."
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+A CHAPARRAL CHRISTMAS GIFT
+
+
+The original cause of the trouble was about twenty years in growing.
+
+At the end of that time it was worth it.
+
+Had you lived anywhere within fifty miles of Sundown Ranch you would
+have heard of it. It possessed a quantity of jet-black hair, a pair
+of extremely frank, deep-brown eyes and a laugh that rippled across
+the prairie like the sound of a hidden brook. The name of it was
+Rosita McMullen; and she was the daughter of old man McMullen of the
+Sundown Sheep Ranch.
+
+There came riding on red roan steeds--or, to be more explicit, on a
+paint and a flea-bitten sorrel--two wooers. One was Madison Lane,
+and the other was the Frio Kid. But at that time they did not call him
+the Frio Kid, for he had not earned the honours of special
+nomenclature. His name was simply Johnny McRoy.
+
+It must not be supposed that these two were the sum of the agreeable
+Rosita's admirers. The bronchos of a dozen others champed their bits
+at the long hitching rack of the Sundown Ranch. Many were the
+sheeps'-eyes that were cast in those savannas that did not belong to
+the flocks of Dan McMullen. But of all the cavaliers, Madison Lane
+and Johnny McRoy galloped far ahead, wherefore they are to be
+chronicled.
+
+Madison Lane, a young cattleman from the Nueces country, won the race.
+He and Rosita were married one Christmas day. Armed, hilarious,
+vociferous, magnanimous, the cowmen and the sheepmen, laying aside
+their hereditary hatred, joined forces to celebrate the occasion.
+
+Sundown Ranch was sonorous with the cracking of jokes and sixshooters,
+the shine of buckles and bright eyes, the outspoken congratulations of
+the herders of kine.
+
+But while the wedding feast was at its liveliest there descended upon
+it Johnny McRoy, bitten by jealousy, like one possessed.
+
+"I'll give you a Christmas present," he yelled, shrilly, at the door,
+with his .45 in his hand. Even then he had some reputation as an
+offhand shot.
+
+His first bullet cut a neat underbit in Madison Lane's right ear. The
+barrel of his gun moved an inch. The next shot would have been the
+bride's had not Carson, a sheepman, possessed a mind with triggers
+somewhat well oiled and in repair. The guns of the wedding party had
+been hung, in their belts, upon nails in the wall when they sat at
+table, as a concession to good taste. But Carson, with great
+promptness, hurled his plate of roast venison and frijoles at McRoy,
+spoiling his aim. The second bullet, then, only shattered the white
+petals of a Spanish dagger flower suspended two feet above Rosita's
+head.
+
+The guests spurned their chairs and jumped for their weapons. It was
+considered an improper act to shoot the bride and groom at a wedding.
+In about six seconds there were twenty or so bullets due to be
+whizzing in the direction of Mr. McRoy.
+
+"I'll shoot better next time," yelled Johnny; "and there'll be a next
+time." He backed rapidly out the door.
+
+Carson, the sheepman, spurred on to attempt further exploits by the
+success of his plate-throwing, was first to reach the door. McRoy's
+bullet from the darkness laid him low.
+
+The cattlemen then swept out upon him, calling for vengeance, for,
+while the slaughter of a sheepman has not always lacked condonement,
+it was a decided misdemeanour in this instance. Carson was
+innocent; he was no accomplice at the matrimonial proceedings; nor had
+any one heard him quote the line "Christmas comes but once a year" to
+the guests.
+
+But the sortie failed in its vengeance. McRoy was on his horse and
+away, shouting back curses and threats as he galloped into the
+concealing chaparral.
+
+That night was the birthnight of the Frio Kid. He became the "bad
+man" of that portion of the State. The rejection of his suit by Miss
+McMullen turned him to a dangerous man. When officers went after him
+for the shooting of Carson, he killed two of them, and entered upon
+the life of an outlaw. He became a marvellous shot with either hand.
+He would turn up in towns and settlements, raise a quarrel at the
+slightest opportunity, pick off his man and laugh at the officers
+of the law. He was so cool, so deadly, so rapid, so inhumanly
+blood-thirsty that none but faint attempts were ever made to capture
+him. When he was at last shot and killed by a little one-armed Mexican
+who was nearly dead himself from fright, the Frio Kid had the deaths
+of eighteen men on his head. About half of these were killed in fair
+duels depending upon the quickness of the draw. The other half were
+men whom he assassinated from absolute wantonness and cruelty.
+
+Many tales are told along the border of his impudent courage and
+daring. But he was not one of the breed of desperadoes who have
+seasons of generosity and even of softness. They say he never had
+mercy on the object of his anger. Yet at this and every Christmastide
+it is well to give each one credit, if it can be done, for whatever
+speck of good he may have possessed. If the Frio Kid ever did a
+kindly act or felt a throb of generosity in his heart it was once at
+such a time and season, and this is the way it happened.
+
+
+One who has been crossed in love should never breathe the odour from
+the blossoms of the ratama tree. It stirs the memory to a dangerous
+degree.
+
+One December in the Frio country there was a ratama tree in full
+bloom, for the winter had been as warm as springtime. That way rode
+the Frio Kid and his satellite and co-murderer, Mexican Frank. The kid
+reined in his mustang, and sat in his saddle, thoughtful and grim,
+with dangerously narrowing eyes. The rich, sweet scent touched him
+somewhere beneath his ice and iron.
+
+"I don't know what I've been thinking about, Mex," he remarked in his
+usual mild drawl, "to have forgot all about a Christmas present I got
+to give. I'm going to ride over to-morrow night and shoot Madison
+Lane in his own house. He got my girl--Rosita would have had me if
+he hadn't cut into the game. I wonder why I happened to overlook it
+up to now?"
+
+"Ah, shucks, Kid," said Mexican, "don't talk foolishness. You know
+you can't get within a mile of Mad Lane's house to-morrow night. I
+see old man Allen day before yesterday, and he says Mad is going to
+have Christmas doings at his house. You remember how you shot up the
+festivities when Mad was married, and about the threats you made?
+Don't you suppose Mad Lane'll kind of keep his eye open for a certain
+Mr. Kid? You plumb make me tired, Kid, with such remarks."
+
+"I'm going," repeated the Frio Kid, without heat, "to go to Madison
+Lane's Christmas doings, and kill him. I ought to have done it a long
+time ago. Why, Mex, just two weeks ago I dreamed me and Rosita was
+married instead of her and him; and we was living in a house, and I
+could see her smiling at me, and--oh! h----l, Mex, he got her; and
+I'll get him--yes, sir, on Christmas Eve he got her, and then's when
+I'll get him."
+
+"There's other ways of committing suicide," advised Mexican. "Why
+don't you go and surrender to the sheriff?"
+
+"I'll get him," said the Kid.
+
+Christmas Eve fell as balmy as April. Perhaps there was a hint of
+far-away frostiness in the air, but it tingles like seltzer, perfumed
+faintly with late prairie blossoms and the mesquite grass.
+
+When night came the five or six rooms of the ranch-house were
+brightly lit. In one room was a Christmas tree, for the Lanes had a
+boy of three, and a dozen or more guests were expected from the nearer
+ranches.
+
+At nightfall Madison Lane called aside Jim Belcher and three other
+cowboys employed on his ranch.
+
+"Now, boys," said Lane, "keep your eyes open. Walk around the house
+and watch the road well. All of you know the 'Frio Kid,' as they call
+him now, and if you see him, open fire on him without asking any
+questions. I'm not afraid of his coming around, but Rosita is. She's
+been afraid he'd come in on us every Christmas since we were married."
+
+The guests had arrived in buckboards and on horseback, and were making
+themselves comfortable inside.
+
+The evening went along pleasantly. The guests enjoyed and praised
+Rosita's excellent supper, and afterward the men scattered in groups
+about the rooms or on the broad "gallery," smoking and chatting.
+
+The Christmas tree, of course, delighted the youngsters, and above all
+were they pleased when Santa Claus himself in magnificent white beard
+and furs appeared and began to distribute the toys.
+
+"It's my papa," announced Billy Sampson, aged six. "I've seen him wear
+'em before."
+
+Berkly, a sheepman, an old friend of Lane, stopped Rosita as she was
+passing by him on the gallery, where he was sitting smoking.
+
+"Well, Mrs. Lane," said he, "I suppose by this Christmas you've
+gotten over being afraid of that fellow McRoy, haven't you? Madison
+and I have talked about it, you know."
+
+"Very nearly," said Rosita, smiling, "but I am still nervous
+sometimes. I shall never forget that awful time when he came so near
+to killing us."
+
+"He's the most cold-hearted villain in the world," said Berkly. "The
+citizens all along the border ought to turn out and hunt him down like
+a wolf."
+
+"He has committed awful crimes," said Rosita, "but--I--don't--know.
+I think there is a spot of good somewhere in everybody. He was not
+always bad--that I know."
+
+Rosita turned into the hallway between the rooms. Santa Claus, in
+muffling whiskers and furs, was just coming through.
+
+"I heard what you said through the window, Mrs. Lane," he said. "I
+was just going down in my pocket for a Christmas present for your
+husband. But I've left one for you, instead. It's in the room to
+your right."
+
+"Oh, thank you, kind Santa Claus," said Rosita, brightly.
+
+Rosita went into the room, while Santa Claus stepped into the cooler
+air of the yard.
+
+She found no one in the room but Madison.
+
+"Where is my present that Santa said he left for me in here?" she
+asked.
+
+"Haven't seen anything in the way of a present," said her husband,
+laughing, "unless he could have meant me."
+
+
+The next day Gabriel Radd, the foreman of the X O Ranch, dropped into
+the post-office at Loma Alta.
+
+"Well, the Frio Kid's got his dose of lead at last," he remarked to
+the postmaster.
+
+"That so? How'd it happen?"
+
+"One of old Sanchez's Mexican sheep herders did it!--think of it!
+the Frio Kid killed by a sheep herder! The Greaser saw him riding
+along past his camp about twelve o'clock last night, and was so
+skeered that he up with a Winchester and let him have it. Funniest
+part of it was that the Kid was dressed all up with white Angora-skin
+whiskers and a regular Santy Claus rig-out from head to foot. Think
+of the Frio Kid playing Santy!"
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+A LITTLE LOCAL COLOUR
+
+
+I mentioned to Rivington that I was in search of characteristic New
+York scenes and incidents--something typical, I told him, without
+necessarily having to spell the first syllable with an "i."
+
+"Oh, for your writing business," said Rivington; "you couldn't have
+applied to a better shop. What I don't know about little old New York
+wouldn't make a sonnet to a sunbonnet. I'll put you right in the
+middle of so much local colour that you won't know whether you are a
+magazine cover or in the erysipelas ward. When do you want to begin?"
+
+Rivington is a young-man-about-town and a New Yorker by birth,
+preference and incommutability.
+
+I told him that I would be glad to accept his escort and guardianship
+so that I might take notes of Manhattan's grand, gloomy and peculiar
+idiosyncrasies, and that the time of so doing would be at his own
+convenience.
+
+"We'll begin this very evening," said Rivington, himself interested,
+like a good fellow. "Dine with me at seven, and then I'll steer you
+up against metropolitan phases so thick you'll have to have a
+kinetoscope to record 'em."
+
+So I dined with Rivington pleasantly at his club, in Forty-eleventh
+street, and then we set forth in pursuit of the elusive tincture of
+affairs.
+
+As we came out of the club there stood two men on the sidewalk near
+the steps in earnest conversation.
+
+"And by what process of ratiocination," said one of them, "do you
+arrive at the conclusion that the division of society into producing
+and non-possessing classes predicates failure when compared with
+competitive systems that are monopolizing in tendency and result
+inimically to industrial evolution?"
+
+"Oh, come off your perch!" said the other man, who wore glasses.
+"Your premises won't come out in the wash. You wind-jammers who apply
+bandy-legged theories to concrete categorical syllogisms send logical
+conclusions skallybootin' into the infinitesimal ragbag. You can't
+pull my leg with an old sophism with whiskers on it. You quote Marx
+and Hyndman and Kautsky--what are they?--shines! Tolstoi?--his
+garret is full of rats. I put it to you over the home-plate that the
+idea of a cooperative commonwealth and an abolishment of competitive
+systems simply takes the rag off the bush and gives me hyperesthesia
+of the roopteetoop! The skookum house for yours!"
+
+I stopped a few yards away and took out my little notebook.
+
+"Oh, come ahead," said Rivington, somewhat nervously; "you don't
+want to listen to that."
+
+"Why, man," I whispered, "this is just what I do want to hear. These
+slang types are among your city's most distinguishing features. Is
+this the Bowery variety? I really must hear more of it."
+
+"If I follow you," said the man who had spoken first, "you do not
+believe it possible to reorganize society on the basis of common
+interest?"
+
+"Shinny on your own side!" said the man with glasses. "You never
+heard any such music from my foghorn. What I said was that I did not
+believe it practicable just now. The guys with wads are not in the
+frame of mind to slack up on the mazuma, and the man with the portable
+tin banqueting canister isn't exactly ready to join the Bible class.
+You can bet your variegated socks that the situation is all
+spifflicated up from the Battery to breakfast! What the country needs
+is for some bully old bloke like Cobden or some wise guy like old Ben
+Franklin to sashay up to the front and biff the nigger's head with
+the baseball. Do you catch my smoke? What?"
+
+Rivington pulled me by the arm impatiently.
+
+"Please come on," he said. "Let's go see something. This isn't what
+you want."
+
+"Indeed, it is," I said resisting. "This tough talk is the very stuff
+that counts. There is a picturesqueness about the speech of the lower
+order of people that is quite unique. Did you say that this is the
+Bowery variety of slang?"
+
+"Oh, well," said Rivington, giving it up, "I'll tell you straight.
+That's one of our college professors talking. He ran down for a day or
+two at the club. It's a sort of fad with him lately to use slang in
+his conversation. He thinks it improves language. The man he is
+talking to is one of New York's famous social economists. Now will
+you come on. You can't use that, you know."
+
+"No," I agreed; "I can't use that. Would you call that typical of New
+York?"
+
+"Of course not," said Rivington, with a sigh of relief. "I'm glad you
+see the difference. But if you want to hear the real old tough Bowery
+slang I'll take you down where you'll get your fill of it."
+
+"I would like it," I said; "that is, if it's the real thing. I've
+often read it in books, but I never heard it. Do you think it will be
+dangerous to go unprotected among those characters?"
+
+"Oh, no," said Rivington; "not at this time of night. To tell the
+truth, I haven't been along the Bowery in a long time, but I know it
+as well as I do Broadway. We'll look up some of the typical Bowery
+boys and get them to talk. It'll be worth your while. They talk a
+peculiar dialect that you won't hear anywhere else on earth."
+
+Rivington and I went east in a Forty-second street car and then south
+on the Third avenue line.
+
+At Houston street we got off and walked.
+
+"We are now on the famous Bowery," said Rivington; "the Bowery
+celebrated in song and story."
+
+We passed block after block of "gents'" furnishing stores--the
+windows full of shirts with prices attached and cuffs inside. In
+other windows were neckties and no shirts. People walked up and down
+the sidewalks.
+
+"In some ways," said I, "this reminds me of Kokomono, Ind., during
+the peach-crating season."
+
+Rivington was nettled.
+
+"Step into one of these saloons or vaudeville shows," said he, "with a
+large roll of money, and see how quickly the Bowery will sustain its
+reputation."
+
+"You make impossible conditions," said I, coldly.
+
+By and by Rivington stopped and said we were in the heart of the
+Bowery. There was a policeman on the corner whom Rivington knew.
+
+"Hallo, Donahue!" said my guide. "How goes it? My friend and I are
+down this way looking up a bit of local colour. He's anxious to meet
+one of the Bowery types. Can't you put us on to something genuine in
+that line--something that's got the colour, you know?"
+
+Policeman Donahue turned himself about ponderously, his florid face
+full of good-nature. He pointed with his club down the street.
+
+"Sure!" he said huskily. "Here comes a lad now that was born on the
+Bowery and knows every inch of it. If he's ever been above Bleecker
+street he's kept it to himself."
+
+A man about twenty-eight or twenty-nine, with a smooth face, was
+sauntering toward us with his hands in his coat pockets. Policeman
+Donahue stopped him with a courteous wave of his club.
+
+"Evening, Kerry," he said. "Here's a couple of gents, friends of
+mine, that want to hear you spiel something about the Bowery. Can you
+reel 'em off a few yards?"
+
+"Certainly, Donahue," said the young man, pleasantly. "Good
+evening, gentlemen," he said to us, with a pleasant smile. Donahue
+walked off on his beat.
+
+"This is the goods," whispered Rivington, nudging me with his elbow.
+"Look at his jaw!"
+
+"Say, cull," said Rivington, pushing back his hat, "wot's doin'?
+Me and my friend's taking a look down de old line--see? De copper
+tipped us off dat you was wise to de bowery. Is dat right?"
+
+I could not help admiring Rivington's power of adapting himself to
+his surroundings.
+
+"Donahue was right," said the young man, frankly; "I was brought up
+on the Bowery. I have been news-boy, teamster, pugilist, member of
+an organized band of 'toughs,' bartender, and a 'sport' in various
+meanings of the word. The experience certainly warrants the
+supposition that I have at least a passing acquaintance with a few
+phases of Bowery life. I will be pleased to place whatever knowledge
+and experience I have at the service of my friend Donahue's friends."
+
+Rivington seemed ill at ease.
+
+"I say," he said--somewhat entreatingly, "I thought--you're not
+stringing us, are you? It isn't just the kind of talk we expected.
+You haven't even said 'Hully gee!' once. Do you really belong on the
+Bowery?"
+
+"I am afraid," said the Bowery boy, smilingly, "that at some time you
+have been enticed into one of the dives of literature and had the
+counterfeit coin of the Bowery passed upon you. The 'argot' to which
+you doubtless refer was the invention of certain of your literary
+'discoverers' who invaded the unknown wilds below Third avenue and
+put strange sounds into the mouths of the inhabitants. Safe in their
+homes far to the north and west, the credulous readers who were
+beguiled by this new 'dialect' perused and believed. Like Marco Polo
+and Mungo Park--pioneers indeed, but ambitious souls who could not
+draw the line of demarcation between discovery and invention--the
+literary bones of these explorers are dotting the trackless wastes of
+the subway. While it is true that after the publication of the
+mythical language attributed to the dwellers along the Bowery certain
+of its pat phrases and apt metaphors were adopted and, to a limited
+extent, used in this locality, it was because our people are prompt in
+assimilating whatever is to their commercial advantage. To the
+tourists who visited our newly discovered clime, and who expected a
+realization of their literary guide books, they supplied the demands
+of the market.
+
+"But perhaps I am wandering from the question. In what way can I
+assist you, gentlemen? I beg you will believe that the hospitality of
+the street is extended to all. There are, I regret to say, many
+catchpenny places of entertainment, but I cannot conceive that they
+would entice you."
+
+I felt Rivington lean somewhat heavily against me. "Say!" he
+remarked, with uncertain utterance; "come and have a drink with us."
+
+"Thank you, but I never drink. I find that alcohol, even in the
+smallest quantities, alters the perspective. And I must preserve my
+perspective, for I am studying the Bowery. I have lived in it nearly
+thirty years, and I am just beginning to understand its heartbeats.
+It is like a great river fed by a hundred alien streams. Each influx
+brings strange seeds on its flood, strange silt and weeds, and now and
+then a flower of rare promise. To construe this river requires a man
+who can build dykes against the overflow, who is a naturalist, a
+geologist, a humanitarian, a diver and a strong swimmer. I love my
+Bowery. It was my cradle and is my inspiration. I have published one
+book. The critics have been kind. I put my heart in it. I am writing
+another, into which I hope to put both heart and brain. Consider me
+your guide, gentlemen. Is there anything I can take you to see, any
+place to which I can conduct you?"
+
+I was afraid to look at Rivington except with one eye.
+
+"Thanks," said Rivington. "We were looking up . . . that is . . . my
+friend . . . confound it; it's against all precedent, you know . . .
+awfully obliged . . . just the same."
+
+"In case," said our friend, "you would like to meet some of our Bowery
+young men I would be pleased to have you visit the quarters of our
+East Side Kappa Delta Phi Society, only two blocks east of here."
+
+"Awfully sorry," said Rivington, "but my friend's got me on the jump
+to-night. He's a terror when he's out after local colour. Now,
+there's nothing I would like better than to drop in at the Kappa Delta
+Phi, but--some other time!"
+
+We said our farewells and boarded a home-bound car. We had a rabbit on
+upper Broadway, and then I parted with Rivington on a street corner.
+
+"Well, anyhow," said he, braced and recovered, "it couldn't have
+happened anywhere but in little old New York."
+
+Which to say the least, was typical of Rivington.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+GEORGIA'S RULING
+
+
+If you should chance to visit the General Land Office, step into the
+draughtsmen's room and ask to be shown the map of Salado County. A
+leisurely German--possibly old Kampfer himself--will bring it to
+you. It will be four feet square, on heavy drawing-cloth. The
+lettering and the figures will be beautifully clear and distinct. The
+title will be in splendid, undecipherable German text, ornamented with
+classic Teutonic designs--very likely Ceres or Pomona leaning
+against the initial letters with cornucopias venting grapes and
+wieners. You must tell him that this is not the map you wish to see;
+that he will kindly bring you its official predecessor. He will then
+say, "Ach, so!" and bring out a map half the size of the first, dim,
+old, tattered, and faded.
+
+By looking carefully near its northwest corner you will presently come
+upon the worn contours of Chiquito River, and, maybe, if your eyes are
+good, discern the silent witness to this story.
+
+
+The Commissioner of the Land Office was of the old style; his
+antique courtesy was too formal for his day. He dressed in fine
+black, and there was a suggestion of Roman drapery in his long
+coat-skirts. His collars were "undetached" (blame haberdashery
+for the word); his tie was a narrow, funereal strip, tied in the
+same knot as were his shoe-strings. His gray hair was a trifle
+too long behind, but he kept it smooth and orderly. His face was
+clean-shaven, like the old statesmen's. Most people thought it a
+stern face, but when its official expression was off, a few had
+seen altogether a different countenance. Especially tender and
+gentle it had appeared to those who were about him during the last
+illness of his only child.
+
+The Commissioner had been a widower for years, and his life, outside
+his official duties, had been so devoted to little Georgia that people
+spoke of it as a touching and admirable thing. He was a reserved man,
+and dignified almost to austerity, but the child had come below it all
+and rested upon his very heart, so that she scarcely missed the
+mother's love that had been taken away. There was a wonderful
+companionship between them, for she had many of his own ways, being
+thoughtful and serious beyond her years.
+
+One day, while she was lying with the fever burning brightly in her
+checks, she said suddenly:
+
+"Papa, I wish I could do something good for a whole lot of children!"
+
+"What would you like to do, dear?" asked the Commissioner. "Give
+them a party?"
+
+"Oh, I don't mean those kind. I mean poor children who haven't homes,
+and aren't loved and cared for as I am. I tell you what, papa!"
+
+"What, my own child?"
+
+"If I shouldn't get well, I'll leave them you--not _give_ you, but
+just lend you, for you must come to mamma and me when you die too. If
+you can find time, wouldn't you do something to help them, if I ask
+you, papa?"
+
+"Hush, hush dear, dear child," said the Commissioner, holding her hot
+little hand against his cheek; "you'll get well real soon, and you and
+I will see what we can do for them together."
+
+But in whatsoever paths of benevolence, thus vaguely premeditated, the
+Commissioner might tread, he was not to have the company of his
+beloved. That night the little frail body grew suddenly too tired to
+struggle further, and Georgia's exit was made from the great stage
+when she had scarcely begun to speak her little piece before the
+footlights. But there must be a stage manager who understands. She
+had given the cue to the one who was to speak after her.
+
+A week after she was laid away, the Commissioner reappeared at the
+office, a little more courteous, a little paler and sterner, with the
+black frock-coat hanging a little more loosely from his tall figure.
+
+His desk was piled with work that had accumulated during the four
+heartbreaking weeks of his absence. His chief clerk had done what he
+could, but there were questions of law, of fine judicial decisions
+to be made concerning the issue of patents, the marketing and
+leasing of school lands, the classification into grazing,
+agricultural, watered, and timbered, of new tracts to be opened to
+settlers.
+
+The Commissioner went to work silently and obstinately, putting
+back his grief as far as possible, forcing his mind to attack the
+complicated and important business of his office. On the second day
+after his return he called the porter, pointed to a leather-covered
+chair that stood near his own, and ordered it removed to a lumber-room
+at the top of the building. In that chair Georgia would always sit
+when she came to the office for him of afternoons.
+
+As time passed, the Commissioner seemed to grow more silent, solitary,
+and reserved. A new phase of mind developed in him. He could not
+endure the presence of a child. Often when a clattering youngster
+belonging to one of the clerks would come chattering into the big
+business-room adjoining his little apartment, the Commissioner would
+steal softly and close the door. He would always cross the street to
+avoid meeting the school-children when they came dancing along in
+happy groups upon the sidewalk, and his firm mouth would close into a
+mere line.
+
+It was nearly three months after the rains had washed the last dead
+flower-petals from the mound above little Georgia when the "land-shark"
+firm of Hamlin and Avery filed papers upon what they considered the
+"fattest" vacancy of the year.
+
+It should not be supposed that all who were termed "land-sharks"
+deserved the name. Many of them were reputable men of good business
+character. Some of them could walk into the most august councils of
+the State and say: "Gentlemen, we would like to have this, and that,
+and matters go thus." But, next to a three years' drought and the
+boll-worm, the Actual Settler hated the Land-shark. The land-shark
+haunted the Land Office, where all the land records were kept, and
+hunted "vacancies"--that is, tracts of unappropriated public
+domain, generally invisible upon the official maps, but actually
+existing "upon the ground." The law entitled any one possessing
+certain State scrip to file by virtue of same upon any land not
+previously legally appropriated. Most of the scrip was now in the
+hands of the land-sharks. Thus, at the cost of a few hundred dollars,
+they often secured lands worth as many thousands. Naturally, the
+search for "vacancies" was lively.
+
+But often--very often--the land they thus secured, though legally
+"unappropriated," would be occupied by happy and contented settlers,
+who had laboured for years to build up their homes, only to discover
+that their titles were worthless, and to receive peremptory notice to
+quit. Thus came about the bitter and not unjustifiable hatred felt by
+the toiling settlers toward the shrewd and seldom merciful speculators
+who so often turned them forth destitute and homeless from their
+fruitless labours. The history of the state teems with their
+antagonism. Mr. Land-shark seldom showed his face on "locations" from
+which he should have to eject the unfortunate victims of a monstrously
+tangled land system, but let his emissaries do the work. There was
+lead in every cabin, moulded into balls for him; many of his brothers
+had enriched the grass with their blood. The fault of it all lay far
+back.
+
+When the state was young, she felt the need of attracting newcomers,
+and of rewarding those pioneers already within her borders. Year
+after year she issued land scrip--Headrights, Bounties, Veteran
+Donations, Confederates; and to railroads, irrigation companies,
+colonies, and tillers of the soil galore. All required of the grantee
+was that he or it should have the scrip properly surveyed upon the
+public domain by the county or district surveyor, and the land thus
+appropriated became the property of him or it, or his or its heirs and
+assigns, forever.
+
+In those days--and here is where the trouble began--the state's
+domain was practically inexhaustible, and the old surveyors, with
+princely--yea, even Western American--liberality, gave good
+measure and over-flowing. Often the jovial man of metes and bounds
+would dispense altogether with the tripod and chain. Mounted on a pony
+that could cover something near a "vara" at a step, with a pocket
+compass to direct his course, he would trot out a survey by counting
+the beat of his pony's hoofs, mark his corners, and write out his
+field notes with the complacency produced by an act of duty well
+performed. Sometimes--and who could blame the surveyor?--when
+the pony was "feeling his oats," he might step a little higher and
+farther, and in that case the beneficiary of the scrip might get a
+thousand or two more acres in his survey than the scrip called for.
+But look at the boundless leagues the state had to spare! However, no
+one ever had to complain of the pony under-stepping. Nearly every
+old survey in the state contained an excess of land.
+
+In later years, when the state became more populous, and land values
+increased, this careless work entailed incalculable trouble, endless
+litigation, a period of riotous land-grabbing, and no little
+bloodshed. The land-sharks voraciously attacked these excesses in
+the old surveys, and filed upon such portions with new scrip as
+unappropriated public domain. Wherever the identifications of the
+old tracts were vague, and the corners were not to be clearly
+established, the Land Office would recognize the newer locations as
+valid, and issue title to the locators. Here was the greatest
+hardship to be found. These old surveys, taken from the pick of the
+land, were already nearly all occupied by unsuspecting and peaceful
+settlers, and thus their titles were demolished, and the choice was
+placed before them either to buy their land over at a double price or
+to vacate it, with their families and personal belongings,
+immediately. Land locators sprang up by hundreds. The country was
+held up and searched for "vacancies" at the point of a compass.
+Hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of splendid acres were wrested
+from their innocent purchasers and holders. There began a vast hegira
+of evicted settlers in tattered wagons; going nowhere, cursing
+injustice, stunned, purposeless, homeless, hopeless. Their children
+began to look up to them for bread, and cry.
+
+
+It was in consequence of these conditions that Hamilton and Avery
+had filed upon a strip of land about a mile wide and three miles long,
+comprising about two thousand acres, it being the excess over
+complement of the Elias Denny three-league survey on Chiquito River,
+in one of the middle-western counties. This two-thousand-acre body
+of land was asserted by them to be vacant land, and improperly
+considered a part of the Denny survey. They based this assertion and
+their claim upon the land upon the demonstrated facts that the
+beginning corner of the Denny survey was plainly identified; that its
+field notes called to run west 5,760 varas, and then called for
+Chiquito River; thence it ran south, with the meanders--and so on--
+and that the Chiquito River was, on the ground, fully a mile farther
+west from the point reached by course and distance. To sum up: there
+were two thousand acres of vacant land between the Denny survey proper
+and Chiquito River.
+
+One sweltering day in July the Commissioner called for the papers in
+connection with this new location. They were brought, and heaped, a
+foot deep, upon his desk--field notes, statements, sketches,
+affidavits, connecting lines--documents of every description that
+shrewdness and money could call to the aid of Hamlin and Avery.
+
+The firm was pressing the Commissioner to issue a patent upon their
+location. They possesed inside information concerning a new
+railroad that would probably pass somewhere near this land.
+
+The General Land Office was very still while the Commissioner was
+delving into the heart of the mass of evidence. The pigeons could
+be heard on the roof of the old, castle-like building, cooing and
+fretting. The clerks were droning everywhere, scarcely pretending
+to earn their salaries. Each little sound echoed hollow and loud
+from the bare, stone-flagged floors, the plastered walls, and the
+iron-joisted ceiling. The impalpable, perpetual limestone dust that
+never settled, whitened a long streamer of sunlight that pierced the
+tattered window-awning.
+
+It seemed that Hamlin and Avery had builded well. The Denny survey was
+carelessly made, even for a careless period. Its beginning corner
+was identical with that of a well-defined old Spanish grant, but its
+other calls were sinfully vague. The field notes contained no other
+object that survived--no tree, no natural object save Chiquito
+River, and it was a mile wrong there. According to precedent, the
+Office would be justified in giving it its complement by course and
+distance, and considering the remainder vacant instead of a mere
+excess.
+
+The Actual Settler was besieging the office with wild protests _in re_.
+Having the nose of a pointer and the eye of a hawk for the land-shark,
+he had observed his myrmidons running the lines upon his ground.
+Making inquiries, he learned that the spoiler had attacked his home,
+and he left the plough in the furrow and took his pen in hand.
+
+One of the protests the Commissioner read twice. It was from a woman,
+a widow, the granddaughter of Elias Denny himself. She told how her
+grandfather had sold most of the survey years before at a trivial
+price--land that was now a principality in extent and value. Her
+mother had also sold a part, and she herself had succeeded to this
+western portion, along Chiquito River. Much of it she had been forced
+to part with in order to live, and now she owned only about three
+hundred acres, on which she had her home. Her letter wound up rather
+pathetically:
+
+"I've got eight children, the oldest fifteen years. I work all day
+and half the night to till what little land I can and keep us in
+clothes and books. I teach my children too. My neighbours is all
+poor and has big families. The drought kills the crops every two or
+three years and then we has hard times to get enough to eat. There is
+ten families on this land what the land-sharks is trying to rob us of,
+and all of them got titles from me. I sold to them cheap, and they
+aint paid out yet, but part of them is, and if their land should be
+took from them I would die. My grandfather was an honest man, and he
+helped to build up this state, and he taught his children to be
+honest, and how could I make it up to them who bought from me? Mr.
+Commissioner, if you let them land-sharks take the roof from over my
+children and the little from them as they has to live on, whoever
+again calls this state great or its government just will have a lie in
+their mouths."
+
+The Commissioner laid this letter aside with a sigh. Many, many such
+letters he had received. He had never been hurt by them, nor had he
+ever felt that they appealed to him personally. He was but the
+state's servant, and must follow its laws. And yet, somehow, this
+reflection did not always eliminate a certain responsible feeling that
+hung upon him. Of all the state's officers he was supremest in his
+department, not even excepting the Governor. Broad, general land laws
+he followed, it was true, but he had a wide latitude in particular
+ramifications. Rather than law, what he followed was Rulings:
+Office Rulings and precedents. In the complicated and new questions
+that were being engendered by the state's development the
+Commissioner's ruling was rarely appealed from. Even the courts
+sustained it when its equity was apparent.
+
+The Commissioner stepped to the door and spoke to a clerk in the other
+room--spoke as he always did, as if he were addressing a prince of
+the blood:
+
+"Mr. Weldon, will you be kind enough to ask Mr. Ashe, the state
+school-land appraiser, to please come to my office as soon as
+convenient?"
+
+Ashe came quickly from the big table where he was arranging his
+reports.
+
+"Mr. Ashe," said the Commissioner, "you worked along the Chiquito
+River, in Salado County, during your last trip, I believe. Do you
+remember anything of the Elias Denny three-league survey?"
+
+"Yes, sir, I do," the blunt, breezy, surveyor answered. "I crossed it
+on my way to Block H, on the north side of it. The road runs with the
+Chiquito River, along the valley. The Denny survey fronts three miles
+on the Chiquito."
+
+"It is claimed," continued the commissioner, "that it fails to reach
+the river by as much as a mile."
+
+The appraiser shrugged his shoulder. He was by birth and instinct an
+Actual Settler, and the natural foe of the land-shark.
+
+"It has always been considered to extend to the river," he said,
+dryly.
+
+"But that is not the point I desired to discuss," said the
+Commissioner. "What kind of country is this valley portion of (let us
+say, then) the Denny tract?"
+
+The spirit of the Actual Settler beamed in Ashe's face.
+
+"Beautiful," he said, with enthusiasm. "Valley as level as this
+floor, with just a little swell on, like the sea, and rich as cream.
+Just enough brakes to shelter the cattle in winter. Black loamy soil
+for six feet, and then clay. Holds water. A dozen nice little houses
+on it, with windmills and gardens. People pretty poor, I guess--too
+far from market--but comfortable. Never saw so many kids in my
+life."
+
+"They raise flocks?" inquired the Commissioner.
+
+"Ho, ho! I mean two-legged kids," laughed the surveyor; "two-legged,
+and bare-legged, and tow-headed."
+
+"Children! oh, children!" mused the Commissioner, as though a new
+view had opened to him; "they raise children!
+
+"It's a lonesome country, Commissioner," said the surveyor. "Can you
+blame 'em?"
+
+"I suppose," continued the Commissioner, slowly, as one carefully
+pursues deductions from a new, stupendous theory, "not all of them are
+tow-headed. It would not be unreasonable, Mr. Ashe, I conjecture, to
+believe that a portion of them have brown, or even black, hair."
+
+"Brown and black, sure," said Ashe; "also red."
+
+"No doubt," said the Commissioner. "Well, I thank you for your
+courtesy in informing me, Mr. Ashe. I will not detain you any longer
+from your duties."
+
+Later, in the afternoon, came Hamlin and Avery, big, handsome, genial,
+sauntering men, clothed in white duck and low-cut shoes. They
+permeated the whole office with an aura of debonair prosperity. They
+passed among the clerks and left a wake of abbreviated given names and
+fat brown cigars.
+
+These were the aristocracy of the land-sharks, who went in for big
+things. Full of serene confidence in themselves, there was no
+corporation, no syndicate, no railroad company or attorney general
+too big for them to tackle. The peculiar smoke of their rare, fat
+brown cigars was to be perceived in the sanctum of every department of
+state, in every committee-room of the Legislature, in every bank
+parlour and every private caucus-room in the state Capital. Always
+pleasant, never in a hurry, in seeming to possess unlimited leisure,
+people wondered when they gave their attention to the many audacious
+enterprises in which they were known to be engaged.
+
+By and by the two dropped carelessly into the Commissioner's room
+and reclined lazily in the big, leather-upholstered arm-chairs. They
+drawled a good-natured complaint of the weather, and Hamlin told the
+Commissioner an excellent story he had amassed that morning from
+the Secretary of State.
+
+But the Commissioner knew why they were there. He had half promised
+to render a decision that day upon their location.
+
+The chief clerk now brought in a batch of duplicate certificates for
+the Commissioner to sign. As he traced his sprawling signature,
+"Hollis Summerfield, Comr. Genl. Land Office," on each one, the chief
+clerk stood, deftly removing them and applying the blotter.
+
+"I notice," said the chief clerk, "you've been going through that
+Salado County location. Kampfer is making a new map of Salado, and
+I believe is platting in that section of the county now."
+
+"I will see it," said the Commissioner. A few moments later he went to
+the draughtsmen's room.
+
+As he entered he saw five or six of the draughtsmen grouped about
+Kampfer's desk, gargling away at each other in pectoral German, and
+gazing at something thereupon. At the Commissioner's approach they
+scattered to their several places. Kampfer, a wizened little German,
+with long, frizzled ringlets and a watery eye, began to stammer
+forth some sort of an apology, the Commissioner thought, for the
+congregation of his fellows about his desk.
+
+"Never mind," said the Commissioner, "I wish to see the map you are
+making"; and, passing around the old German, seated himself upon the
+high draughtsman's stool. Kampfer continued to break English in
+trying to explain.
+
+"Herr Gommissioner, I assure you blenty sat I haf not it bremeditated
+--sat it wass--sat it itself make. Look you! from se field notes
+wass it blatted--blease to observe se calls: South, 10 degrees west
+1,050 varas; south, 10 degrees east 300 varas; south, 100; south, 9
+west, 200; south, 40 degrees west 400--and so on. Herr Gommissioner,
+nefer would I have--"
+
+The Commissioner raised one white hand, silently, Kampfer dropped his
+pipe and fled.
+
+With a hand at each side of his face, and his elbows resting upon the
+desk, the Commissioner sat staring at the map which was spread and
+fastened there--staring at the sweet and living profile of little
+Georgia drawn thereupon--at her face, pensive, delicate, and
+infantile, outlined in a perfect likeness.
+
+When his mind at length came to inquire into the reason of it, he
+saw that it must have been, as Kampfer had said, unpremeditated. The
+old draughtsman had been platting in the Elias Denny survey, and
+Georgia's likeness, striking though it was, was formed by nothing more
+than the meanders of Chiquito River. Indeed, Kampfer's blotter,
+whereon his preliminary work was done, showed the laborious tracings
+of the calls and the countless pricks of the compasses. Then, over
+his faint pencilling, Kampfer had drawn in India ink with a full, firm
+pen the similitude of Chiquito River, and forth had blossomed
+mysteriously the dainty, pathetic profile of the child.
+
+The Commissioner sat for half an hour with his face in his hands,
+gazing downward, and none dared approach him. Then he arose and
+walked out. In the business office he paused long enough to ask that
+the Denny file be brought to his desk.
+
+He found Hamlin and Avery still reclining in their chairs, apparently
+oblivious of business. They were lazily discussing summer opera, it
+being, their habit--perhaps their pride also--to appear supernaturally
+indifferent whenever they stood with large interests imperilled. And
+they stood to win more on this stake than most people knew. They
+possessed inside information to the effect that a new railroad would,
+within a year, split this very Chiquito River valley and send land
+values ballooning all along its route. A dollar under thirty thousand
+profit on this location, if it should hold good, would be a loss to
+their expectations. So, while they chatted lightly and waited for the
+Commissioner to open the subject, there was a quick, sidelong sparkle
+in their eyes, evincing a desire to read their title clear to those
+fair acres on the Chiquito.
+
+A clerk brought in the file. The Commissioner seated himself and
+wrote upon it in red ink. Then he rose to his feet and stood for a
+while looking straight out of the window. The Land Office capped the
+summit of a bold hill. The eyes of the Commissioner passed over the
+roofs of many houses set in a packing of deep green, the whole
+checkered by strips of blinding white streets. The horizon, where his
+gaze was focussed, swelled to a fair wooded eminence flecked with
+faint dots of shining white. There was the cemetery, where lay many
+who were forgotten, and a few who had not lived in vain. And one
+lay there, occupying very small space, whose childish heart had been
+large enough to desire, while near its last beats, good to others.
+The Commissioner's lips moved slightly as he whispered to himself: "It
+was her last will and testament, and I have neglected it so long!"
+
+The big brown cigars of Hamlin and Avery were fireless, but they still
+gripped them between their teeth and waited, while they marvelled at
+the absent expression upon the Commissioner's face.
+
+By and by he spoke suddenly and promptly.
+
+"Gentlemen, I have just indorsed the Elias Denny survey for patenting.
+This office will not regard your location upon a part of it as legal."
+He paused a moment, and then, extending his hand as those dear old-time
+ones used to do in debate, he enunciated the spirit of that Ruling that
+subsequently drove the land-sharks to the wall, and placed the seal of
+peace and security over the doors of ten thousand homes.
+
+"And, furthermore," he continued, with a clear, soft light upon his
+face, "it may interest you to know that from this time on this office
+will consider that when a survey of land made by virtue of a
+certificate granted by this state to the men who wrested it from the
+wilderness and the savage--made in good faith, settled in good faith,
+and left in good faith to their children or innocent purchasers--when
+such a survey, although overrunning its complement, shall call for
+any natural object visible to the eye of man, to that object it shall
+hold, and be good and valid. And the children of this state shall
+lie down to sleep at night, and rumours of disturbers of title shall
+not disquiet them. For," concluded the Commissioner, "of such is the
+Kingdom of Heaven."
+
+In the silence that followed, a laugh floated up from the patent-room
+below. The man who carried down the Denny file was exhibiting it
+among the clerks.
+
+"Look here," he said, delightedly, "the old man has forgotten his
+name. He's written 'Patent to original grantee,' and signed it
+'Georgia Summerfield, Comr."'
+
+The speech of the Commissioner rebounded lightly from the impregnable
+Hamlin and Avery. They smiled, rose gracefully, spoke of the baseball
+team, and argued feelingly that quite a perceptible breeze had arisen
+from the east. They lit fresh fat brown cigars, and drifted
+courteously away. But later they made another tiger-spring for their
+quarry in the courts. But the courts, according to reports in the
+papers, "coolly roasted them" (a remarkable performance, suggestive of
+liquid-air didoes), and sustained the Commissioner's Ruling.
+
+And this Ruling itself grew to be a Precedent, and the Actual Settler
+framed it, and taught his children to spell from it, and there was
+sound sleep o' nights from the pines to the sage-brush, and from the
+chaparral to the great brown river of the north.
+
+But I think, and I am sure the Commissioner never thought otherwise,
+that whether Kampfer was a snuffy old instrument of destiny, or
+whether the meanders of the Chiquito accidentally platted themselves
+into that memorable sweet profile or not, there was brought about
+"something good for a whole lot of children," and the result ought
+to be called "Georgia's Ruling."
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+BLIND MAN'S HOLIDAY
+
+
+Alas for the man and for the artist with the shifting point of
+perspective! Life shall be a confusion of ways to the one; the
+landscape shall rise up and confound the other. Take the case of
+Lorison. At one time he appeared to himself to be the feeblest of
+fools; at another he conceived that he followed ideals so fine that
+the world was not yet ready to accept them. During one mood he cursed
+his folly; possessed by the other, he bore himself with a serene
+grandeur akin to greatness: in neither did he attain the perspective.
+
+Generations before, the name had been "Larsen." His race had
+bequeathed him its fine-strung, melancholy temperament, its saving
+balance of thrift and industry.
+
+From his point of perspective he saw himself an outcast from society,
+forever to be a shady skulker along the ragged edge of respectability;
+a denizen _des trois-quartz de monde_, that pathetic spheroid lying
+between the _haut_ and the _demi_, whose inhabitants envy each of their
+neighbours, and are scorned by both. He was self-condemned to this
+opinion, as he was self-exiled, through it, to this quaint Southern
+city a thousand miles from his former home. Here he had dwelt for
+longer than a year, knowing but few, keeping in a subjective world
+of shadows which was invaded at times by the perplexing bulks of
+jarring realities. Then he fell in love with a girl whom he met in a
+cheap restaurant, and his story begins.
+
+
+The Rue Chartres, in New Orleans, is a street of ghosts. It lies in
+the quarter where the Frenchman, in his prime, set up his translated
+pride and glory; where, also, the arrogant don had swaggered, and
+dreamed of gold and grants and ladies' gloves. Every flagstone has
+its grooves worn by footsteps going royally to the wooing and the
+fighting. Every house has a princely heartbreak; each doorway its
+untold tale of gallant promise and slow decay.
+
+By night the Rue Chartres is now but a murky fissure, from which the
+groping wayfarer sees, flung against the sky, the tangled filigree of
+Moorish iron balconies. The old houses of monsieur stand yet,
+indomitable against the century, but their essence is gone. The
+street is one of ghosts to whosoever can see them.
+
+A faint heartbeat of the street's ancient glory still survives in a
+corner occupied by the Caf Carabine d'Or. Once men gathered there to
+plot against kings, and to warn presidents. They do so yet, but they
+are not the same kind of men. A brass button will scatter these;
+those would have set their faces against an army. Above the door
+hangs the sign board, upon which has been depicted a vast animal of
+unfamiliar species. In the act of firing upon this monster is
+represented an unobtrusive human levelling an obtrusive gun, once the
+colour of bright gold. Now the legend above the picture is faded
+beyond conjecture; the gun's relation to the title is a matter of
+faith; the menaced animal, wearied of the long aim of the hunter, has
+resolved itself into a shapeless blot.
+
+The place is known as "Antonio's," as the name, white upon the red-lit
+transparency, and gilt upon the windows, attests. There is a promise
+in "Antonio"; a justifiable expectancy of savoury things in oil and
+pepper and wine, and perhaps an angel's whisper of garlic. But the
+rest of the name is "O'Riley." Antonio O'Riley!
+
+The Carabine d'Or is an ignominious ghost of the Rue Chartres. The
+caf where Bienville and Conti dined, where a prince has broken bread,
+is become a "family ristaurant."
+
+Its customers are working men and women, almost to a unit.
+Occasionally you will see chorus girls from the cheaper theatres,
+and men who follow avocations subject to quick vicissitudes; but at
+Antonio's--name rich in Bohemian promise, but tame in fulfillment--
+manners debonair and gay are toned down to the "family" standard.
+Should you light a cigarette, mine host will touch you on the "arrum"
+and remind you that the proprieties are menaced. "Antonio" entices
+and beguiles from fiery legend without, but "O'Riley" teaches decorum
+within.
+
+It was at this restaurant that Lorison first saw the girl. A flashy
+fellow with a predatory eye had followed her in, and had advanced to
+take the other chair at the little table where she stopped, but
+Lorison slipped into the seat before him. Their acquaintance began,
+and grew, and now for two months they had sat at the same table each
+evening, not meeting by appointment, but as if by a series of
+fortuitous and happy accidents. After dining, they would take a walk
+together in one of the little city parks, or among the panoramic
+markets where exhibits a continuous vaudeville of sights and sounds.
+Always at eight o'clock their steps led them to a certain street
+corner, where she prettily but firmly bade him good night and left
+him. "I do not live far from here," she frequently said, "and you
+must let me go the rest of the way alone."
+
+But now Lorison had discovered that he wanted to go the rest of the
+way with her, or happiness would depart, leaving, him on a very lonely
+corner of life. And at the same time that he made the discovery, the
+secret of his banishment from the society of the good laid its finger
+in his face and told him it must not be.
+
+Man is too thoroughly an egoist not to be also an egotist; if he love,
+the object shall know it. During a lifetime he may conceal it through
+stress of expediency and honour, but it shall bubble from his dying
+lips, though it disrupt a neighbourhood. It is known, however, that
+most men do not wait so long to disclose their passion. In the case
+of Lorison, his particular ethics positively forbade him to declare
+his sentiments, but he must needs dally with the subject, and woo by
+innuendo at least.
+
+On this night, after the usual meal at the Carabine d'Or, he strolled
+with his companion down the dim old street toward the river.
+
+The Rue Chartres perishes in the old Place d'Armes. The ancient
+Cabildo, where Spanish justice fell like hail, faces it, and the
+Cathedral, another provincial ghost, overlooks it. Its centre is a
+little, iron-railed park of flowers and immaculate gravelled walks,
+where citizens take the air of evenings. Pedestalled high above it,
+the general sits his cavorting steed, with his face turned stonily
+down the river toward English Turn, whence come no more Britons to
+bombard his cotton bales.
+
+Often the two sat in this square, but to-night Lorison guided her past
+the stone-stepped gate, and still riverward. As they walked, he smiled
+to himself to think that all he knew of her--except that be loved
+her--was her name, Norah Greenway, and that she lived with her
+brother. They had talked about everything except themselves. Perhaps
+her reticence had been caused by his.
+
+They came, at length, upon the levee, and sat upon a great, prostrate
+beam. The air was pungent with the dust of commerce. The great river
+slipped yellowly past. Across it Algiers lay, a longitudinous black
+bulk against a vibrant electric haze sprinkled with exact stars.
+
+The girl was young and of the piquant order. A certain bright
+melancholy pervaded her; she possessed an untarnished, pale prettiness
+doomed to please. Her voice, when she spoke, dwarfed her theme. It
+was the voice capable of investing little subjects with a large
+interest. She sat at ease, bestowing her skirts with the little
+womanly touch, serene as if the begrimed pier were a summer garden.
+Lorison poked the rotting boards with his cane.
+
+He began by telling her that he was in love with some one to whom he
+durst not speak of it. "And why not?" she asked, accepting swiftly
+his fatuous presentation of a third person of straw. "My place in the
+world," he answered, "is none to ask a woman to share. I am an
+outcast from honest people; I am wrongly accused of one crime, and am,
+I believe, guilty of another."
+
+Thence he plunged into the story of his abdication from society. The
+story, pruned of his moral philosophy, deserves no more than the
+slightest touch. It is no new tale, that of the gambler's declension.
+During one night's sitting he lost, and then had imperilled a certain
+amount of his employer's money, which, by accident, he carried with
+him. He continued to lose, to the last wager, and then began to gain,
+leaving the game winner to a somewhat formidable sum. The same night
+his employer's safe was robbed. A search was had; the winnings of
+Lorison were found in his room, their total forming an accusative
+nearness to the sum purloined. He was taken, tried and, through
+incomplete evidence, released, smutched with the sinister _devoirs_
+of a disagreeing jury.
+
+"It is not in the unjust accusation," he said to the girl, "that my
+burden lies, but in the knowledge that from the moment I staked the
+first dollar of the firm's money I was a criminal--no matter whether
+I lost or won. You see why it is impossible for me to speak of love
+to her."
+
+"It is a sad thing," said Norah, after a little pause, "to think what
+very good people there are in the world."
+
+"Good?" said Lorison.
+
+"I was thinking of this superior person whom you say you love. She
+must be a very poor sort of creature."
+
+"I do not understand."
+
+"Nearly," she continued, "as poor a sort of creature as yourself."
+
+"You do not understand," said Lorison, removing his hat and sweeping
+back his fine, light hair. "Suppose she loved me in return, and
+were willing to marry me. Think, if you can, what would follow. Never
+a day would pass but she would be reminded of her sacrifice. I would
+read a condescension in her smile, a pity even in her affection, that
+would madden me. No. The thing would stand between us forever. Only
+equals should mate. I could never ask her to come down upon my lower
+plane."
+
+An arc light faintly shone upon Lorison's face. An illumination from
+within also pervaded it. The girl saw the rapt, ascetic look; it was
+the face either of Sir Galahad or Sir Fool.
+
+"Quite starlike," she said, "is this unapproachable angel. Really too
+high to be grasped."
+
+"By me, yes."
+
+She faced him suddenly. "My dear friend, would you prefer your star
+fallen?" Lorison made a wide gesture.
+
+"You push me to the bald fact," he declared; "you are not in sympathy
+with my argument. But I will answer you so. If I could reach my
+particular star, to drag it down, I would not do it; but if it were
+fallen, I would pick it up, and thank Heaven for the privilege."
+
+They were silent for some minutes. Norah shivered, and thrust her
+hands deep into the pockets of her jacket. Lorison uttered a
+remorseful exclamation.
+
+"I'm not cold," she said. "I was just thinking. I ought to tell you
+something. You have selected a strange confidante. But you cannot
+expect a chance acquaintance, picked up in a doubtful restaurant, to
+be an angel."
+
+"Norah!" cried Lorison.
+
+"Let me go on. You have told me about yourself. We have been such
+good friends. I must tell you now what I never wanted you to know.
+I am--worse than you are. I was on the stage . . . I sang in the
+chorus . . . I was pretty bad, I guess . . . I stole diamonds from
+the prima donna . . . they arrested me . . . I gave most of them up,
+and they let me go . . . I drank wine every night . . . a great
+deal . . . I was very wicked, but--"
+
+Lorison knelt quickly by her side and took her hands.
+
+"Dear Norah!" he said, exultantly. "It is you, it is you I love!
+You never guessed it, did you? 'Tis you I meant all the time. Now I
+can speak. Let me make you forget the past. We have both suffered;
+let us shut out the world, and live for each other. Norah, do you
+hear me say I love you?"
+
+"In spite of--"
+
+"Rather say because of it. You have come out of your past noble and
+good. Your heart is an angel's. Give it to me."
+
+"A little while ago you feared the future too much to even speak."
+
+"But for you; not for myself. Can you love me?"
+
+She cast herself, wildly sobbing, upon his breast.
+
+"Better than life--than truth itself--than everything."
+
+"And my own past," said Lorison, with a note of solicitude--"can you
+forgive and--"
+
+"I answered you that," she whispered, "when I told you I loved you."
+She leaned away, and looked thoughtfully at him. "If I had not told
+you about myself, would you have--would you--"
+
+"No," he interrupted; "I would never have let you know I loved you. I
+would never have asked you this--Norah, will you be my wife?"
+
+She wept again.
+
+"Oh, believe me; I am good now--I am no longer wicked! I will be
+the best wife in the world. Don't think I am--bad any more. If you
+do I shall die, I shall die!"
+
+While he was consoling, her, she brightened up, eager and impetuous.
+"Will you marry me to-night?" she said. "Will you prove it that way.
+I have a reason for wishing it to be to-night. Will you?"
+
+Of one of two things was this exceeding frankness the outcome: either
+of importunate brazenness or of utter innocence. The lover's
+perspective contained only the one.
+
+"The sooner," said Lorison, "the happier I shall be."
+
+"What is there to do?" she asked. "What do you have to get? Come!
+You should know."
+
+Her energy stirred the dreamer to action.
+
+"A city directory first," he cried, gayly, "to find where the man
+lives who gives licenses to happiness. We will go together and rout
+him out. Cabs, cars, policemen, telephones and ministers shall aid
+us."
+
+"Father Rogan shall marry us," said the girl, with ardour. "I will
+take you to him."
+
+
+An hour later the two stood at the open doorway of an immense, gloomy
+brick building in a narrow and lonely street. The license was tight
+in Norah's hand.
+
+"Wait here a moment," she said, "till I find Father Rogan."
+
+She plunged into the black hallway, and the lover was left standing,
+as it were, on one leg, outside. His impatience was not greatly
+taxed. Gazing curiously into what seemed the hallway to Erebus,
+he was presently reassured by a stream of light that bisected the
+darkness, far down the passage. Then he heard her call, and
+fluttered lampward, like the moth. She beckoned him through a
+doorway into the room whence emanated the light. The room was
+bare of nearly everything except books, which had subjugated all
+its space. Here and there little spots of territory had been
+reconquered. An elderly, bald man, with a superlatively calm,
+remote eye, stood by a table with a book in his hand, his finger
+still marking a page. His dress was sombre and appertained to a
+religious order. His eye denoted an acquaintance with the
+perspective.
+
+"Father Rogan," said Norah, "this is _he_."
+
+"The two of ye," said Father Rogan, "want to get married?"
+
+They did not deny it. He married them. The ceremony was quickly
+done. One who could have witnessed it, and felt its scope, might have
+trembled at the terrible inadequacy of it to rise to the dignity of
+its endless chain of results.
+
+Afterward the priest spake briefly, as if by rote, of certain other
+civil and legal addenda that either might or should, at a later time,
+cap the ceremony. Lorison tendered a fee, which was declined, and
+before the door closed after the departing couple Father Rogan's book
+popped open again where his finger marked it.
+
+In the dark hall Norah whirled and clung to her companion, tearful.
+
+"Will you never, never be sorry?"
+
+At last she was reassured.
+
+At the first light they reached upon the street, she asked the time,
+just as she had each night. Lorison looked at his watch. Half-past
+eight.
+
+Lorison thought it was from habit that she guided their steps toward
+the corner where they always parted. But, arrived there, she
+hesitated, and then released his arm. A drug store stood on the
+corner; its bright, soft light shone upon them.
+
+"Please leave me here as usual to-night," said Norah, sweetly. "I
+must--I would rather you would. You will not object? At six
+to-morrow evening I will meet you at Antonio's. I want to sit with
+you there once more. And then--I will go where you say." She gave
+him a bewildering, bright smile, and walked swiftly away.
+
+Surely it needed all the strength of her charm to carry off this
+astounding behaviour. It was no discredit to Lorison's strength of
+mind that his head began to whirl. Pocketing his hands, he rambled
+vacuously over to the druggist's windows, and began assiduously to
+spell over the names of the patent medicines therein displayed.
+
+As soon as be had recovered his wits, he proceeded along the street in
+an aimless fashion. After drifting for two or three squares, he
+flowed into a somewhat more pretentious thoroughfare, a way much
+frequented by him in his solitary ramblings. For here was a row of
+shops devoted to traffic in goods of the widest range of choice--
+handiworks of art, skill and fancy, products of nature and labour from
+every zone.
+
+Here, for a time, he loitered among the conspicuous windows, where was
+set, emphasized by congested floods of light, the cunningest spoil of
+the interiors. There were few passers, and of this Lorison was glad.
+He was not of the world. For a long time he had touched his fellow
+man only at the gear of a levelled cog-wheel--at right angles, and
+upon a different axis. He had dropped into a distinctly new orbit.
+The stroke of ill fortune had acted upon him, in effect, as a blow
+delivered upon the apex of a certain ingenious toy, the musical top,
+which, when thus buffeted while spinning, gives forth, with scarcely
+retarded motion, a complete change of key and chord.
+
+Strolling along the pacific avenue, he experienced singular,
+supernatural calm, accompanied by an unusual a activity of brain.
+Reflecting upon recent affairs, he assured himself of his happiness in
+having won for a bride the one he had so greatly desired, yet he
+wondered mildly at his dearth of active emotion. Her strange
+behaviour in abandoning him without valid excuse on his bridal eve
+aroused in him only a vague and curious speculation. Again, he found
+himself contemplating, with complaisant serenity, the incidents of her
+somewhat lively career. His perspective seemed to have been queerly
+shifted.
+
+As he stood before a window near a corner, his ears were assailed by a
+waxing clamour and commotion. He stood close to the window to allow
+passage to the cause of the hubbub--a procession of human beings,
+which rounded the corner and headed in his direction. He perceived a
+salient hue of blue and a glitter of brass about a central figure of
+dazzling white and silver, and a ragged wake of black, bobbing
+figures.
+
+Two ponderous policemen were conducting between them a woman dressed
+as if for the stage, in a short, white, satiny skirt reaching to the
+knees, pink stockings, and a sort of sleeveless bodice bright with
+relucent, armour-like scales. Upon her curly, light hair was perched,
+at a rollicking angle, a shining tin helmet. The costume was to be
+instantly recognized as one of those amazing conceptions to which
+competition has harried the inventors of the spectacular ballet. One
+of the officers bore a long cloak upon his arm, which, doubtless, had
+been intended to veil the I candid attractions of their effulgent
+prisoner, but, for some reason, it had not been called into use, to
+the vociferous delight of the tail of the procession.
+
+Compelled by a sudden and vigorous movement of the woman, the parade
+halted before the window by which Lorison stood. He saw that she was
+young, and, at the first glance, was deceived by a sophistical
+prettiness of her face, which waned before a more judicious scrutiny.
+Her look was bold and reckless, and upon her countenance, where yet
+the contours of youth survived, were the finger-marks of old age's
+credentialed courier, Late Hours.
+
+The young woman fixed her unshrinking gaze upon Lorison, and called to
+him in the voice of the wronged heroine in straits:
+
+"Say! You look like a good fellow; come and put up the bail, won't
+you? I've done nothing to get pinched for. It's all a mistake. See
+how they're treating me! You won't be sorry, if you'll help me out of
+this. Think of your sister or your girl being dragged along the
+streets this way! I say, come along now, like a good fellow."
+
+It may be that Lorison, in spite of the unconvincing bathos of this
+appeal, showed a sympathetic face, for one of the officers left the
+woman's side, and went over to him.
+
+"It's all right, Sir," he said, in a husky, confidential tone; "she's
+the right party. We took her after the first act at the Green Light
+Theatre, on a wire from the chief of police of Chicago. It's only a
+square or two to the station. Her rig's pretty bad, but she refused
+to change clothes--or, rather," added the officer, with a smile, "to
+put on some. I thought I'd explain matters to you so you wouldn't
+think she was being imposed upon."
+
+"What is the charge?" asked Lorison.
+
+"Grand larceny. Diamonds. Her husband is a jeweller in Chicago. She
+cleaned his show case of the sparklers, and skipped with a comic-opera
+troupe."
+
+The policeman, perceiving that the interest of the entire group of
+spectators was centred upon himself and Lorison--their conference
+being regarded as a possible new complication--was fain to prolong
+the situation--which reflected his own importance--by a little
+afterpiece of philosophical comment.
+
+"A gentleman like you, Sir," he went on affably, "would never notice
+it, but it comes in my line to observe what an immense amount of
+trouble is made by that combination--I mean the stage, diamonds
+and light-headed women who aren't satisfied with good homes. I tell
+you, Sir, a man these days and nights wants to know what his women
+folks are up to."
+
+The policeman smiled a good night, and returned to the side of his
+charge, who had been intently watching Lorison's face during the
+conversation, no doubt for some indication of his intention to render
+succour. Now, at the failure of the sign, and at the movement made to
+continue the ignominious progress, she abandoned hope, and addressed
+him thus, pointedly:
+
+"You damn chalk-faced quitter! You was thinking of giving me a hand,
+but you let the cop talk you out of it the first word. You're a dandy
+to tie to. Say, if you ever get a girl, she'll have a picnic. Won't
+she work you to the queen's taste! Oh, my!" She concluded with a
+taunting, shrill laugh that rasped Lorison like a saw. The policemen
+urged her forward; the delighted train of gaping followers closed up
+the rear; and the captive Amazon, accepting her fate, extended the
+scope of her maledictions so that none in hearing might seem to be
+slighted.
+
+Then there came upon Lorison an overwhelming revulsion of his
+perspective. It may be that he had been ripe for it, that the
+abnormal condition of mind in which he had for so long existed was
+already about to revert to its balance; however, it is certain that
+the events of the last few minutes had furnished the channel, if not
+the impetus, for the change.
+
+The initial determining influence had been so small a thing as the
+fact and manner of his having been approached by the officer. That
+agent had, by the style of his accost, restored the loiterer to his
+former place in society. In an instant he had been transformed from a
+somewhat rancid prowler along the fishy side streets of gentility into
+an honest gentleman, with whom even so lordly a guardian of the peace
+might agreeably exchange the compliments.
+
+This, then, first broke the spell, and set thrilling in him a
+resurrected longing for the fellowship of his kind, and the rewards of
+the virtuous. To what end, he vehemently asked himself, was this
+fanciful self-accusation, this empty renunciation, this moral
+squeamishness through which he had been led to abandon what was his
+heritage in life, and not beyond his deserts? Technically, he was
+uncondemned; his sole guilty spot was in thought rather than deed, and
+cognizance of it unshared by others. For what good, moral or
+sentimental, did he slink, retreating like the hedgehog from his own
+shadow, to and fro in this musty Bohemia that lacked even the
+picturesque?
+
+But the thing that struck home and set him raging was the part played
+by the Amazonian prisoner. To the counterpart of that astounding
+belligerent--identical at least, in the way of experience--to one,
+by her own confession, thus far fallen, had he, not three hours since,
+been united in marriage. How desirable and natural it had seemed to
+him then, and how monstrous it seemed now! How the words of diamond
+thief number two yet burned in his ears: "If you ever get a girl,
+she'll have a picnic." What did that mean but that women instinctively
+knew him for one they could hoodwink? Still again, there reverberated
+the policeman's sapient contribution to his agony: "A man these days
+and nights wants to know what his women folks are up to." Oh, yes, he
+had been a fool; he had looked at things from the wrong standpoint.
+
+But the wildest note in all the clamour was struck by pain's
+forefinger, jealousy. Now, at least, he felt that keenest sting--a
+mounting love unworthily bestowed. Whatever she might be, he loved
+her; he bore in his own breast his doom. A grating, comic flavour to
+his predicament struck him suddenly, and he laughed creakingly as he
+swung down the echoing pavement. An impetuous desire to act, to
+battle with his fate, seized him. He stopped upon his heel, and smote
+his palms together triumphantly. His wife was--where? But there
+was a tangible link; an outlet more or less navigable, through which
+his derelict ship of matrimony might yet be safely towed--the
+priest!
+
+Like all imaginative men with pliable natures, Lorison was, when
+thoroughly stirred, apt to become tempestuous. With a high and
+stubborn indignation upon him, be retraced his steps to the
+intersecting street by which he had come. Down this he hurried to the
+corner where he had parted with--an astringent grimace tinctured the
+thought--his wife. Thence still back he harked, following through
+an unfamiliar district his stimulated recollections of the way they
+had come from that preposterous wedding. Many times he went abroad,
+and nosed his way back to the trail, furious.
+
+At last, when he reached the dark, calamitous building in which his
+madness had culminated, and found the black hallway, he dashed down
+it, perceiving no light or sound. But he raised his voice, hailing
+loudly; reckless of everything but that he should find the old
+mischief-maker with the eyes that looked too far away to see the
+disaster he had wrought. The door opened, and in the stream of light
+Father Rogan stood, his book in hand, with his finger marking the
+place.
+
+"Ah!" cried Lorison. "You are the man I want. I had a wife of you a
+few hours ago. I would not trouble you, but I neglected to note how
+it was done. Will you oblige me with the information whether the
+business is beyond remedy?"
+
+"Come inside," said the priest; "there are other lodgers in the
+house, who might prefer sleep to even a gratified curiosity."
+
+Lorison entered the room and took the chair offered him. The priest's
+eyes looked a courteous interrogation.
+
+"I must apologize again," said the young man, "for so soon intruding
+upon you with my marital infelicities, but, as my wife has neglected
+to furnish me with her address, I am deprived of the legitimate
+recourse of a family row."
+
+"I am quite a plain man," said Father Rogan, pleasantly; "but I do
+not see how I am to ask you questions."
+
+"Pardon my indirectness," said Lorison; "I will ask one. In this room
+to-night you pronounced me to be a husband. You afterward spoke of
+additional rites or performances that either should or could be
+effected. I paid little attention to your words then, but I am hungry
+to hear them repeated now. As matters stand, am I married past all
+help?"
+
+"You are as legally and as firmly bound," said the priest, "as though
+it had been done in a cathedral, in the presence of thousands. The
+additional observances I referred to are not necessary to the
+strictest legality of the act, but were advised as a precaution for
+the future--for convenience of proof in such contingencies as wills,
+inheritances and the like."
+
+Lorison laughed harshly.
+
+"Many thanks," he said. "Then there is no mistake, and I am the happy
+benedict. I suppose I should go stand upon the bridal corner, and
+when my wife gets through walking the streets she will look me up."
+
+Father Rogan regarded him calmly.
+
+"My son," he said, "when a man and woman come to me to be married I
+always marry them. I do this for the sake of other people whom they
+might go away and marry if they did not marry each other. As you see,
+I do not seek your confidence; but your case seems to me to be one not
+altogether devoid of interest. Very few marriages that have come to
+my notice have brought such well-expressed regret within so short a
+time. I will hazard one question: were you not under the impression
+that you loved the lady you married, at the time you did so?"
+
+"Loved her!" cried Lorison, wildly. "Never so well as now, though
+she told me she deceived and sinned and stole. Never more than now,
+when, perhaps, she is laughing at the fool she cajoled and left, with
+scarcely a word, to return to God only knows what particular line of
+her former folly."
+
+Father Rogan answered nothing. During the silence that succeeded, he
+sat with a quiet expectation beaming in his full, lambent eye.
+
+"If you would listen--" began Lorison. The priest held up his hand.
+
+"As I hoped," he said. "I thought you would trust me. Wait but a
+moment." He brought a long clay pipe, filled and lighted it.
+
+"Now, my son," he said.
+
+Lorison poured a twelve month's accumulated confidence into Father
+Rogan's ear. He told all; not sparing himself or omitting the facts
+of his past, the events of the night, or his disturbing conjectures
+and fears.
+
+"The main point," said the priest, when he had concluded, "seems to
+me to be this--are you reasonably sure that you love this woman whom
+you have married?"
+
+"Why," exclaimed Lorison, rising impulsively to his feet--"why
+should I deny it? But look at me--am fish, flesh or fowl? That is
+the main point to me, I assure you."
+
+"I understand you," said the priest, also rising, and laying down his
+pipe. "The situation is one that has taxed the endurance of much
+older men than you--in fact, especially much older men than you. I
+will try to relieve you from it, and this night. You shall see for
+yourself into exactly what predicament you have fallen, and how you
+shall, possibly, be extricated. There is no evidence so credible as
+that of the eyesight."
+
+Father Rogan moved about the room, and donned a soft black hat.
+Buttoning his coat to his throat, he laid his hand on the doorknob.
+"Let us walk," he said.
+
+The two went out upon the street. The priest turned his face down it,
+and Lorison walked with him through a squalid district, where the
+houses loomed, awry and desolate-looking, high above them. Presently
+they turned into a less dismal side street, where the houses were
+smaller, and, though hinting of the most meagre comfort, lacked the
+concentrated wretchedness of the more populous byways.
+
+At a segregated, two-story house Father Rogan halted, and mounted the
+steps with the confidence of a familiar visitor. He ushered Lorison
+into a narrow hallway, faintly lighted by a cobwebbed hanging lamp.
+Almost immediately a door to the right opened and a dingy Irishwoman
+protruded her head.
+
+"Good evening to ye, Mistress Geehan," said the priest, unconsciously,
+it seemed, falling into a delicately flavoured brogue. "And is it
+yourself can tell me if Norah has gone out again, the night, maybe?"
+
+"Oh, it's yer blissid riverence! Sure and I can tell ye the same.
+The purty darlin' wint out, as usual, but a bit later. And she says:
+'Mother Geehan,' says she, 'it's me last noight out, praise the
+saints, this noight is!' And, oh, yer riverence, the swate, beautiful
+drame of a dress she had this toime! White satin and silk and
+ribbons, and lace about the neck and arrums--'twas a sin, yer
+reverence, the gold was spint upon it."
+
+The priest heard Lorison catch his breath painfully, and a faint smile
+flickered across his own clean-cut mouth.
+
+"Well, then, Mistress Geehan," said he, "I'll just step upstairs and
+see the bit boy for a minute, and I'll take this gentleman up with
+me."
+
+"He's awake, thin," said the woman. "I've just come down from sitting
+wid him the last hour, tilling him fine shtories of ould County
+Tyrone. 'Tis a greedy gossoon, it is, yer riverence, for me
+shtories."
+
+"Small the doubt," said Father Rogan. "There's no rocking would put
+him to slape the quicker, I'm thinking."
+
+Amid the woman's shrill protest against the retort, the two men
+ascended the steep stairway. The priest pushed open the door of a
+room near its top.
+
+"Is that you already, sister?" drawled a sweet, childish voice from
+the darkness.
+
+"It's only ould Father Denny come to see ye, darlin'; and a foine
+gentleman I've brought to make ye a gr-r-and call. And ye resaves us
+fast aslape in bed! Shame on yez manners!"
+
+"Oh, Father Denny, is that you? I'm glad. And will you light the
+lamp, please? It's on the table by the door. And quit talking like
+Mother Geehan, Father Denny."
+
+The priest lit the lamp, and Lorison saw a tiny, towsled-haired boy,
+with a thin, delicate face, sitting up in a small bed in a corner.
+Quickly, also, his rapid glance considered the room and its
+contents. It was furnished with more than comfort, and its adornments
+plainly indicated a woman's discerning taste. An open door beyond
+revealed the blackness of an adjoining room's interior.
+
+The boy clutched both of Father Rogan's hands. "I'm so glad you
+came," he said; "but why did you come in the night? Did sister send
+you?"
+
+"Off wid ye! Am I to be sint about, at me age, as was Terence
+McShane, of Ballymahone? I come on me own r-r-responsibility."
+
+Lorison had also advanced to the boy's bedside. He was fond of
+children; and the wee fellow, laying himself down to sleep alone in
+that dark room, stirred-his heart.
+
+"Aren't you afraid, little man?" he asked, stooping down beside him.
+
+"Sometimes," answered the boy, with a shy smile, "when the rats make
+too much noise. But nearly every night, when sister goes out, Mother
+Geehan stays a while with me, and tells me funny stories. I'm not
+often afraid, sir."
+
+"This brave little gentleman," said Father Rogan, "is a scholar of
+mine. Every day from half-past six to half-past eight--when sister
+comes for him--he stops in my study, and we find out what's in the
+inside of books. He knows multiplication, division and fractions; and
+he's troubling me to begin wid the chronicles of Ciaran of
+Clonmacnoise, Corurac McCullenan and Cuan O'Lochain, the gr-r-reat
+Irish histhorians." The boy was evidently accustomed to the priest's
+Celtic pleasantries. A little, appreciative grin was all the attention
+the insinuation of pedantry received.
+
+Lorison, to have saved his life, could not have put to the child one
+of those vital questions that were wildly beating about, unanswered,
+in his own brain. The little fellow was very like Norah; he had the
+same shining hair and candid eyes.
+
+"Oh, Father Denny," cried the boy, suddenly, "I forgot to tell you!
+Sister is not going away at night any more! She told me so when she
+kissed me good night as she was leaving. And she said she was so
+happy, and then she cried. Wasn't that queer? But I'm glad; aren't
+you?"
+
+"Yes, lad. And now, ye omadhaun, go to sleep, and say good night; we
+must be going."
+
+"Which shall I do first, Father Denny?"
+
+"Faith, he's caught me again! Wait till I get the sassenach into the
+annals of Tageruach, the hagiographer; I'll give him enough of the
+Irish idiom to make him more respectful."
+
+The light was out, and the small, brave voice bidding them good night
+from the dark room. They groped downstairs, and tore away from the
+garrulity of Mother Geehan.
+
+Again the priest steered them through the dim ways, but this time in
+another direction. His conductor was serenely silent, and Lorison
+followed his example to the extent of seldom speaking. Serene he
+could not be. His heart beat suffocatingly in his breast. The
+following of this blind, menacing trail was pregnant with he knew not
+what humiliating revelation to be delivered at its end.
+
+They came into a more pretentious street, where trade, it could be
+surmised, flourished by day. And again the priest paused; this time
+before a lofty building, whose great doors and windows in the lowest
+floor were carefully shuttered and barred. Its higher apertures were
+dark, save in the third story, the windows of which were brilliantly
+lighted. Lorison's ear caught a distant, regular, pleasing thrumming,
+as of music above. They stood at an angle of the building. Up, along
+the side nearest them, mounted an iron stairway. At its top was an
+upright, illuminated parallelogram. Father Rogan had stopped, and
+stood, musing.
+
+"I will say this much," he remarked, thoughtfully: "I believe you to
+be a better man than you think yourself to be, and a better man than I
+thought some hours ago. But do not take this," he added, with a smile,
+"as much praise. I promised you a possible deliverance from an
+unhappy perplexity. I will have to modify that promise. I can only
+remove the mystery that enhanced that perplexity. Your deliverance
+depends upon yourself. Come."
+
+He led his companion up the stairway. Halfway up, Lorison caught him
+by the sleeve. "Remember," he gasped, "I love that woman."
+
+"You desired to know.
+
+"I--Go on."
+
+The priest reached the landing at the top of the stairway. Lorison,
+behind him, saw that the illuminated space was the glass upper half of
+a door opening into the lighted room. The rhythmic music increased as
+they neared it; the stairs shook with the mellow vibrations.
+
+Lorison stopped breathing when he set foot upon the highest step, for
+the priest stood aside, and motioned him to look through the glass of
+the door.
+
+His eye, accustomed to the darkness, met first a blinding glare,
+and then he made out the faces and forms of many people, amid
+an extravagant display of splendid robings--billowy laces,
+brilliant-hued finery, ribbons, silks and misty drapery. And then
+he caught the meaning of that jarring hum, and he saw the tired,
+pale, happy face of his wife, bending, as were a score of others,
+over her sewing machine--toiling, toiling. Here was the folly she
+pursued, and the end of his quest.
+
+But not his deliverance, though even then remorse struck him. His
+shamed soul fluttered once more before it retired to make room for the
+other and better one. For, to temper his thrill of joy, the shine of
+the satin and the glimmer of ornaments recalled the disturbing figure
+of the bespangled Amazon, and the base duplicate histories lit by the
+glare of footlights and stolen diamonds. It is past the wisdom of him
+who only sets the scenes, either to praise or blame the man. But this
+time his love overcame his scruples. He took a quick step, and
+reached out his hand for the doorknob. Father Rogan was quicker to
+arrest it and draw him back.
+
+"You use my trust in you queerly," said the priest sternly. "What are
+you about to do?"
+
+"I am going to my wife," said Lorison. "Let me pass."
+
+"Listen," said the priest, holding him firmly by the arm. "I am about
+to put you in possession of a piece of knowledge of which, thus far,
+you have scarcely proved deserving. I do not think you ever will; but
+I will not dwell upon that. You see in that room the woman you
+married, working for a frugal living for herself, and a generous
+comfort for an idolized brother. This building belongs to the chief
+costumer of the city. For months the advance orders for the coming
+Mardi Gras festivals have kept the work going day and night. I myself
+secured employment here for Norah. She toils here each night from
+nine o'clock until daylight, and, besides, carries home with her some
+of the finer costumes, requiring more delicate needlework, and works
+there part of the day. Somehow, you two have remained strangely
+ignorant of each other's lives. Are you convinced now that your wife
+is not walking the streets?"
+
+"Let me go to her," cried Lorison, again struggling, "and beg her
+forgiveness!'
+
+"Sir," said the priest, "do you owe me nothing? Be quiet. It seems
+so often that Heaven lets fall its choicest gifts into hands that must
+be taught to hold them. Listen again. You forgot that repentant sin
+must not compromise, but look up, for redemption, to the purest and
+best. You went to her with the fine-spun sophistry that peace could be
+found in a mutual guilt; and she, fearful of losing what her heart so
+craved, thought it worth the price to buy it with a desperate, pure,
+beautiful lie. I have known her since the day she was born; she is as
+innocent and unsullied in life and deed as a holy saint. In that
+lowly street where she dwells she first saw the light, and she has
+lived there ever since, spending her days in generous self-sacrifice
+for others. Och, ye spalpeen!" continued Father Rogan, raising his
+finger in kindly anger at Lorison. "What for, I wonder, could she be
+after making a fool of hersilf, and shamin' her swate soul with lies,
+for the like of you!"
+
+"Sir," said Lorison, trembling, "say what you please of me. Doubt it
+as you must, I will yet prove my gratitude to you, and my devotion to
+her. But let me speak to her once now, let me kneel for just one
+moment at her feet, and--"
+
+"Tut, tut!" said the priest. "How many acts of a love drama do you
+think an old bookworm like me capable of witnessing? Besides, what
+kind of figures do we cut, spying upon the mysteries of midnight
+millinery! Go to meet your wife to-morrow, as she ordered you, and
+obey her thereafter, and maybe some time I shall get forgiveness for
+the part I have played in this night's work. Off wid yez down the
+shtairs, now! 'Tis late, and an ould man like me should be takin' his
+rest."
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES
+
+
+"Aunt Ellen," said Octavia, cheerfully, as she threw her black kid
+gloves carefully at the dignified Persian cat on the window-seat, "I'm
+a pauper."
+
+"You are so extreme in your statements, Octavia, dear," said Aunt
+Ellen, mildly, looking up from her paper. "If you find yourself
+temporarily in need of some small change for bonbons, you will find
+my purse in the drawer of the writing desk."
+
+Octavia Beaupree removed her hat and seated herself on a footstool
+near her aunt's chair, clasping her hands about her knees. Her slim
+and flexible figure, clad in a modish mourning costume, accommodated
+itself easily and gracefully to the trying position. Her bright and
+youthful face, with its pair of sparkling, life-enamoured eyes, tried
+to compose itself to the seriousness that the occasion seemed to
+demand.
+
+"You good auntie, it isn't a case of bonbons; it is abject, staring,
+unpicturesque poverty, with ready-made clothes, gasolined gloves, and
+probably one o'clock dinners all waiting with the traditional wolf at
+the door. I've just come from my lawyer, auntie, and, 'Please, ma'am,
+I ain't got nothink 't all. Flowers, lady? Buttonhole, gentleman?
+Pencils, sir, three for five, to help a poor widow?' Do I do it
+nicely, auntie, or, as a bread-winner accomplishment, were my lessons
+in elocution entirely wasted?"
+
+"Do be serious, my dear," said Aunt Ellen, letting her paper fall to
+the floor, "long enough to tell me what you mean. Colonel Beaupree's
+estate--"
+
+"Colonel Beaupree's estate," interrupted Octavia, emphasizing her
+words with appropriate dramatic gestures, "is of Spanish castellar
+architecture. Colonel Beaupree's resources are--wind. Colonel
+Beaupree's stocks are--water. Colonel Beaupree's income is--all
+in. The statement lacks the legal technicalities to which I have been
+listening for an hour, but that is what it means when translated."
+
+"Octavia!" Aunt Ellen was now visibly possessed by consternation. "I
+can hardly believe it. And it was the impression that he was worth a
+million. And the De Peysters themselves introduced him!"
+
+Octavia rippled out a laugh, and then became properly grave.
+
+"_De mortuis nil_, auntie--not even the rest of it. The dear old
+colonel--what a gold brick he was, after all! I paid for my bargain
+fairly--I'm all here, am I not?--items: eyes, fingers, toes,
+youth, old family, unquestionable position in society as called for
+in the contract--no wild-cat stock here." Octavia picked up the morning
+paper from the floor. "But I'm not going to 'squeal'--isn't that
+what they call it when you rail at Fortune because you've, lost the
+game?" She turned the pages of the paper calmly. "'Stock market'--no
+use for that. 'Society's doings'--that's done. Here is my page--the
+wish column. A Van Dresser could not be said to 'want' for anything,
+of course. 'Chamber-maids, cooks, canvassers, stenographers--'"
+
+"Dear," said Aunt Ellen, with a little tremor in her voice, "please do
+not talk in that way. Even if your affairs are in so unfortunate a
+condition, there is my three thousand--"
+
+Octavia sprang up lithely, and deposited a smart kiss on the delicate
+cheek of the prim little elderly maid.
+
+"Blessed auntie, your three thousand is just sufficient to insure your
+Hyson to be free from willow leaves and keep the Persian in sterilized
+cream. I know I'd be welcome, but I prefer to strike bottom like
+Beelzebub rather than hang around like the Peri listening to the music
+from the side entrance. I'm going to earn my own living. There's
+nothing else to do. I'm a--Oh, oh, oh!--I had forgotten. There's
+one thing saved from the wreck. It's a corral--no, a ranch in--let
+me see--Texas: an asset, dear old Mr. Bannister called it. How
+pleased he was to show me something he could describe as unencumbered!
+I've a description of it among those stupid papers he made me bring
+away with me from his office. I'll try to find it."
+
+Octavia found her shopping-bag, and drew from it a long envelope
+filled with typewritten documents.
+
+"A ranch in Texas," sighed Aunt Ellen. "It sounds to me more like a
+liability than an asset. Those are the places where the centipedes are
+found, and cowboys, and fandangos."
+
+"'The Rancho de las Sombras,'" read Octavia from a sheet of violently
+purple typewriting, "'is situated one hundred and ten miles southeast
+of San Antonio, and thirty-eight miles from its nearest railroad
+station, Nopal, on the I. and G. N. Ranch, consists of 7,680 acres
+of well-watered land, with title conferred by State patents, and
+twenty-two sections, or 14,080 acres, partly under yearly running
+lease and partly bought under State's twenty-year-purchase act. Eight
+thousand graded merino sheep, with the necessary equipment of horses,
+vehicles and general ranch paraphernalia. Ranch-house built of brick,
+with six rooms comfortably furnished according to the requirements of
+the climate. All within a strong barbed-wire fence.
+
+"'The present ranch manager seems to be competent and reliable, and is
+rapidly placing upon a paying basis a business that, in other hands,
+had been allowed to suffer from neglect and misconduct.
+
+"'This property was secured by Colonel Beaupree in a deal with a
+Western irrigation syndicate, and the title to it seems to be perfect.
+With careful management and the natural increase of land values, it
+ought to be made the foundation for a comfortable fortune for its
+owner.'"
+
+When Octavia ceased reading, Aunt Ellen uttered something as near a
+sniff as her breeding permitted.
+
+"The prospectus," she said, with uncompromising metropolitan
+suspicion, "doesn't mention the centipedes, or the Indians. And you
+never did like mutton, Octavia. I don't see what advantage you can
+derive from this--desert."
+
+But Octavia was in a trance. Her eyes were steadily regarding
+something quite beyond their focus. Her lips were parted, and her face
+was lighted by the kindling furor of the explorer, the ardent,
+stirring disquiet of the adventurer. Suddenly she clasped her hands
+together exultantly.
+
+"The problem solves itself, auntie," she cried. "I'm going to that
+ranch. I'm going to live on it. I'm going to learn to like mutton,
+and even concede the good qualities of centipedes--at a respectful
+distance. It's just what I need. It's a new life that comes when my
+old one is just ending. It's a release, auntie; it isn't a narrowing.
+Think of the gallops over those leagues of prairies, with the wind
+tugging at the roots of your hair, the coming close to the earth
+and learning over again the stories of the growing grass and the
+little wild flowers without names! Glorious is what it will be. Shall
+I be a shepherdess with a Watteau hat, and a crook to keep the bad
+wolves from the lambs, or a typical Western ranch girl, with short
+hair, like the pictures of her in the Sunday papers? I think the
+latter. And they'll have my picture, too, with the wild-cats I've
+slain, single-handed, hanging from my saddle horn. 'From the Four
+Hundred to the Flocks' is the way they'll headline it, and they'll
+print photographs of the old Van Dresser mansion and the church where
+I was married. They won't have my picture, but they'll get an artist
+to draw it. I'll be wild and woolly, and I'll grow my own wool."
+
+"Octavia!" Aunt Ellen condensed into the one word all the protests
+she was unable to utter.
+
+"Don't say a word, auntie. I'm going. I'll see the sky at night fit
+down on the world like a big butter-dish cover, and I'll make friends
+again with the stars that I haven't had a chat with since I was a wee
+child. I wish to go. I'm tired of all this. I'm glad I haven't any
+money. I could bless Colonel Beaupree for that ranch, and forgive him
+for all his bubbles. What if the life will be rough and lonely! I--I
+deserve it. I shut my heart to everything except that miserable
+ambition. I--oh, I wish to go away, and forget--forget!"
+
+Octavia swerved suddenly to her knees, laid her flushed face in her
+aunt's lap, and shook with turbulent sobs.
+
+Aunt Ellen bent over her, and smoothed the coppery-brown hair.
+
+"I didn't know," she said, gently; "I didn't know--that. Who was it,
+dear?"
+
+
+When Mrs. Octavia Beaupree, ne Van Dresser, stepped from the train at
+Nopal, her manner lost, for the moment, some of that easy certitude
+which had always marked her movements. The town was of recent
+establishment, and seemed to have been hastily constructed of undressed
+lumber and flapping canvas. The element that had congregated about the
+station, though not offensively demonstrative, was clearly composed of
+citizens accustomed to and prepared for rude alarms.
+
+Octavia stood on the platform, against the telegraph office, and
+attempted to choose by intuition from the swaggering, straggling
+string, of loungers the manager of the Rancho de las Sombras, who
+had been instructed by Mr. Bannister to meet her there. That tall,
+serious, looking, elderly man in the blue flannel shirt and white tie
+she thought must be he. But, no; he passed by, removing his gaze from
+the lady as hers rested on him, according to the Southern custom. The
+manager, she thought, with some impatience at being kept waiting,
+should have no difficulty in selecting her. Young women wearing the
+most recent thing in ash-coloured travelling suits were not so
+plentiful in Nopal!
+
+Thus keeping a speculative watch on all persons of possible managerial
+aspect, Octavia, with a catching breath and a start of surprise,
+suddenly became aware of Teddy Westlake hurrying along the platform in
+the direction of the train--of Teddy Westlake or his sun-browned
+ghost in cheviot, boots and leather-girdled hat--Theodore Westlake,
+Jr., amateur polo (almost) champion, all-round butterfly and cumberer
+of the soil; but a broader, surer, more emphasized and determined
+Teddy than the one she had known a year ago when last she saw him.
+
+He perceived Octavia at almost the same time, deflected his course,
+and steered for her in his old, straightforward way. Something like
+awe came upon her as the strangeness of his metamorphosis was
+brought into closer range; the rich, red-brown of his complexion
+brought out so vividly his straw-coloured mustache and steel-gray
+eyes. He seemed more grown-up, and, somehow, farther away. But, when
+he spoke, the old, boyish Teddy came back again. They had been friends
+from childhood.
+
+"Why, 'Tave!" he exclaimed, unable to reduce his perplexity to
+coherence. "How--what--when--where?"
+
+"Train," said Octavia; "necessity; ten minutes ago; home. Your
+complexion's gone, Teddy. Now, how--what--when--where?"
+
+"I'm working down here," said Teddy. He cast side glances about the
+station as one does who tries to combine politeness with duty.
+
+"You didn't notice on the train," he asked, "an old lady with gray
+curls and a poodle, who occupied two seats with her bundles and
+quarrelled with the conductor, did you?"
+
+"I think not," answered Octavia, reflecting. "And you haven't, by
+any chance, noticed a big, gray-mustached man in a blue shirt and
+six-shooters, with little flakes of merino wool sticking in his hair,
+have you?"
+
+"Lots of 'em," said Teddy, with symptoms of mental delirium under the
+strain. "Do you happen to know any such individual?"
+
+"No; the description is imaginary. Is your interest in the old lady
+whom you describe a personal one?"
+
+"Never saw her in my life. She's painted entirely from fancy. She owns
+the little piece of property where I earn my bread and butter--the
+Rancho de las Sombras. I drove up to meet her according to arrangement
+with her lawyer."
+
+Octavia leaned against the wall of the telegraph office. Was this
+possible? And didn't he know?
+
+"Are you the manager of that ranch?" she asked weakly.
+
+"I am," said Teddy, with pride.
+
+"I am Mrs. Beaupree," said Octavia faintly; "but my hair never would
+curl, and I was polite to the conductor."
+
+For a moment that strange, grown-up look came back, and removed Teddy
+miles away from her.
+
+"I hope you'll excuse me," he said, rather awkwardly. "You see, I've
+been down here in the chaparral a year. I hadn't heard. Give me your
+checks, please, and I'll have your traps loaded into the wagon. Jos
+will follow with them. We travel ahead in the buckboard."
+
+Seated by Teddy in a feather-weight buckboard, behind a pair of wild,
+cream-coloured Spanish ponies, Octavia abandoned all thought for the
+exhilaration of the present. They swept out of the little town and
+down the level road toward the south. Soon the road dwindled and
+disappeared, and they struck across a world carpeted with an endless
+reach of curly mesquite grass. The wheels made no sound. The tireless
+ponies bounded ahead at an unbroken gallop. The temperate wind, made
+fragrant by thousands of acres of blue and yellow wild flowers, roared
+gloriously in their ears. The motion was arial, ecstatic, with a
+thrilling sense of perpetuity in its effect. Octavia sat silent,
+possessed by a feeling of elemental, sensual bliss. Teddy seemed to be
+wrestling with some internal problem.
+
+"I'm going to call you madama," he announced as the result of his
+labours. "That is what the Mexicans will call you--they're nearly
+all Mexicans on the ranch, you know. That seems to me about the proper
+thing."
+
+"Very well, Mr. Westlake," said Octavia, primly.
+
+"Oh, now," said Teddy, in some consternation, "that's carrying the
+thing too far, isn't it?"
+
+"Don't worry me with your beastly etiquette. I'm just beginning to
+live. Don't remind me of anything artificial. If only this air could
+be bottled! This much alone is worth coming for. Oh, look I there goes
+a deer!"
+
+"Jack-rabbit," said Teddy, without turning his head.
+
+"Could I--might I drive?" suggested Octavia, panting, with rose-tinted
+cheeks and the eye of an eager child.
+
+"On one condition. Could I--might I smoke?"
+
+"Forever!" cried Octavia, taking the lines with solemn joy. "How shall
+I know which way to drive?"
+
+"Keep her sou' by sou'east, and all sail set. You see that black speck
+on the horizon under that lowermost Gulf cloud? That's a group of
+live-oaks and a landmark. Steer halfway between that and the little
+hill to the left. I'll recite you the whole code of driving rules for
+the Texas prairies: keep the reins from under the horses' feet, and
+swear at 'em frequent."
+
+"I'm too happy to swear, Ted. Oh, why do people buy yachts or travel
+in palace-cars, when a buckboard and a pair of plugs and a spring
+morning like this can satisfy all desire?"
+
+"Now, I'll ask you," protested Teddy, who was futilely striking match
+after match on the dashboard, "not to call those denizens of the air
+plugs. They can kick out a hundred miles between daylight and dark."
+At last he succeeded in snatching a light for his cigar from the flame
+held in the hollow of his hands.
+
+"Room!" said Octavia, intensely. "That's what produces the effect. I
+know now what I've wanted--scope--range--room!"
+
+"Smoking-room," said Teddy, unsentimentally. "I love to smoke in a
+buckboard. The wind blows the smoke into you and out again. It saves
+exertion."
+
+The two fell so naturally into their old-time goodfellowship that it
+was only by degrees that a sense of the strangeness of the new
+relations between them came to be felt.
+
+"Madama," said Teddy, wonderingly, "however did you get it into your
+bead to cut the crowd and come down here? Is it a fad now among the
+upper classes to trot off to sheep ranches instead of to Newport?"
+
+"I was broke, Teddy," said Octavia, sweetly, with her interest centred
+upon steering safely between a Spanish dagger plant and a clump of
+chaparral; "I haven't a thing in the world but this ranch--not even
+any other home to go to."
+
+"Come, now," said Teddy, anxiously but incredulously, "you don't
+mean it?"
+
+"When my husband," said Octavia, with a shy slurring of the word,
+"died three months ago I thought I had a reasonable amount of the
+world's goods. His lawyer exploded that theory in a sixty-minute fully
+illustrated lecture. I took to the sheep as a last resort. Do you
+happen to know of any fashionable caprice among the gilded youth of
+Manhattan that induces them to abandon polo and club windows to become
+managers of sheep ranches?"
+
+"It's easily explained in my case," responded Teddy, promptly. "I
+had to go to work. I couldn't have earned my board in New York, so I
+chummed a while with old Sandford, one of the syndicate that owned the
+ranch before Colonel Beaupree bought it, and got a place down here. I
+wasn't manager at first. I jogged around on ponies and studied the
+business in detail, until I got all the points in my head. I saw where
+it was losing and what the remedies were, and then Sandford put me
+in charge. I get a hundred dollars a month, and I earn it."
+
+"Poor Teddy!" said Octavia, with a smile.
+
+"You needn't. I like it. I save half my wages, and I'm as hard as a
+water plug. It beats polo."
+
+"Will it furnish bread and tea and jam for another outcast from
+civilization?"
+
+"The spring shearing," said the manager, "just cleaned up a deficit in
+last year's business. Wastefulness and inattention have been the rule
+heretofore. The autumn clip will leave a small profit over all
+expenses. Next year there will be jam."
+
+When, about four o'clock in the afternoon, the ponies rounded a
+gentle, brush-covered hill, and then swooped, like a double
+cream-coloured cyclone, upon the Rancho de las Sombras, Octavia gave
+a little cry of delight. A lordly grove of magnificent live-oaks cast
+an area of grateful, cool shade, whence the ranch had drawn its name,
+"de las Sombras"--of the shadows. The house, of red brick, one story,
+ran low and long beneath the trees. Through its middle, dividing its
+six rooms in half, extended a broad, arched passageway, picturesque
+with flowering cactus and hanging red earthern jars. A "gallery," low
+and broad, encircled the building. Vines climbed about it, and the
+adjacent ground was, for a space, covered with transplanted grass and
+shrubs. A little lake, long and narrow, glimmered in the sun at the
+rear. Further away stood the shacks of the Mexican workers, the
+corrals, wool sheds and shearing pens. To the right lay the low hills,
+splattered with dark patches of chaparral; to the left the unbounded
+green prairie blending against the blue heavens.
+
+"It's a home, Teddy," said Octavia, breathlessly; "that's what it
+is--it's a home."
+
+"Not so bad for a sheep ranch," admitted Teddy, with excusable pride.
+"I've been tinkering on it at odd times."
+
+A Mexican youth sprang from somewhere in the grass, and took charge of
+the creams. The mistress and the manager entered the house.
+
+"Here's Mrs. MacIntyre," said Teddy, as a placid, neat, elderly lady
+came out upon the gallery to meet them. "Mrs. Mac, here's the boss.
+Very likely she will be wanting a hunk of ham and a dish of beans
+after her drive."
+
+Mrs. MacIntyre, the housekeeper, as much a fixture on the place as the
+lake or the live-oaks, received the imputation of the ranch's
+resources of refreshment with mild indignation, and was about to give
+it utterance when Octavia spoke.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. MacIntyre, don't apologize for Teddy. Yes, I call him Teddy.
+So does every one whom he hasn't duped into taking him seriously. You
+see, we used to cut paper dolls and play jackstraws together ages ago.
+No one minds what he says."
+
+"No," said Teddy, "no one minds what he says, just so he doesn't do it
+again."
+
+Octavia cast one of those subtle, sidelong glances toward him from
+beneath her lowered eyelids--a glance that Teddy used to describe as
+an upper-cut. But there was nothing in his ingenuous, weather-tanned
+face to warrant a suspicion that he was making an allusion--nothing.
+Beyond a doubt, thought Octavia, he had forgotten.
+
+"Mr. Westlake likes his fun," said Mrs. Maclntyre, as she conducted
+Octavia to her rooms. "But," she added, loyally, "people around here
+usually pay attention to what he says when he talks in earnest. I
+don't know what would have become of this place without him."
+
+Two rooms at the east end of the house had been arranged for the
+occupancy of the ranch's mistress. When she entered them a slight
+dismay seized her at their bare appearance and the scantiness of
+their furniture; but she quickly reflected that the climate was a
+semi-tropical one, and was moved to appreciation of the well-conceived
+efforts to conform to it. The sashes had already been removed from the
+big windows, and white curtains waved in the Gulf breeze that streamed
+through the wide jalousies. The bare floor was amply strewn with cool
+rugs; the chairs were inviting, deep, dreamy willows; the walls were
+papered with a light, cheerful olive. One whole side of her sitting
+room was covered with books on smooth, unpainted pine shelves. She
+flew to these at once. Before her was a well-selected library. She
+caught glimpses of titles of volumes of fiction and travel not yet
+seasoned from the dampness of the press.
+
+Presently, recollecting that she was now in a wilderness given over to
+mutton, centipedes and privations, the incongruity of these luxuries
+struck her, and, with intuitive feminine suspicion, she began turning
+to the fly-leaves of volume after volume. Upon each one was inscribed
+in fluent characters the name of Theodore Westlake, Jr.
+
+Octavia, fatigued by her long journey, retired early that night. Lying
+upon her white, cool bed, she rested deliciously, but sleep coquetted
+long with her. She listened to faint noises whose strangeness kept her
+faculties on the alert--the fractious yelping of the coyotes, the
+ceaseless, low symphony of the wind, the distant booming of the frogs
+about the lake, the lamentation of a concertina in the Mexicans'
+quarters. There were many conflicting feelings in her heart--
+thankfulness and rebellion, peace and disquietude, loneliness and a
+sense of protecting care, happiness and an old, haunting pain.
+
+She did what any other woman would have done--sought relief in a
+wholesome tide of unreasonable tears, and her last words, murmured to
+herself before slumber, capitulating, came softly to woo her, were "He
+has forgotten."
+
+The manager of the Rancho de las Sombras was no dilettante. He was a
+"hustler." He was generally up, mounted, and away of mornings before
+the rest of the household were awake, making the rounds of the flocks
+and camps. This was the duty of the major-domo, a stately old Mexican
+with a princely air and manner, but Teddy seemed to have a great deal
+of confidence in his own eyesight. Except in the busy seasons, he
+nearly always returned to the ranch to breakfast at eight o'clock,
+with Octavia and Mrs. Maclntyre, at the little table set in the
+central hallway, bringing with him a tonic and breezy cheerfulness
+full of the health and flavour of the prairies.
+
+A few days after Octavia's arrival he made her get out one of her
+riding skirts, and curtail it to a shortness demanded by the chaparral
+brakes.
+
+With some misgivings she donned this and the pair of buckskin leggings
+he prescribed in addition, and, mounted upon a dancing pony, rode with
+him to view her possessions. He showed her everything--the flocks
+of ewes, muttons and grazing lambs, the dipping vats, the shearing
+pens, the uncouth merino rams in their little pasture, the water-tanks
+prepared against the summer drought--giving account of his stewardship
+with a boyish enthusiasm that never flagged.
+
+Where was the old Teddy that she knew so well? This side of him was
+the same, and it was a side that pleased her; but this was all she
+ever saw of him now. Where was his sentimentality--those old,
+varying moods of impetuous love-making, of fanciful, quixotic
+devotion, of heart-breaking gloom, of alternating, absurd tenderness
+and haughty dignity? His nature had been a sensitive one, his
+temperament bordering closely on the artistic. She knew that, besides
+being a follower of fashion and its fads and sports, he had cultivated
+tastes of a finer nature. He had written things, he had tampered with
+colours, he was something of a student in certain branches of art, and
+once she had been admitted to all his aspirations and thoughts. But
+now--and she could not avoid the conclusion--Teddy had barricaded
+against her every side of himself except one--the side that showed the
+manager of the Rancho de las Sombras and a jolly chum who had forgiven
+and forgotten. Queerly enough the words of Mr. Bannister's description
+of her property came into her mind--"all inclosed within a strong
+barbed-wire fence."
+
+"Teddy's fenced, too," said Octavia to herself.
+
+It was not difficult for her to reason out the cause of his
+fortifications. It had originated one night at the Hammersmiths' ball.
+It occurred at a time soon after she had decided to accept Colonel
+Beaupree and his million, which was no more than her looks and the
+entre she held to the inner circles were worth. Teddy had proposed
+with all his impetuosity and fire, and she looked him straight in the
+eyes, an said, coldly and finally: "Never let me hear any such silly
+nonsense from you again." "You won't," said Teddy, with an expression
+around his mouth, and--now Teddy was inclosed within a strong
+barbed-wire fence.
+
+It was on this first ride of inspection that Teddy was seized by the
+inspiration that suggested the name of Mother Goose's heroine, and he
+at once bestowed it upon Octavia. The idea, supported by both a
+similarity of names and identity of occupations, seemed to strike him
+as a peculiarly happy one, and he never tired of using it. The
+Mexicans on the ranch also took up the name, adding another syllable
+to accommodate their lingual incapacity for the final "p," gravely
+referring to her as "La Madama Bo-Peepy." Eventually it spread, and
+"Madame Bo-Peep's ranch" was as often mentioned as the "Rancho de las
+Sombras."
+
+Came the long, hot season from May to September, when work is scarce
+on the ranches. Octavia passed the days in a kind of lotus-eater's
+dream. Books, hammocks, correspondence with a few intimate friends, a
+renewed interest in her old water-colour box and easel--these
+disposed of the sultry hours of daylight. The evenings were always
+sure to bring enjoyment. Best of all were the rapturous horseback
+rides with Teddy, when the moon gave light over the wind-swept
+leagues, chaperoned by the wheeling night-hawk and the startled owl.
+Often the Mexicans would come up from their shacks with their guitars
+and sing the weirdest of heart-breaking songs. There were long, cosy
+chats on the breezy gallery, and an interminable warfare of wits
+between Teddy and Mrs. MacIntyre, whose abundant Scotch shrewdness
+often more than overmatched the lighter humour in which she was
+lacking.
+
+And the nights came, one after another, and were filed away by weeks
+and months--nights soft and languorous and fragrant, that should
+have driven Strephon to Chloe over wires however barbed, that might
+have drawn Cupid himself to hunt, lasso in hand, among those amorous
+pastures--but Teddy kept his fences up.
+
+One July night Madame Bo-Peep and her ranch manager were sitting on
+the east gallery. Teddy had been exhausting the science of
+prognostication as to the probabilities of a price of twenty-four
+cents for the autumn clip, and had then subsided into an anesthetic
+cloud of Havana smoke. Only as incompetent a judge as a woman would
+have failed to note long ago that at least a third of his salary must
+have gone up in the fumes of those imported Regalias.
+
+"Teddy," said Octavia, suddenly, and rather sharply, "what are you
+working down here on a ranch for?"
+
+"One hundred per," said Teddy, glibly, "and found."
+
+"I've a good mind to discharge you."
+
+"Can't do it," said Teddy, with a grin.
+
+"Why not?" demanded Octavia, with argumentative heat.
+
+"Under contract. Terms of sale respect all unexpired contracts. Mine
+runs until 12 P. M., December thirty-first. You might get up at
+midnight on that date and fire me. If you try it sooner I'll be in a
+position to bring legal proceedings."
+
+Octavia seemed to be considering the prospects of litigation.
+
+"But," continued Teddy cheerfully, "I've been thinking of resigning
+anyway."
+
+Octavia's rocking-chair ceased its motion. There were centipedes in
+this country, she felt sure; and Indians, and vast, lonely, desolate,
+empty wastes; all within strong barbed-wire fence. There was a Van
+Dresser pride, but there was also a Van Dresser heart. She must know
+for certain whether or not he had forgotten.
+
+"Ah, well, Teddy," she said, with a fine assumption of polite
+interest, "it's lonely down here; you're longing to get back to the
+old life--to polo and lobsters and theatres and balls."
+
+"Never cared much for balls," said Teddy virtuously.
+
+"You're getting old, Teddy. Your memory is failing. Nobody ever knew
+you to miss a dance, unless it occurred on the same night with another
+one which you attended. And you showed such shocking bad taste, too,
+in dancing too often with the same partner. Let me see, what was that
+Forbes girl's name--the one with wall eyes--Mabel, wasn't it?"
+
+"No; Adle. Mabel was the one with the bony elbows. That wasn't wall
+in Adle's eyes. It was soul. We used to talk sonnets together, and
+Verlaine. Just then I was trying to run a pipe from the Pierian
+spring."
+
+"You were on the floor with her," said Octavia, undeflected, "five
+times at the Hammersmiths'."
+
+"Hammersmiths' what?" questioned Teddy, vacuously.
+
+"Ball--ball," said Octavia, viciously. "What were we talking of?"
+
+"Eyes, I thought," said Teddy, after some reflection; "and elbows."
+
+"Those Hammersmiths," went on Octavia, in her sweetest society
+prattle, after subduing an intense desire to yank a handful of
+sunburnt, sandy hair from the head lying back contentedly against the
+canvas of the steamer chair, "had too much money. Mines, wasn't it? It
+was something that paid something to the ton. You couldn't get a glass
+of plain water in their house. Everything at that ball was dreadfully
+overdone."
+
+"It was," said Teddy.
+
+"Such a crowd there was!" Octavia continued, conscious that she was
+talking the rapid drivel of a school-girl describing her first dance.
+"The balconies were as warm as the rooms. I--lost--something at
+that ball." The last sentence was uttered in a tone calculated to
+remove the barbs from miles of wire.
+
+"So did I," confessed Teddy, in a lower voice.
+
+"A glove," said Octavia, falling back as the enemy approached her
+ditches.
+
+"Caste," said Teddy, halting his firing line without loss. "I
+hobnobbed, half the evening with one of Hammersmith's miners, a fellow
+who kept his hands in his pockets, and talked like an archangel about
+reduction plants and drifts and levels and sluice-boxes."
+
+"A pearl-gray glove, nearly new," sighed Octavia, mournfully.
+
+"A bang-up chap, that McArdle," maintained Teddy approvingly. "A
+man who hated olives and elevators; a man who handled mountains as
+croquettes, and built tunnels in the air; a man who never uttered a
+word of silly nonsense in his life. Did you sign those lease-renewal
+applications yet, madama? They've got to be on file in the land office
+by the thirty-first."
+
+Teddy turned his head lazily. Octavia's chair was vacant.
+
+
+A certain centipede, crawling along the lines marked out by fate,
+expounded the situation. It was early one morning while Octavia and
+Mrs. Maclntyre were trimming the honeysuckle on the west gallery.
+Teddy had risen and departed hastily before daylight in response to
+word that a flock of ewes had been scattered from their bedding ground
+during the night by a thunder-storm.
+
+The centipede, driven by destiny, showed himself on the floor of the
+gallery, and then, the screeches of the two women giving him his cue,
+he scuttled with all his yellow legs through the open door into the
+furthermost west room, which was Teddy's. Arming themselves with
+domestic utensils selected with regard to their length, Octavia and
+Mrs. Maclntyre, with much clutching of skirts and skirmishing for the
+position of rear guard in the attacking force, followed.
+
+Once outside, the centipede seemed to have disappeared, and his
+prospective murderers began a thorough but cautious search for their
+victim.
+
+Even in the midst of such a dangerous and absorbing adventure Octavia
+was conscious of an awed curiosity on finding herself in Teddy's
+sanctum. In that room he sat alone, silently communing with those
+secret thoughts that he now shared with no one, dreamed there whatever
+dreams he now called on no one to interpret.
+
+It was the room of a Spartan or a soldier. In one corner stood a wide,
+canvas-covered cot; in another, a small bookcase; in another, a grim
+stand of Winchesters and shotguns. An immense table, strewn with
+letters, papers and documents and surmounted by a set of pigeon-holes,
+occupied one side.
+
+The centipede showed genius in concealing himself in such bare
+quarters. Mrs. Maclntyre was poking a broom-handle behind the
+bookcase. Octavia approached Teddy's cot. The room was just as the
+manager had left it in his hurry. The Mexican maid had not yet given
+it her attention. There was his big pillow with the imprint of his
+head still in the centre. She thought the horrid beast might have
+climbed the cot and hidden itself to bite Teddy. Centipedes were thus
+cruel and vindictive toward managers.
+
+She cautiously overturned the pillow, and then parted her lips to give
+the signal for reinforcements at sight of a long, slender, dark object
+lying there. But, repressing it in time, she caught up a glove, a
+pearl-gray glove, flattened--it might be conceived--by many, many
+months of nightly pressure beneath the pillow of the man who had
+forgotten the Hammersmiths' ball. Teddy must have left so hurriedly
+that morning that he had, for once, forgotten to transfer it to its
+resting-place by day. Even managers, who are notoriously wily and
+cunning, are sometimes caught up with.
+
+Octavia slid the gray glove into the bosom of her summery morning gown.
+It was hers. Men who put themselves within a strong barbed-wire fence,
+and remember Hammersmith balls only by the talk of miners about
+sluice-boxes, should not be allowed to possess such articles.
+
+After all, what a paradise this prairie country was! How it blossomed
+like the rose when you found things that were thought to be lost! How
+delicious was that morning breeze coming in the windows, fresh and
+sweet with the breath of the yellow ratama blooms! Might one not
+stand, for a minute, with shining, far-gazing eyes, and dream that
+mistakes might be corrected?
+
+Why was Mrs. Maclntyre poking about so absurdly with a broom?
+
+"I've found it," said Mrs. MacIntyre, banging the door. "Here it is."
+
+"Did you lose something? asked Octavia, with sweetly polite
+non-interest.
+
+"The little devil!" said Mrs. Maclntyre, driven to violence. "Ye've no
+forgotten him alretty?"
+
+Between them they slew the centipede. Thus was he rewarded for his
+agency toward the recovery of things lost at the Hammersmiths' ball.
+
+It seems that Teddy, in due course, remembered the glove, and when he
+returned to the house at sunset made a secret but exhaustive search
+for it. Not until evening, upon the moonlit eastern gallery, did he
+find it. It was upon the hand that he had thought lost to him forever,
+and so he was moved to repeat certain nonsense that he had been
+commanded never, never to utter again. Teddy's fences were down.
+
+This time there was no ambition to stand in the way, and the wooing
+was as natural and successful as should be between ardent shepherd and
+gentle shepherdess.
+
+The prairies changed to a garden. The Rancho de las Sombras became the
+Ranch of Light.
+
+A few days later Octavia received a letter from Mr. Bannister, in
+reply to one she had written to him asking some questions about her
+business. A portion of the letter ran as follows:
+
+
+ "I am at a loss to account for your references to the sheep ranch.
+ Two months after your departure to take up your residence upon it,
+ it was discovered that Colonel Beaupree's title was worthless. A
+ deed came to light showing that he disposed of the property before
+ his death. The matter was reported to your manager, Mr. Westlake,
+ who at once repurchased the property. It is entirely beyond my
+ powers of conjecture to imagine how you have remained in ignorance
+ of this fact. I beg that you that will at once confer with that
+ gentleman, who will, at least, corroborate my statement."
+
+
+Octavia sought Teddy, with battle in her eye.
+
+"What are you working on this ranch for?" she asked once more.
+
+"One hundred--" he began to repeat, but saw in her face that she
+knew. She held Mr. Bannister's letter in her hand. He knew that the
+game was up.
+
+"It's my ranch," said Teddy, like a schoolboy detected in evil. "It's
+a mighty poor manager that isn't able to absorb the boss's business if
+you give him time."
+
+"Why were you working down here?" pursued Octavia still struggling
+after the key to the riddle of Teddy.
+
+"To tell the truth, 'Tave," said Teddy, with quiet candour, "it wasn't
+for the salary. That about kept me in cigars and sunburn lotions. I
+was sent south by my doctor. 'Twas that right lung that was going to
+the bad on account of over-exercise and strain at polo and gymnastics.
+I needed climate and ozone and rest and things of that sort."
+
+In an instant Octavia was close against the vicinity of the affected
+organ. Mr. Bannister's letter fluttered to the floor.
+
+"It's--it's well now, isn't it, Teddy?"
+
+"Sound as a mesquite chunk. I deceived you in one thing. I paid fifty
+thousand for your ranch as soon as I found you had no title. I had
+just about that much income accumulated at my banker's while I've been
+herding sheep down here, so it was almost like picking the thing up on
+a bargain-counter for a penny. There's another little surplus of
+unearned increment piling up there, 'Tave. I've been thinking of a
+wedding trip in a yacht with white ribbons tied to the mast, through
+the Mediterranean, and then up among the Hebrides and down Norway to
+the Zuyder Zee."
+
+"And I was thinking," said Octavia, softly, "of a wedding gallop with
+my manager among the flocks of sheep and back to a wedding breakfast
+with Mrs. MacIntyre on the gallery, with, maybe, a sprig of orange
+blossom fastened to the red jar above the table."
+
+Teddy laughed, and began to chant:
+
+ "Little Bo-Peep has lost her sheep,
+ And doesn't know where to find 'em.
+ Let 'em alone, and they'll come home,
+ And--"
+
+Octavia drew his head down, and whispered in his ear, But that is one
+of the tales they brought behind them.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHIRLIGIGS***
+
+
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diff --git a/old/1595-8.zip b/old/1595-8.zip
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Whirligigs, by O. Henry
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Whirligigs
+
+
+Author: O. Henry
+
+
+
+Release Date: January, 1999 [eBook #1595]
+Most recently updated: February 3, 2011
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHIRLIGIGS***
+
+
+E-text prepared by anonymous Project Gutenberg Volunteers
+and revised by Joseph E. Loewenstein, M.D.
+
+
+
+WHIRLIGIGS
+
+by
+
+O. HENRY
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. THE WORLD AND THE DOOR
+
+ II. THE THEORY AND THE HOUND
+
+ III. THE HYPOTHESES OF FAILURE
+
+ IV. CALLOWAY'S CODE
+
+ V. A MATTER OF MEAN ELEVATION
+
+ VI. "GIRL"
+
+ VII. SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW
+
+ VIII. THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF
+
+ IX. THE MARRY MONTH OF MAY
+
+ X. A TECHNICAL ERROR
+
+ XI. SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE
+
+ XII. THE WHIRLIGIG OF LIFE
+
+ XIII. A SACRIFICE HIT
+
+ XIV. THE ROADS WE TAKE
+
+ XV. A BLACKJACK BARGAINER
+
+ XVI. THE SONG AND THE SERGEANT
+
+ XVII. ONE DOLLAR'S WORTH
+
+XVIII. A NEWSPAPER STORY
+
+ XIX. TOMMY'S BURGLAR
+
+ XX. A CHAPARRAL CHRISTMAS
+
+ XXI. A LITTLE LOCAL COLOUR
+
+ XXII. GEORGIA'S RULING
+
+XXIII. BLIND MAN'S HOLIDAY
+
+ XXIV. MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+THE WORLD AND THE DOOR
+
+
+A favourite dodge to get your story read by the public is to assert
+that it is true, and then add that Truth is stranger than Fiction.
+I do not know if the yarn I am anxious for you to read is true; but
+the Spanish purser of the fruit steamer _El Carrero_ swore to me by
+the shrine of Santa Guadalupe that he had the facts from the U. S.
+vice-consul at La Paz--a person who could not possibly have been
+cognizant of half of them.
+
+As for the adage quoted above, I take pleasure in puncturing it by
+affirming that I read in a purely fictional story the other day the
+line: "'Be it so,' said the policeman." Nothing so strange has yet
+cropped out in Truth.
+
+
+When H. Ferguson Hedges, millionaire promoter, investor and
+man-about-New-York, turned his thoughts upon matters convivial, and
+word of it went "down the line," bouncers took a precautionary turn
+at the Indian clubs, waiters put ironstone china on his favourite
+tables, cab drivers crowded close to the curbstone in front of
+all-night cafes, and careful cashiers in his regular haunts charged
+up a few bottles to his account by way of preface and introduction.
+
+As a money power a one-millionaire is of small account in a city where
+the man who cuts your slice of beef behind the free-lunch counter
+rides to work in his own automobile. But Hedges spent his money as
+lavishly, loudly and showily as though he were only a clerk
+squandering a week's wages. And, after all, the bartender takes no
+interest in your reserve fund. He would rather look you up on his
+cash register than in Bradstreet.
+
+On the evening that the material allegation of facts begins, Hedges
+was bidding dull care begone in the company of five or six good
+fellows--acquaintances and friends who had gathered in his wake.
+
+Among them were two younger men--Ralph Merriam, a broker, and Wade,
+his friend.
+
+Two deep-sea cabmen were chartered. At Columbus Circle they hove
+to long enough to revile the statue of the great navigator,
+unpatriotically rebuking him for having voyaged in search of land
+instead of liquids. Midnight overtook the party marooned in the rear
+of a cheap cafe far uptown.
+
+Hedges was arrogant, overriding and quarrelsome. He was burly and
+tough, iron-gray but vigorous, "good" for the rest of the night. There
+was a dispute--about nothing that matters--and the five-fingered words
+were passed--the words that represent the glove cast into the lists.
+Merriam played the role of the verbal Hotspur.
+
+Hedges rose quickly, seized his chair, swung it once and smashed
+wildly down at Merriam's head. Merriam dodged, drew a small revolver
+and shot Hedges in the chest. The leading roysterer stumbled, fell in
+a wry heap, and lay still.
+
+Wade, a commuter, had formed that habit of promptness. He juggled
+Merriam out a side door, walked him to the corner, ran him a block and
+caught a hansom. They rode five minutes and then got out on a dark
+corner and dismissed the cab. Across the street the lights of a small
+saloon betrayed its hectic hospitality.
+
+"Go in the back room of that saloon," said Wade, "and wait. I'll go
+find out what's doing and let you know. You may take two drinks while
+I am gone--no more."
+
+At ten minutes to one o'clock Wade returned. "Brace up, old chap," he
+said. "The ambulance got there just as I did. The doctor says he's
+dead. You may have one more drink. You let me run this thing for
+you. You've got to skip. I don't believe a chair is legally a deadly
+weapon. You've got to make tracks, that's all there is to it."
+
+Merriam complained of the cold querulously, and asked for another
+drink. "Did you notice what big veins he had on the back of his
+hands?" he said. "I never could stand--I never could--"
+
+"Take one more," said Wade, "and then come on. I'll see you through."
+
+Wade kept his promise so well that at eleven o'clock the next morning
+Merriam, with a new suit case full of new clothes and hair-brushes,
+stepped quietly on board a little 500-ton fruit steamer at an East
+River pier. The vessel had brought the season's first cargo of limes
+from Port Limon, and was homeward bound. Merriam had his bank balance
+of $2,800 in his pocket in large bills, and brief instructions to pile
+up as much water as he could between himself and New York. There was
+no time for anything more.
+
+From Port Limon Merriam worked down the coast by schooner and sloop to
+Colon, thence across the isthmus to Panama, where he caught a tramp
+bound for Callao and such intermediate ports as might tempt the
+discursive skipper from his course.
+
+It was at La Paz that Merriam decided to land--La Paz the Beautiful,
+a little harbourless town smothered in a living green ribbon that
+banded the foot of a cloud-piercing mountain. Here the little
+steamer stopped to tread water while the captain's dory took him
+ashore that he might feel the pulse of the cocoanut market. Merriam
+went too, with his suit case, and remained.
+
+Kalb, the vice-consul, a Graeco-Armenian citizen of the United States,
+born in Hessen-Darmstadt, and educated in Cincinnati ward primaries,
+considered all Americans his brothers and bankers. He attached
+himself to Merriam's elbow, introduced him to every one in La Paz who
+wore shoes, borrowed ten dollars and went back to his hammock.
+
+There was a little wooden hotel in the edge of a banana grove, facing
+the sea, that catered to the tastes of the few foreigners that had
+dropped out of the world into the _triste_ Peruvian town. At Kalb's
+introductory: "Shake hands with ----," he had obediently exchanged
+manual salutations with a German doctor, one French and two Italian
+merchants, and three or four Americans who were spoken of as gold men,
+rubber men, mahogany men--anything but men of living tissue.
+
+After dinner Merriam sat in a corner of the broad front _galeria_ with
+Bibb, a Vermonter interested in hydraulic mining, and smoked and drank
+Scotch "smoke." The moonlit sea, spreading infinitely before him,
+seemed to separate him beyond all apprehension from his old life. The
+horrid tragedy in which he had played such a disastrous part now
+began, for the first time since he stole on board the fruiter, a
+wretched fugitive, to lose its sharper outlines. Distance lent
+assuagement to his view. Bibb had opened the flood-gates of a stream
+of long-dammed discourse, overjoyed to have captured an audience that
+had not suffered under a hundred repetitions of his views and
+theories.
+
+"One year more," said Bibb, "and I'll go back to God's country. Oh, I
+know it's pretty here, and you get _dolce far niente_ handed to you in
+chunks, but this country wasn't made for a white man to live in.
+You've got to have to plug through snow now and then, and see a game
+of baseball and wear a stiff collar and have a policeman cuss you.
+Still, La Paz is a good sort of a pipe-dreamy old hole. And Mrs.
+Conant is here. When any of us feels particularly like jumping into
+the sea we rush around to her house and propose. It's nicer to be
+rejected by Mrs. Conant than it is to be drowned. And they say
+drowning is a delightful sensation."
+
+"Many like her here?" asked Merriam.
+
+"Not anywhere," said Bibb, with a comfortable sigh. "She's the only
+white woman in La Paz. The rest range from a dappled dun to the
+colour of a b-flat piano key. She's been here a year. Comes
+from--well, you know how a woman can talk--ask 'em to say 'string'
+and they'll say 'crow's foot' or 'cat's cradle.' Sometimes you'd think
+she was from Oshkosh, and again from Jacksonville, Florida, and the
+next day from Cape Cod."
+
+"Mystery?" ventured Merriam.
+
+"M--well, she looks it; but her talk's translucent enough. But
+that's a woman. I suppose if the Sphinx were to begin talking she'd
+merely say: 'Goodness me! more visitors coming for dinner, and nothing
+to eat but the sand which is here.' But you won't think about that
+when you meet her, Merriam. You'll propose to her too."
+
+To make a hard story soft, Merriam did meet her and propose to her.
+He found her to be a woman in black with hair the colour of a bronze
+turkey's wings, and mysterious, _remembering_ eyes that--well, that
+looked as if she might have been a trained nurse looking on when Eve
+was created. Her words and manner, though, were translucent, as Bibb
+had said. She spoke, vaguely, of friends in California and some of
+the lower parishes in Louisiana. The tropical climate and indolent
+life suited her; she had thought of buying an orange grove later on;
+La Paz, all in all, charmed her.
+
+Merriam's courtship of the Sphinx lasted three months, although be did
+not know that he was courting her. He was using her as an antidote
+for remorse, until he found, too late, that he had acquired the habit.
+During that time he had received no news from home. Wade did not know
+where he was; and he was not sure of Wade's exact address, and was
+afraid to write. He thought he had better let matters rest as they
+were for a while.
+
+One afternoon he and Mrs. Conant hired two ponies and rode out along
+the mountain trail as far as the little cold river that came tumbling
+down the foothills. There they stopped for a drink, and Merriam spoke
+his piece--he proposed, as Bibb had prophesied.
+
+Mrs. Conant gave him one glance of brilliant tenderness, and then her
+face took on such a strange, haggard look that Merriam was shaken out
+of his intoxication and back to his senses.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Florence," he said, releasing her hand; "but I'll
+have to hedge on part of what I said. I can't ask you to marry me, of
+course. I killed a man in New York--a man who was my friend--shot
+him down--in quite a cowardly manner, I understand. Of course, the
+drinking didn't excuse it. Well, I couldn't resist having my say; and
+I'll always mean it. I'm here as a fugitive from justice, and--I
+suppose that ends our acquaintance."
+
+Mrs. Conant plucked little leaves assiduously from the low-hanging
+branch of a lime tree.
+
+"I suppose so," she said, in low and oddly uneven tones; "but that
+depends upon you. I'll be as honest as you were. I poisoned my
+husband. I am a self-made widow. A man cannot love a murderess. So
+I suppose that ends our acquaintance."
+
+She looked up at him slowly. His face turned a little pale, and he
+stared at her blankly, like a deaf-and-dumb man who was wondering what
+it was all about.
+
+She took a swift step toward him, with stiffened arms and eyes
+blazing.
+
+"Don't look at me like that!" she cried, as though she were in acute
+pain. "Curse me, or turn your back on me, but don't look that way.
+Am I a woman to be beaten? If I could show you--here on my arms,
+and on my back are scars--and it has been more than a year--scars
+that he made in his brutal rages. A holy nun would have risen and
+struck the fiend down. Yes, I killed him. The foul and horrible
+words that he hurled at me that last day are repeated in my ears every
+night when I sleep. And then came his blows, and the end of my
+endurance. I got the poison that afternoon. It was his custom to
+drink every night in the library before going to bed a hot punch made
+of rum and wine. Only from my fair hands would he receive it--
+because he knew the fumes of spirits always sickened me. That night
+when the maid brought it to me I sent her downstairs on an errand.
+Before taking him his drink I went to my little private cabinet and
+poured into it more than a tea-spoonful of tincture of aconite--
+enough to kill three men, so I had learned. I had drawn $6,000 that I
+had in bank, and with that and a few things in a satchel I left the
+house without any one seeing me. As I passed the library I heard him
+stagger up and fall heavily on a couch. I took a night train for New
+Orleans, and from there I sailed to the Bermudas. I finally cast
+anchor in La Paz. And now what have you to say? Can you open your
+mouth?"
+
+Merriam came back to life.
+
+"Florence," he said earnestly, "I want you. I don't care what you've
+done. If the world--"
+
+"Ralph," she interrupted, almost with a scream, "be my world!"
+
+Her eyes melted; she relaxed magnificently and swayed toward Merriam
+so suddenly that he had to jump to catch her.
+
+Dear me! in such scenes how the talk runs into artificial prose. But
+it can't be helped. It's the subconscious smell of the footlights'
+smoke that's in all of us. Stir the depths of your cook's soul
+sufficiently and she will discourse in Bulwer-Lyttonese.
+
+Merriam and Mrs. Conant were very happy. He announced their
+engagement at the Hotel Orilla del Mar. Eight foreigners and four
+native Astors pounded his back and shouted insincere congratulations
+at him. Pedrito, the Castilian-mannered barkeep, was goaded to extra
+duty until his agility would have turned a Boston cherry-phosphate
+clerk a pale lilac with envy.
+
+They were both very happy. According to the strange mathematics of
+the god of mutual affinity, the shadows that clouded their pasts when
+united became only half as dense instead of darker. They shut the
+world out and bolted the doors. Each was the other's world. Mrs.
+Conant lived again. The remembering look left her eyes. Merriam was
+with her every moment that was possible. On a little plateau under a
+grove of palms and calabash trees they were going to build a fairy
+bungalow. They were to be married in two months. Many hours of the
+day they had their heads together over the house plans. Their joint
+capital would set up a business in fruit or woods that would yield a
+comfortable support. "Good night, my world," would say Mrs. Conant
+every evening when Merriam left her for his hotel. They were very
+happy. Their love had, circumstantially, that element of melancholy
+in it that it seems to require to attain its supremest elevation. And
+it seemed that their mutual great misfortune or sin was a bond that
+nothing could sever.
+
+One day a steamer hove in the offing. Bare-legged and bare-shouldered
+La Paz scampered down to the beach, for the arrival of a steamer was
+their loop-the-loop, circus, Emancipation Day and four-o'clock tea.
+
+When the steamer was near enough, wise ones proclaimed that she was
+the _Pajaro_, bound up-coast from Callao to Panama.
+
+The _Pajaro_ put on brakes a mile off shore. Soon a boat came bobbing
+shoreward. Merriam strolled down on the beach to look on. In the
+shallow water the Carib sailors sprang out and dragged the boat with a
+mighty rush to the firm shingle. Out climbed the purser, the captain
+and two passengers, ploughing their way through the deep sand toward
+the hotel. Merriam glanced toward them with the mild interest due to
+strangers. There was something familiar to him in the walk of one of
+the passengers. He looked again, and his blood seemed to turn to
+strawberry ice cream in his veins. Burly, arrogant, debonair as ever,
+H. Ferguson Hedges, the man he had killed, was coming toward him ten
+feet away.
+
+When Hedges saw Merriam his face flushed a dark red. Then he shouted
+in his old, bluff way: "Hello, Merriam. Glad to see you. Didn't
+expect to find you out here. Quinby, this is my old friend Merriam,
+of New York--Merriam, Mr. Quinby."
+
+Merriam gave Hedges and then Quinby an ice-cold hand. "Br-r-r-r!" said
+Hedges. "But you've got a frapped flipper! Man, you're not well.
+You're as yellow as a Chinaman. Malarial here? Steer us to a bar if
+there is such a thing, and let's take a prophylactic."
+
+Merriam, still half comatose, led them toward the Hotel Orilla del
+Mar.
+
+"Quinby and I," explained Hedges, puffing through the slippery sand,
+"are looking out along the coast for some investments. We've just
+come up from Concepcion and Valparaiso and Lima. The captain of this
+subsidized ferry boat told us there was some good picking around
+here in silver mines. So we got off. Now, where is that cafe,
+Merriam? Oh, in this portable soda water pavilion?"
+
+Leaving Quinby at the bar, Hedges drew Merriam aside.
+
+"Now, what does this mean?" he said, with gruff kindness. "Are you
+sulking about that fool row we had?"
+
+"I thought," stammered Merriam--"I heard--they told me you were--
+that I had--"
+
+"Well, you didn't, and I'm not," said Hedges. "That fool young
+ambulance surgeon told Wade I was a candidate for a coffin just
+because I'd got tired and quit breathing. I laid up in a private
+hospital for a month; but here I am, kicking as hard as ever. Wade
+and I tried to find you, but couldn't. Now, Merriam, shake hands and
+forget it all. I was as much to blame as you were; and the shot
+really did me good--I came out of the hospital as healthy and fit as
+a cab horse. Come on; that drink's waiting."
+
+"Old man," said Merriam, brokenly, "I don't know how to thank you--I
+--well, you know--"
+
+"Oh, forget it," boomed Hedges. "Quinby'll die of thirst if we don't
+join him."
+
+Bibb was sitting on the shady side of the gallery waiting for the
+eleven-o'clock breakfast. Presently Merriam came out and joined him.
+His eye was strangely bright.
+
+"Bibb, my boy," said he, slowly waving his hand, "do you see those
+mountains and that sea and sky and sunshine?--they're mine, Bibbsy
+--all mine."
+
+"You go in," said Bibb, "and take eight grains of quinine, right away.
+It won't do in this climate for a man to get to thinking he's
+Rockefeller, or James O'Neill either."
+
+Inside, the purser was untying a great roll of newspapers, many of
+them weeks old, gathered in the lower ports by the _Pajaro_ to be
+distributed at casual stopping-places. Thus do the beneficent voyagers
+scatter news and entertainment among the prisoners of sea and
+mountains.
+
+Tio Pancho, the hotel proprietor, set his great silver-rimmed _anteojos_
+upon his nose and divided the papers into a number of smaller rolls.
+A barefooted _muchacho_ dashed in, desiring the post of messenger.
+
+"_Bien venido_," said Tio Pancho. "This to Senora Conant; that to el
+Doctor S-S-Schlegel--_Dios_! what a name to say!--that to Senor Davis
+--one for Don Alberto. These two for the _Casa de Huespedes, Numero
+6, en la calle de las Buenas Gracias_. And say to them all, _muchacho_,
+that the _Pajaro_ sails for Panama at three this afternoon. If any have
+letters to send by the post, let them come quickly, that they may
+first pass through the _correo_."
+
+Mrs. Conant received her roll of newspapers at four o'clock. The boy
+was late in delivering them, because he had been deflected from his
+duty by an iguana that crossed his path and to which he immediately
+gave chase. But it made no hardship, for she had no letters to send.
+
+She was idling in a hammock in the patio of the house that she
+occupied, half awake, half happily dreaming of the paradise that she
+and Merriam had created out of the wrecks of their pasts. She was
+content now for the horizon of that shimmering sea to be the horizon
+of her life. They had shut out the world and closed the door.
+
+Merriam was coming to her house at seven, after his dinner at the
+hotel. She would put on a white dress and an apricot-coloured lace
+mantilla, and they would walk an hour under the cocoanut palms by the
+lagoon. She smiled contentedly, and chose a paper at random from the
+roll the boy had brought.
+
+At first the words of a certain headline of a Sunday newspaper meant
+nothing to her; they conveyed only a visualized sense of familiarity.
+The largest type ran thus: "Lloyd B. Conant secures divorce." And then
+the subheadings: "Well-known Saint Louis paint manufacturer wins
+suit, pleading one year's absence of wife." "Her mysterious
+disappearance recalled." "Nothing has been heard of her since."
+
+Twisting herself quickly out of the hammock, Mrs. Conant's eye soon
+traversed the half-column of the "Recall." It ended thus: "It will be
+remembered that Mrs. Conant disappeared one evening in March of last
+year. It was freely rumoured that her marriage with Lloyd B. Conant
+resulted in much unhappiness. Stories were not wanting to the effect
+that his cruelty toward his wife had more than once taken the form of
+physical abuse. After her departure a full bottle of tincture of
+aconite, a deadly poison, was found in a small medicine cabinet in her
+bedroom. This might have been an indication that she meditated
+suicide. It is supposed that she abandoned such an intention if she
+possessed it, and left her home instead."
+
+Mrs. Conant slowly dropped the paper, and sat on a chair, clasping her
+hands tightly.
+
+"Let me think--O God!--let me think," she whispered. "I took
+the bottle with me . . . I threw it out of the window of the train
+. . . I-- . . . there was another bottle in the cabinet . . .
+there were two, side by side--the aconite--and the valerian that I
+took when I could not sleep . . . If they found the aconite bottle
+full, why--but, he is alive, of course--I gave him only a
+harmless dose of valerian . . . I am not a murderess in fact . . .
+Ralph, I--O God, don't let this be a dream!"
+
+She went into the part of the house that she rented from the old
+Peruvian man and his wife, shut the door, and walked up and down her
+room swiftly and feverishly for half an hour. Merriam's photograph
+stood in a frame on a table. She picked it up, looked at it with a
+smile of exquisite tenderness, and--dropped four tears on it. And
+Merriam only twenty rods away! Then she stood still for ten minutes,
+looking into space. She looked into space through a slowly opening
+door. On her side of the door was the building material for a castle
+of Romance--love, an Arcady of waving palms, a lullaby of waves on
+the shore of a haven of rest, respite, peace, a lotus land of dreamy
+ease and security--a life of poetry and heart's ease and refuge.
+Romanticist, will you tell me what Mrs. Conant saw on the other side
+of the door? You cannot?--that is, you will not? Very well; then
+listen.
+
+_She saw herself go into a department store and buy five spools of
+silk thread and three yards of gingham to make an apron for the cook.
+"Shall I charge it, ma'am?" asked the clerk. As she walked out a
+lady whom she met greeted her cordially. "Oh, where did you get the
+pattern for those sleeves, dear Mrs. Conant?" she said. At the corner
+a policeman helped her across the street and touched his helmet. "Any
+callers?" she asked the maid when she reached home. "Mrs. Waldron,"
+answered the maid, "and the two Misses Jenkinson." "Very well," she
+said. "You may bring me a cup of tea, Maggie._"
+
+Mrs. Conant went to the door and called Angela, the old Peruvian
+woman. "If Mateo is there send him to me." Mateo, a half-breed,
+shuffling and old but efficient, came.
+
+"Is there a steamer or a vessel of any kind leaving this coast
+to-night or to-morrow that I can get passage on?" she asked.
+
+Mateo considered.
+
+"At Punta Reina, thirty miles down the coast, senora," he answered,
+"there is a small steamer loading with cinchona and dyewoods. She
+sails for San Francisco to-morrow at sunrise. So says my brother, who
+arrived in his sloop to-day, passing by Punta Reina."
+
+"You must take me in that sloop to that steamer to-night. Will you do
+that?"
+
+"Perhaps--" Mateo shrugged a suggestive shoulder. Mrs. Conant
+took a handful of money from a drawer and gave it to him.
+
+"Get the sloop ready behind the little point of land below the town,"
+she ordered. "Get sailors, and be ready to sail at six o'clock. In
+half an hour bring a cart partly filled with straw into the patio
+here, and take my trunk to the sloop. There is more money yet. Now,
+hurry."
+
+For one time Mateo walked away without shuffling his feet.
+
+"Angela," cried Mrs. Conant, almost fiercely, "come and help me pack.
+I am going away. Out with this trunk. My clothes first. Stir
+yourself. Those dark dresses first. Hurry."
+
+From the first she did not waver from her decision. Her view was clear
+and final. Her door had opened and let the world in. Her love for
+Merriam was not lessened; but it now appeared a hopeless and
+unrealizable thing. The visions of their future that had seemed so
+blissful and complete had vanished. She tried to assure herself that
+her renunciation was rather for his sake than for her own. Now that
+she was cleared of her burden--at least, technically--would not
+his own weigh too heavily upon him? If she should cling to him, would
+not the difference forever silently mar and corrode their happiness?
+Thus she reasoned; but there were a thousand little voices calling to
+her that she could feel rather than hear, like the hum of distant,
+powerful machinery--the little voices of the world, that, when
+raised in unison, can send their insistent call through the thickest
+door.
+
+Once while packing, a brief shadow of the lotus dream came back to
+her. She held Merriam's picture to her heart with one hand, while she
+threw a pair of shoes into the trunk with her other.
+
+At six o'clock Mateo returned and reported the sloop ready. He and
+his brother lifted the trunk into the cart, covered it with straw and
+conveyed it to the point of embarkation. From there they transferred
+it on board in the sloop's dory. Then Mateo returned for additional
+orders.
+
+Mrs. Conant was ready. She had settled all business matters with
+Angela, and was impatiently waiting. She wore a long, loose black-silk
+duster that she often walked about in when the evenings were chilly.
+On her head was a small round hat, and over it the apricot-coloured
+lace mantilla.
+
+Dusk had quickly followed the short twilight. Mateo led her by dark
+and grass-grown streets toward the point behind which the sloop was
+anchored. On turning a corner they beheld the Hotel Orilla del Mar
+three streets away, nebulously aglow with its array of kerosene lamps.
+
+Mrs. Conant paused, with streaming eyes. "I must, I _must_ see him
+once before I go," she murmured in anguish. But even then she did not
+falter in her decision. Quickly she invented a plan by which she might
+speak to him, and yet make her departure without his knowing. She
+would walk past the hotel, ask some one to call him out and talk a few
+moments on some trivial excuse, leaving him expecting to see her at
+her home at seven.
+
+She unpinned her hat and gave it to Mateo. "Keep this, and wait here
+till I come," she ordered. Then she draped the mantilla over her head
+as she usually did when walking after sunset, and went straight to the
+Orilla del Mar.
+
+She was glad to see the bulky, white-clad figure of Tio Pancho
+standing alone on the gallery.
+
+"Tio Pancho," she said, with a charming smile, "may I trouble you to
+ask Mr. Merriam to come out for just a few moments that I may speak
+with him?"
+
+Tio Pancho bowed as an elephant bows.
+
+"Buenas tardes, Senora Conant," he said, as a cavalier talks. And
+then he went on, less at his ease:
+
+"But does not the senora know that Senor Merriam sailed on the _Pajaro_
+for Panama at three o'clock of this afternoon?"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+THE THEORY AND THE HOUND
+
+
+Not many days ago my old friend from the tropics, J. P. Bridger,
+United States consul on the island of Ratona, was in the city. We
+had wassail and jubilee and saw the Flatiron building, and missed
+seeing the Bronxless menagerie by about a couple of nights. And
+then, at the ebb tide, we were walking up a street that parallels and
+parodies Broadway.
+
+A woman with a comely and mundane countenance passed us, holding in
+leash a wheezing, vicious, waddling, brute of a yellow pug. The dog
+entangled himself with Bridger's legs and mumbled his ankles in a
+snarling, peevish, sulky bite. Bridger, with a happy smile, kicked
+the breath out of the brute; the woman showered us with a quick rain
+of well-conceived adjectives that left us in no doubt as to our place
+in her opinion, and we passed on. Ten yards farther an old woman
+with disordered white hair and her bankbook tucked well hidden
+beneath her tattered shawl begged. Bridger stopped and disinterred
+for her a quarter from his holiday waistcoat.
+
+On the next corner a quarter of a ton of well-clothed man with a
+rice-powdered, fat, white jowl, stood holding the chain of a
+devil-born bulldog whose forelegs were strangers by the length of a
+dachshund. A little woman in a last-season's hat confronted him and
+wept, which was plainly all she could do, while he cursed her in low
+sweet, practised tones.
+
+Bridger smiled again--strictly to himself--and this time he took out
+a little memorandum book and made a note of it. This he had no right
+to do without due explanation, and I said so.
+
+"It's a new theory," said Bridger, "that I picked up down in Ratona.
+I've been gathering support for it as I knock about. The world isn't
+ripe for it yet, but--well I'll tell you; and then you run your
+mind back along the people you've known and see what you make of it."
+
+And so I cornered Bridger in a place where they have artificial palms
+and wine; and he told me the story which is here in my words and on
+his responsibility.
+
+One afternoon at three o'clock, on the island of Ratona, a boy raced
+along the beach screaming, "_Pajaro_, ahoy!"
+
+Thus he made known the keenness of his hearing and the justice of his
+discrimination in pitch.
+
+He who first heard and made oral proclamation concerning the toot
+of an approaching steamer's whistle, and correctly named the steamer,
+was a small hero in Ratona--until the next steamer came. Wherefore,
+there was rivalry among the barefoot youth of Ratona, and many fell
+victims to the softly blown conch shells of sloops which, as they
+enter harbour, sound surprisingly like a distant steamer's signal.
+And some could name you the vessel when its call, in your duller
+ears, sounded no louder than the sigh of the wind through the
+branches of the cocoanut palms.
+
+But to-day he who proclaimed the _Pajaro_ gained his honours. Ratona
+bent its ear to listen; and soon the deep-tongued blast grew louder
+and nearer, and at length Ratona saw above the line of palms on the
+low "point" the two black funnels of the fruiter slowly creeping
+toward the mouth of the harbour.
+
+You must know that Ratona is an island twenty miles off the south of
+a South American republic. It is a port of that republic; and it
+sleeps sweetly in a smiling sea, toiling not nor spinning; fed by the
+abundant tropics where all things "ripen, cease and fall toward the
+grave."
+
+Eight hundred people dream life away in a green-embowered village
+that follows the horseshoe curve of its bijou harbour. They are
+mostly Spanish and Indian _mestizos_, with a shading of San Domingo
+Negroes, a lightening of pure-blood Spanish officials and a slight
+leavening of the froth of three or four pioneering white races. No
+steamers touch at Ratona save the fruit steamers which take on their
+banana inspectors there on their way to the coast. They leave Sunday
+newspapers, ice, quinine, bacon, watermelons and vaccine matter at
+the island and that is about all the touch Ratona gets with the
+world.
+
+The _Pajaro_ paused at the mouth of the harbour, rolling heavily in
+the swell that sent the whitecaps racing beyond the smooth water
+inside. Already two dories from the village--one conveying fruit
+inspectors, the other going for what it could get--were halfway out
+to the steamer.
+
+The inspectors' dory was taken on board with them, and the _Pajaro_
+steamed away for the mainland for its load of fruit.
+
+The other boat returned to Ratona bearing a contribution from the
+_Pajaro's_ store of ice, the usual roll of newspapers and one
+passenger--Taylor Plunkett, sheriff of Chatham County, Kentucky.
+
+Bridger, the United States consul at Ratona, was cleaning his rifle
+in the official shanty under a bread-fruit tree twenty yards from the
+water of the harbour. The consul occupied a place somewhat near the
+tail of his political party's procession. The music of the band
+wagon sounded very faintly to him in the distance. The plums of
+office went to others. Bridger's share of the spoils--the
+consulship at Ratona--was little more than a prune--a dried prune
+from the boarding-house department of the public crib. But $900
+yearly was opulence in Ratona. Besides, Bridger had contracted a
+passion for shooting alligators in the lagoons near his consulate,
+and was not unhappy.
+
+He looked up from a careful inspection of his rifle lock and saw a
+broad man filling his doorway. A broad, noiseless, slow-moving man,
+sunburned almost to the brown of Vandyke. A man of forty-five,
+neatly clothed in homespun, with scanty light hair, a close-clipped
+brown-and-gray beard and pale-blue eyes expressing mildness and
+simplicity.
+
+"You are Mr. Bridger, the consul," said the broad man. "They
+directed me here. Can you tell me what those big bunches of things
+like gourds are in those trees that look like feather dusters along
+the edge of the water?"
+
+"Take that chair," said the consul, reoiling his cleaning rag.
+"No, the other one--that bamboo thing won't hold you. Why, they're
+cocoanuts--green cocoanuts. The shell of 'em is always a light
+green before they're ripe."
+
+"Much obliged," said the other man, sitting down carefully. "I
+didn't quite like to tell the folks at home they were olives unless I
+was sure about it. My name is Plunkett. I'm sheriff of Chatham
+County, Kentucky. I've got extradition papers in my pocket
+authorizing the arrest of a man on this island. They've been signed
+by the President of this country, and they're in correct shape. The
+man's name is Wade Williams. He's in the cocoanut raising
+business. What he's wanted for is the murder of his wife two years
+ago. Where can I find him?"
+
+The consul squinted an eye and looked through his rifle barrel.
+
+"There's nobody on the island who calls himself 'Williams,'" he
+remarked.
+
+"Didn't suppose there was," said Plunkett mildly. "He'll do by any
+other name."
+
+"Besides myself," said Bridger, "there are only two Americans on
+Ratona--Bob Reeves and Henry Morgan."
+
+"The man I want sells cocoanuts," suggested Plunkett.
+
+"You see that cocoanut walk extending up to the point?" said the
+consul, waving his hand toward the open door. "That belongs to Bob
+Reeves. Henry Morgan owns half the trees to loo'ard on the island."
+
+"One, month ago," said the sheriff, "Wade Williams wrote a
+confidential letter to a man in Chatham county, telling him where he
+was and how he was getting along. The letter was lost; and the person
+that found it gave it away. They sent me after him, and I've got the
+papers. I reckon he's one of your cocoanut men for certain."
+
+"You've got his picture, of course," said Bridger. "It might be
+Reeves or Morgan, but I'd hate to think it. They're both as fine
+fellows as you'd meet in an all-day auto ride."
+
+"No," doubtfully answered Plunkett; "there wasn't any picture of
+Williams to be had. And I never saw him myself. I've been sheriff
+only a year. But I've got a pretty accurate description of him. About
+5 feet 11; dark-hair and eyes; nose inclined to be Roman; heavy about
+the shoulders; strong, white teeth, with none missing; laughs a good
+deal, talkative; drinks considerably but never to intoxication; looks
+you square in the eye when talking; age thirty-five. Which one of
+your men does that description fit?"
+
+The consul grinned broadly.
+
+"I'll tell you what you do," he said, laying down his rifle and
+slipping on his dingy black alpaca coat. "You come along, Mr.
+Plunkett, and I'll take you up to see the boys. If you can tell
+which one of 'em your description fits better than it does the
+other you have the advantage of me."
+
+Bridger conducted the sheriff out and along the hard beach close to
+which the tiny houses of the village were distributed. Immediately
+back of the town rose sudden, small, thickly wooded hills. Up one of
+these, by means of steps cut in the hard clay, the consul led
+Plunkett. On the very verge of an eminence was perched a two-room
+wooden cottage with a thatched roof. A Carib woman was washing
+clothes outside. The consul ushered the sheriff to the door of the
+room that overlooked the harbour.
+
+Two men were in the room, about to sit down, in their shirt sleeves,
+to a table spread for dinner. They bore little resemblance one to
+the other in detail; but the general description given by Plunkett
+could have been justly applied to either. In height, colour of hair,
+shape of nose, build and manners each of them tallied with it. They
+were fair types of jovial, ready-witted, broad-gauged Americans who
+had gravitated together for companionship in an alien land.
+
+"Hello, Bridger" they called in unison at sight Of the consul. "Come
+and have dinner with us!" And then they noticed Plunkett at his
+heels, and came forward with hospitable curiosity.
+
+"Gentlemen," said the consul, his voice taking on unaccustomed
+formality, "this is Mr. Plunkett. Mr. Plunkett--Mr. Reeves and Mr.
+Morgan."
+
+The cocoanut barons greeted the newcomer joyously. Reeves seemed
+about an inch taller than Morgan, but his laugh was not quite as
+loud. Morgan's eyes were deep brown; Reeves's were black. Reeves
+was the host and busied himself with fetching other chairs and
+calling to the Carib woman for supplemental table ware. It was
+explained that Morgan lived in a bamboo shack to "loo'ard," but that
+every day the two friends dined together. Plunkett stood still
+during the preparations, looking about mildly with his pale-blue
+eyes. Bridger looked apologetic and uneasy.
+
+At length two other covers were laid and the company was assigned to
+places. Reeves and Morgan stood side by side across the table from
+the visitors. Reeves nodded genially as a signal for all to seat
+themselves. And then suddenly Plunkett raised his hand with a
+gesture of authority. He was looking straight between Reeves and
+Morgan.
+
+"Wade Williams," he said quietly, "you are under arrest for murder."
+
+Reeves and Morgan instantly exchanged a quick, bright glance, the
+quality of which was interrogation, with a seasoning of surprise.
+Then, simultaneously they turned to the speaker with a puzzled and
+frank deprecation in their gaze.
+
+"Can't say that we understand you, Mr. Plunkett," said Morgan,
+cheerfully. "Did you say 'Williams'?"
+
+"What's the joke, Bridgy?" asked Reeves, turning, to the consul with
+a smile.
+
+Before Bridger could answer Plunkett spoke again.
+
+"I'll explain," he said, quietly. "One of you don't need any
+explanation, but this is for the other one. One of you is Wade
+Williams of Chatham County, Kentucky. You murdered your wife on May
+5, two years ago, after ill-treating and abusing her continually for
+five years. I have the proper papers in my pocket for taking you
+back with me, and you are going. We will return on the fruit steamer
+that comes back by this island to-morrow to leave its inspectors. I
+acknowledge, gentlemen, that I'm not quite sure which one of you is
+Williams. But Wade Williams goes back to Chatham County to-morrow. I
+want you to understand that."
+
+A great sound of merry laughter from Morgan and Reeves went out over
+the still harbour. Two or three fishermen in the fleet of sloops
+anchored there looked up at the house of the diablos Americanos on
+the hill and wondered.
+
+"My dear Mr. Plunkett," cried Morgan, conquering his mirth, "the
+dinner is getting, cold. Let us sit down and eat. I am anxious to
+get my spoon into that shark-fin soup. Business afterward."
+
+"Sit down, gentlemen, if you please," added Reeves, pleasantly. "I
+am sure Mr. Plunkett will not object. Perhaps a little time may be of
+advantage to him in identifying--the gentleman he wishes to
+arrest."
+
+"No objections, I'm sure," said Plunkett, dropping into his chair
+heavily. "I'm hungry myself. I didn't want to accept the
+hospitality of you folks without giving you notice; that's all."
+
+Reeves set bottles and glasses on the table.
+
+"There's cognac," he said, "and anisada, and Scotch 'smoke,' and rye.
+Take your choice."
+
+Bridger chose rye, Reeves poured three fingers of Scotch for himself,
+Morgan took the same. The sheriff, against much protestation, filled
+his glass from the water bottle.
+
+"Here's to the appetite," said Reeves, raising his glass, "of Mr.
+Williams!" Morgan's laugh and his drink encountering sent him into a
+choking splutter. All began to pay attention to the dinner, which
+was well cooked and palatable.
+
+"Williams!" called Plunkett, suddenly and sharply.
+
+All looked up wonderingly. Reeves found the sheriff's mild eye
+resting upon him. He flushed a little.
+
+"See here," he said, with some asperity, "my name's Reeves, and I
+don't want you to--" But the comedy of the thing came to his rescue,
+and he ended with a laugh.
+
+"I suppose, Mr. Plunkett," said Morgan, carefully seasoning an
+alligator pear, "that you are aware of the fact that you will import
+a good deal of trouble for yourself into Kentucky if you take back
+the wrong man--that is, of course, if you take anybody back?"
+
+"Thank you for the salt," said the sheriff. "Oh, I'll take somebody
+back. It'll be one of you two gentlemen. Yes, I know I'd get stuck
+for damages if I make a mistake. But I'm going to try to get the
+right man."
+
+"I'll tell you what you do," said Morgan, leaning forward with a
+jolly twinkle in his eyes. "You take me. I'll go without any
+trouble. The cocoanut business hasn't panned out well this year, and
+I'd like to make some extra money out of your bondsmen."
+
+"That's not fair," chimed in Reeves. "I got only $16 a thousand for
+my last shipment. Take me, Mr. Plunkett."
+
+"I'll take Wade Williams," said the sheriff, patiently, "or I'll come
+pretty close to it."
+
+"It's like dining with a ghost," remarked Morgan, with a pretended
+shiver. "The ghost of a murderer, too! Will somebody pass the
+toothpicks to the shade of the naughty Mr. Williams?"
+
+Plunkett seemed as unconcerned as if he were dining at his own table
+in Chatham County. He was a gallant trencherman, and the strange
+tropic viands tickled his palate. Heavy, commonplace, almost
+slothful in his movements, he appeared to be devoid of all the
+cunning and watchfulness of the sleuth. He even ceased to observe,
+with any sharpness or attempted discrimination, the two men, one of
+whom he had undertaken with surprising self-confidence, to drag
+away upon the serious charge of wife-murder. Here, indeed, was a
+problem set before him that if wrongly solved would have amounted to
+his serious discomfiture, yet there he sat puzzling his soul (to all
+appearances) over the novel flavour of a broiled iguana cutlet.
+
+The consul felt a decided discomfort. Reeves and Morgan were his
+friends and pals; yet the sheriff from Kentucky had a certain right
+to his official aid and moral support. So Bridger sat the silentest
+around the board and tried to estimate the peculiar situation. His
+conclusion was that both Reeves and Morgan, quickwitted, as he knew
+them to be, had conceived at the moment of Plunkett's disclosure of
+his mission--and in the brief space of a lightning flash--the
+idea that the other might be the guilty Williams; and that each of
+them had decided in that moment loyally to protect his comrade
+against the doom that threatened him. This was the consul's theory
+and if he had been a bookmaker at a race of wits for life and liberty
+he would have offered heavy odds against the plodding sheriff from
+Chatham County, Kentucky.
+
+When the meal was concluded the Carib woman came and removed the
+dishes and cloth. Reeves strewed the table with excellent cigars,
+and Plunkett, with the others, lighted one of these with evident
+gratification.
+
+"I may be dull," said Morgan, with a grin and a wink at Bridger; "but
+I want to know if I am. Now, I say this is all a joke of Mr.
+Plunkett's, concocted to frighten two babes-in-the-woods. Is this
+Williamson to be taken seriously or not?"
+
+"'Williams,'" corrected Plunkett gravely. "I never got off any jokes
+in my life. I know I wouldn't travel 2,000 miles to get off a poor
+one as this would be if I didn't take Wade Williams back with me.
+Gentlemen!" continued the sheriff, now letting his mild eyes travel
+impartially from one of the company to another, "see if you can find
+any joke in this case. Wade Williams is listening to the words I
+utter now; but out of politeness, I will speak of him as a third
+person. For five years he made his wife lead the life of a dog--No;
+I'll take that back. No dog in Kentucky was ever treated as she
+was. He spent the money that she brought him--spent it at races, at
+the card table and on horses and hunting. He was a good fellow to
+his friends, but a cold, sullen demon at home. He wound up the five
+years of neglect by striking her with his closed hand--a hand as
+hard as a stone--when she was ill and weak from suffering. She
+died the next day; and he skipped. That's all there is to it. It's
+enough. I never saw Williams; but I knew his wife. I'm not a man to
+tell half. She and I were keeping company when she met him. She
+went to Louisville on a visit and saw him there. I'll admit that he
+spoilt my chances in no time. I lived then on the edge of the
+Cumberland mountains. I was elected sheriff of Chatham County a year
+after Wade Williams killed his wife. My official duty sends me out
+here after him; but I'll admit that there's personal feeling, too.
+And he's going back with me. Mr.--er--Reeves, will you pass me a
+match?
+
+"Awfully imprudent of Williams," said Morgan, putting his feet up
+against the wall, "to strike a Kentucky lady. Seems to me I've heard
+they were scrappers."
+
+"Bad, bad Williams," said Reeves, pouring out more Scotch.
+
+The two men spoke lightly, but the consul saw and felt the tension
+and the carefulness in their actions and words. "Good old fellows,"
+he said to himself; "they're both all right. Each of 'em is standing
+by the other like a little brick church."
+
+And then a dog walked into the room where they sat--a black-and-tan
+hound, long-eared, lazy, confident of welcome.
+
+Plunkett turned his head and looked at the animal, which halted,
+confidently, within a few feet of his chair.
+
+Suddenly the sheriff, with a deep-mouthed oath, left his seat and,
+bestowed upon the dog a vicious and heavy kick, with his ponderous
+shoe.
+
+The hound, heartbroken, astonished, with flapping ears and incurved
+tail, uttered a piercing yelp of pain and surprise.
+
+Reeves and the consul remained in their chairs, saying nothing, but
+astonished at the unexpected show of intolerance from the easy-going
+man from Chatham county.
+
+But Morgan, with a suddenly purpling face, leaped, to his feet and
+raised a threatening arm above the guest.
+
+"You--brute!" he shouted, passionately; "why did you do that?"
+
+Quickly the amenities returned, Plunkett muttered some indistinct
+apology and regained his seat. Morgan with a decided effort
+controlled his indignation and also returned to his chair.
+
+And then Plunkett with the spring of a tiger, leaped around the
+corner of the table and snapped handcuffs on the paralyzed Morgan's
+wrists.
+
+"Hound-lover and woman-killer!" he cried; "get ready to meet your
+God."
+
+When Bridger had finished I asked him:
+
+"Did he get the right man?"
+
+"He did," said the Consul.
+
+"And how did he know?" I inquired, being in a kind of bewilderment.
+
+"When he put Morgan in the dory," answered Bridger, "the next day to
+take him aboard the _Pajaro_, this man Plunkett stopped to shake hands
+with me and I asked him the same question."
+
+"'Mr. Bridger,' said he, 'I'm a Kentuckian, and I've seen a great
+deal of both men and animals. And I never yet saw a man that was
+overfond of horses and dogs but what was cruel to women.'"
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+THE HYPOTHESES OF FAILURE
+
+
+Lawyer Gooch bestowed his undivided attention upon the engrossing arts
+of his profession. But one flight of fancy did he allow his mind to
+entertain. He was fond of likening his suite of office rooms to the
+bottom of a ship. The rooms were three in number, with a door
+opening from one to another. These doors could also be closed.
+
+"Ships," Lawyer Gooch would say, "are constructed for safety, with
+separate, water-tight compartments in their bottoms. If one
+compartment springs a leak it fills with water; but the good ship goes
+on unhurt. Were it not for the separating bulkheads one leak would
+sink the vessel. Now it often happens that while I am occupied with
+clients, other clients with conflicting interests call. With the
+assistance of Archibald--an office boy with a future--I cause the
+dangerous influx to be diverted into separate compartments, while I
+sound with my legal plummet the depth of each. If necessary, they
+may be baled into the hallway and permitted to escape by way of the
+stairs, which we may term the lee scuppers. Thus the good ship of
+business is kept afloat; whereas if the element that supports her were
+allowed to mingle freely in her hold we might be swamped--ha, ha, ha!"
+
+The law is dry. Good jokes are few. Surely it might be permitted
+Lawyer Gooch to mitigate the bore of briefs, the tedium of torts and
+the prosiness of processes with even so light a levy upon the good
+property of humour.
+
+Lawyer Gooch's practice leaned largely to the settlement of marital
+infelicities. Did matrimony languish through complications, he
+mediated, soothed and arbitrated. Did it suffer from implications,
+he readjusted, defended and championed. Did it arrive at the
+extremity of duplications, he always got light sentences for his
+clients.
+
+But not always was Lawyer Gooch the keen, armed, wily belligerent,
+ready with his two-edged sword to lop off the shackles of Hymen. He
+had been known to build up instead of demolishing, to reunite instead
+of severing, to lead erring and foolish ones back into the fold
+instead of scattering the flock. Often had he by his eloquent and
+moving appeals sent husband and wife, weeping, back into each other's
+arms. Frequently he had coached childhood so successfully that, at
+the psychological moment (and at a given signal) the plaintive pipe of
+"Papa, won't you tum home adain to me and muvver?" had won the day
+and upheld the pillars of a tottering home.
+
+Unprejudiced persons admitted that Lawyer Gooch received as big fees
+from these reyoked clients as would have been paid him had the cases
+been contested in court. Prejudiced ones intimated that his fees were
+doubled, because the penitent couples always came back later for the
+divorce, anyhow.
+
+There came a season in June when the legal ship of Lawyer Gooch (to
+borrow his own figure) was nearly becalmed. The divorce mill grinds
+slowly in June. It is the month of Cupid and Hymen.
+
+Lawyer Gooch, then, sat idle in the middle room of his clientless
+suite. A small anteroom connected--or rather separated--this
+apartment from the hallway. Here was stationed Archibald, who wrested
+from visitors their cards or oral nomenclature which he bore to his
+master while they waited.
+
+Suddenly, on this day, there came a great knocking at the outermost
+door.
+
+Archibald, opening it, was thrust aside as superfluous by the visitor,
+who without due reverence at once penetrated to the office of Lawyer
+Gooch and threw himself with good-natured insolence into a comfortable
+chair facing that gentlemen.
+
+"You are Phineas C. Gooch, attorney-at-law?" said the visitor, his
+tone of voice and inflection making his words at once a question, an
+assertion and an accusation.
+
+Before committing himself by a reply, the lawyer estimated his
+possible client in one of his brief but shrewd and calculating
+glances.
+
+The man was of the emphatic type--large-sized, active, bold and
+debonair in demeanour, vain beyond a doubt, slightly swaggering, ready
+and at ease. He was well-clothed, but with a shade too much
+ornateness. He was seeking a lawyer; but if that fact would seem to
+saddle him with troubles they were not patent in his beaming eye and
+courageous air.
+
+"My name is Gooch," at length the lawyer admitted. Upon pressure he
+would also have confessed to the Phineas C. But he did not consider it
+good practice to volunteer information. "I did not receive your
+card," he continued, by way of rebuke, "so I--"
+
+"I know you didn't," remarked the visitor, coolly; "And you won't just
+yet. Light up?" He threw a leg over an arm of his chair, and tossed
+a handful of rich-hued cigars upon the table. Lawyer Gooch knew the
+brand. He thawed just enough to accept the invitation to smoke.
+
+"You are a divorce lawyer," said the cardless visitor. This time there
+was no interrogation in his voice. Nor did his words constitute a
+simple assertion. They formed a charge--a denunciation--as one would
+say to a dog: "You are a dog." Lawyer Gooch was silent under the
+imputation.
+
+"You handle," continued the visitor, "all the various ramifications of
+busted-up connubiality. You are a surgeon, we might saw, who extracts
+Cupid's darts when he shoots 'em into the wrong parties. You furnish
+patent, incandescent lights for premises where the torch of Hymen has
+burned so low you can't light a cigar at it. Am I right, Mr. Gooch?"
+
+"I have undertaken cases," said the lawyer, guardedly, "in the line to
+which your figurative speech seems to refer. Do you wish to consult me
+professionally, Mr.--" The lawyer paused, with significance.
+
+"Not yet," said the other, with an arch wave of his cigar, "not just
+yet. Let us approach the subject with the caution that should have
+been used in the original act that makes this pow-wow necessary.
+There exists a matrimonial jumble to be straightened out. But before
+I give you names I want your honest--well, anyhow, your professional
+opinion on the merits of the mix-up. I want you to size up the
+catastrophe--abstractly--you understand? I'm Mr. Nobody; and I've got
+a story to tell you. Then you say what's what. Do you get my
+wireless?"
+
+"You want to state a hypothetical case?" suggested Lawyer Gooch.
+
+"That's the word I was after. 'Apothecary' was the best shot I could
+make at it in my mind. The hypothetical goes. I'll state the case.
+Suppose there's a woman--a deuced fine-looking woman--who has run
+away from her husband and home? She's badly mashed on another man who
+went to her town to work up some real estate business. Now, we may as
+well call this woman's husband Thomas R. Billings, for that's his
+name. I'm giving you straight tips on the cognomens. The Lothario
+chap is Henry K. Jessup. The Billingses lived in a little town called
+Susanville--a good many miles from here. Now, Jessup leaves
+Susanville two weeks ago. The next day Mrs. Billings follows him.
+She's dead gone on this man Jessup; you can bet your law library on
+that."
+
+Lawyer Gooch's client said this with such unctuous satisfaction that
+even the callous lawyer experienced a slight ripple of repulsion. He
+now saw clearly in his fatuous visitor the conceit of the lady-killer,
+the egoistic complacency of the successful trifler.
+
+"Now," continued the visitor, "suppose this Mrs. Billings wasn't happy
+at home? We'll say she and her husband didn't gee worth a cent.
+They've got incompatibility to burn. The things she likes, Billings
+wouldn't have as a gift with trading-stamps. It's Tabby and Rover
+with them all the time. She's an educated woman in science and
+culture, and she reads things out loud at meetings. Billings is not
+on. He don't appreciate progress and obelisks and ethics, and
+things of that sort. Old Billings is simply a blink when it comes to
+such things. The lady is out and out above his class. Now, lawyer,
+don't it look like a fair equalization of rights and wrongs that a
+woman like that should be allowed to throw down Billings and take the
+man that can appreciate her?
+
+"Incompatibility," said Lawyer Gooch, "is undoubtedly the source of
+much marital discord and unhappiness. Where it is positively proved,
+divorce would seem to be the equitable remedy. Are you--excuse me--is
+this man Jessup one to whom the lady may safely trust her future?"
+
+"Oh, you can bet on Jessup," said the client, with a confident wag of
+his head. "Jessup's all right. He'll do the square thing. Why, he
+left Susanville just to keep people from talking about Mrs. Billings.
+But she followed him up, and now, of course, he'll stick to her.
+When she gets a divorce, all legal and proper, Jessup will do the
+proper thing."
+
+"And now," said Lawyer Gooch, "continuing the hypothesis, if you
+prefer, and supposing that my services should be desired in the case,
+what--"
+
+The client rose impulsively to his feet.
+
+"Oh, dang the hypothetical business," he exclaimed, impatiently.
+"Let's let her drop, and get down to straight talk. You ought to know
+who I am by this time. I want that woman to have her divorce. I'll
+pay for it. The day you set Mrs. Billings free I'll pay you five
+hundred dollars."
+
+Lawyer Gooch's client banged his fist upon the table to punctuate his
+generosity.
+
+"If that is the case--" began the lawyer.
+
+"Lady to see you, sir," bawled Archibald, bouncing in from his
+anteroom. He had orders to always announce immediately any client
+that might come. There was no sense in turning business away.
+
+Lawyer Gooch took client number one by the arm and led him suavely
+into one of the adjoining rooms. "Favour me by remaining here a few
+minutes, sir," said he. "I will return and resume our consultation
+with the least possible delay. I am rather expecting a visit from a
+very wealthy old lady in connection with a will. I will not keep you
+waiting long."
+
+The breezy gentleman seated himself with obliging acquiescence, and
+took up a magazine. The lawyer returned to the middle office,
+carefully closing behind him the connecting door.
+
+"Show the lady in, Archibald," he said to the office boy, who was
+awaiting the order.
+
+A tall lady, of commanding presence and sternly handsome, entered
+the room. She wore robes--robes; not clothes--ample and fluent.
+In her eye could be perceived the lambent flame of genius and soul.
+In her hand was a green bag of the capacity of a bushel, and an
+umbrella that also seemed to wear a robe, ample and fluent. She
+accepted a chair.
+
+"Are you Mr. Phineas C. Gooch, the lawyer?" she asked, in formal and
+unconciliatory tones.
+
+"I am," answered Lawyer Gooch, without circumlocution. He never
+circumlocuted when dealing with a woman. Women circumlocute. Time is
+wasted when both sides in debate employ the same tactics.
+
+"As a lawyer, sir," began the lady, "you may have acquired some
+knowledge of the human heart. Do you believe that the pusillanimous
+and petty conventions of our artificial social life should stand as an
+obstacle in the way of a noble and affectionate heart when it finds
+its true mate among the miserable and worthless wretches in the world
+that are called men?"
+
+"Madam," said Lawyer Gooch, in the tone that he used in curbing his
+female clients, "this is an office for conducting the practice of law.
+I am a lawyer, not a philosopher, nor the editor of an 'Answers to the
+Lovelorn' column of a newspaper. I have other clients waiting. I
+will ask you kindly to come to the point."
+
+"Well, you needn't get so stiff around the gills about it," said the
+lady, with a snap of her luminous eyes and a startling gyration of her
+umbrella. "Business is what I've come for. I want your opinion in
+the matter of a suit for divorce, as the vulgar would call it, but
+which is really only the readjustment of the false and ignoble
+conditions that the short-sighted laws of man have interposed between
+a loving--"
+
+"I beg your pardon, madam," interrupted Lawyer Gooch, with some
+impatience, "for reminding you again that this is a law office.
+Perhaps Mrs. Wilcox--"
+
+"Mrs. Wilcox is all right," cut in the lady, with a hint of asperity.
+"And so are Tolstoi, and Mrs. Gertrude Atherton, and Omar Khayyam, and
+Mr. Edward Bok. I've read 'em all. I would like to discuss with you
+the divine right of the soul as opposed to the freedom-destroying
+restrictions of a bigoted and narrow-minded society. But I will
+proceed to business. I would prefer to lay the matter before you in
+an impersonal way until you pass upon its merits. That is to describe
+it as a supposable instance, without--"
+
+"You wish to state a hypothetical case?" said Lawyer Gooch.
+
+"I was going to say that," said the lady, sharply. "Now, suppose there
+is a woman who is all soul and heart and aspirations for a complete
+existence. This woman has a husband who is far below her in intellect,
+in taste--in everything. Bah! he is a brute. He despises literature.
+He sneers at the lofty thoughts of the world's great thinkers. He
+thinks only of real estate and such sordid things. He is no mate for a
+woman with soul. We will say that this unfortunate wife one day meets
+with her ideal--a man with brain and heart and force. She loves him.
+Although this man feels the thrill of a new-found affinity he is too
+noble, too honourable to declare himself. He flies from the presence
+of his beloved. She flies after him, trampling, with superb
+indifference, upon the fetters with which an unenlightened social
+system would bind her. Now, what will a divorce cost? Eliza Ann
+Timmins, the poetess of Sycamore Gap, got one for three hundred and
+forty dollars. Can I--I mean can this lady I speak of get one that
+cheap?"
+
+"Madam," said Lawyer Gooch, "your last two or three sentences delight
+me with their intelligence and clearness. Can we not now abandon the
+hypothetical and come down to names and business?"
+
+"I should say so," exclaimed the lady, adopting the practical with
+admirable readiness. "Thomas R. Billings is the name of the low
+brute who stands between the happiness of his legal--his legal, but
+not his spiritual--wife and Henry K. Jessup, the noble man whom
+nature intended for her mate. I," concluded the client, with an air
+of dramatic revelation, "am Mrs. Billings!"
+
+"Gentlemen to see you, sir," shouted Archibald, invading the room
+almost at a handspring. Lawyer Gooch arose from his chair.
+
+"Mrs. Billings," he said courteously, "allow me to conduct you into
+the adjoining office apartment for a few minutes. I am expecting a
+very wealthy old gentleman on business connected with a will. In a
+very short while I will join you, and continue our consultation."
+
+With his accustomed chivalrous manner, Lawyer Gooch ushered his
+soulful client into the remaining unoccupied room, and came out,
+closing the door with circumspection.
+
+The next visitor introduced by Archibald was a thin, nervous,
+irritable-looking man of middle age, with a worried and apprehensive
+expression of countenance. He carried in one hand a small satchel,
+which he set down upon the floor beside the chair which the lawyer
+placed for him. His clothing was of good quality, but it was worn
+without regard to neatness or style, and appeared to be covered with
+the dust of travel.
+
+"You make a specialty of divorce cases," he said, in, an agitated but
+business-like tone.
+
+"I may say," began Lawyer Gooch, "that my practice has not
+altogether avoided--"
+
+"I know you do," interrupted client number three. "You needn't tell
+me. I've heard all about you. I have a case to lay before you
+without necessarily disclosing any connection that I might have with
+it--that is--"
+
+"You wish," said Lawyer Gooch, "to state a hypothetical case.
+
+"You may call it that. I am a plain man of business. I will be as
+brief as possible. We will first take up hypothetical woman. We will
+say she is married uncongenially. In many ways she is a superior
+woman. Physically she is considered to be handsome. She is devoted
+to what she calls literature--poetry and prose, and such stuff. Her
+husband is a plain man in the business walks of life. Their home has
+not been happy, although the husband has tried to make it so. Some
+time ago a man--a stranger--came to the peaceful town in which
+they lived and engaged in some real estate operations. This woman met
+him, and became unaccountably infatuated with him. Her attentions
+became so open that the man felt the community to be no safe place for
+him, so he left it. She abandoned husband and home, and followed him.
+She forsook her home, where she was provided with every comfort, to
+follow this man who had inspired her with such a strange affection.
+Is there anything more to be deplored," concluded the client, in a
+trembling voice, "than the wrecking of a home by a woman's
+uncalculating folly?"
+
+Lawyer Gooch delivered the cautious opinion that there was not.
+
+"This man she has gone to join," resumed the visitor, "is not the man
+to make her happy. It is a wild and foolish self-deception that makes
+her think he will. Her husband, in spite of their many disagreements,
+is the only one capable of dealing with her sensitive and peculiar
+nature. But this she does not realize now."
+
+"Would you consider a divorce the logical cure in the case you
+present?" asked Lawyer Gooch, who felt that the conversation was
+wandering too far from the field of business.
+
+"A divorce!" exclaimed the client, feelingly--almost tearfully.
+"No, no--not that. I have read, Mr. Gooch, of many instances where
+your sympathy and kindly interest led you to act as a mediator
+between estranged husband and wife, and brought them together again.
+Let us drop the hypothetical case--I need conceal no longer that it
+is I who am the sufferer in this sad affair--the names you shall
+have--Thomas R. Billings and wife--and Henry K. Jessup, the man
+with whom she is infatuated."
+
+Client number three laid his hand upon Mr. Gooch's arm. Deep emotion
+was written upon his careworn face. "For Heaven's sake", he said
+fervently, "help me in this hour of trouble. Seek out Mrs. Billings,
+and persuade her to abandon this distressing pursuit of her lamentable
+folly. Tell her, Mr. Gooch, that her husband is willing to receive
+her back to his heart and home--promise her anything that will
+induce her to return. I have heard of your success in these matters.
+Mrs. Billings cannot be very far away. I am worn out with travel
+and weariness. Twice during the pursuit I saw her, but various
+circumstances prevented our having an interview. Will you undertake
+this mission for me, Mr. Gooch, and earn my everlasting gratitude?"
+
+"It is true," said Lawyer Gooch, frowning slightly at the other's last
+words, but immediately calling up an expression of virtuous
+benevolence, "that on a number of occasions I have been successful in
+persuading couples who sought the severing of their matrimonial bonds
+to think better of their rash intentions and return to their homes
+reconciled. But I assure you that the work is often exceedingly
+difficult. The amount of argument, perseverance, and, if I may be
+allowed to say it, eloquence that it requires would astonish you. But
+this is a case in which my sympathies would be wholly enlisted. I
+feel deeply for you sir, and I would be most happy to see husband and
+wife reunited. But my time," concluded the lawyer, looking at his
+watch as if suddenly reminded of the fact, "is valuable."
+
+"I am aware of that," said the client, "and if you will take the case
+and persuade Mrs. Billings to return home and leave the man alone that
+she is following--on that day I will pay you the sum of one thousand
+dollars. I have made a little money in real estate during the recent
+boom in Susanville, and I will not begrudge that amount."
+
+"Retain your seat for a few moments, please," said Lawyer Gooch,
+arising, and again consulting his watch. "I have another client
+waiting in an adjoining room whom I had very nearly forgotten. I will
+return in the briefest possible space."
+
+The situation was now one that fully satisfied Lawyer Gooch's love of
+intricacy and complication. He revelled in cases that presented such
+subtle problems and possibilities. It pleased him to think that he
+was master of the happiness and fate of the three individuals who sat,
+unconscious of one another's presence, within his reach. His old
+figure of the ship glided into his mind. But now the figure failed,
+for to have filled every compartment of an actual vessel would have
+been to endanger her safety; with his compartments full, his ship of
+affairs could but sail on to the advantageous port of a fine, fat fee.
+The thing for him to do, of course, was to wring the best bargain he
+could from some one of his anxious cargo.
+
+First he called to the office boy: "Lock the outer door, Archibald,
+and admit no one." Then he moved, with long, silent strides into the
+room in which client number one waited. That gentleman sat, patiently
+scanning the pictures in the magazine, with a cigar in his mouth and
+his feet upon a table.
+
+"Well," he remarked, cheerfully, as the lawyer entered, "have you made
+up your mind? Does five hundred dollars go for getting the fair lady
+a divorce?"
+
+"You mean that as a retainer?" asked Lawyer Gooch, softly
+interrogative.
+
+"Hey? No; for the whole job. It's enough, ain't it?"
+
+"My fee," said Lawyer Gooch, "would be one thousand five hundred
+dollars. Five hundred dollars down, and the remainder upon issuance
+of the divorce."
+
+A loud whistle came from client number one. His feet descended to the
+floor.
+
+"Guess we can't close the deal," he said, arising, "I cleaned up five
+hundred dollars in a little real estate dicker down in Susanville.
+I'd do anything I could to free the lady, but it out-sizes my pile."
+
+"Could you stand one thousand two hundred dollars?" asked the lawyer,
+insinuatingly.
+
+"Five hundred is my limit, I tell you. Guess I'll have to hunt up a
+cheaper lawyer." The client put on his hat.
+
+"Out this way, please," said Lawyer Gooch, opening the door that led
+into the hallway.
+
+As the gentleman flowed out of the compartment and down the stairs,
+Lawyer Gooch smiled to himself. "Exit Mr. Jessup," he murmured, as he
+fingered the Henry Clay tuft of hair at his ear. "And now for the
+forsaken husband." He returned to the middle office, and assumed a
+businesslike manner.
+
+"I understand," he said to client number three, "that you agree to pay
+one thousand dollars if I bring about, or am instrumental in bringing
+about, the return of Mrs. Billings to her home, and her abandonment of
+her infatuated pursuit of the man for whom she has conceived such a
+violent fancy. Also that the case is now unreservedly in my hands on
+that basis. Is that correct?"
+
+"Entirely", said the other, eagerly. "And I can produce the cash any
+time at two hours' notice."
+
+Lawyer Gooch stood up at his full height. His thin figure seemed to
+expand. His thumbs sought the arm-holes of his vest. Upon his face
+was a look of sympathetic benignity that he always wore during such
+undertakings.
+
+"Then, sir," he said, in kindly tones, "I think I can promise you an
+early relief from your troubles. I have that much confidence in my
+powers of argument and persuasion, in the natural impulses of the
+human heart toward good, and in the strong influence of a husband's
+unfaltering love. Mrs. Billings, sir, is here--in that room--" the
+lawyer's long arm pointed to the door. "I will call her in at once;
+and our united pleadings--"
+
+Lawyer Gooch paused, for client number three had leaped from his chair
+as if propelled by steel springs, and clutched his satchel.
+
+"What the devil," he exclaimed, harshly, "do you mean? That woman in
+there! I thought I shook her off forty miles back."
+
+He ran to the open window, looked out below, and threw one leg over
+the sill.
+
+"Stop!" cried Lawyer Gooch, in amazement. "What would you do? Come,
+Mr. Billings, and face your erring but innocent wife. Our combined
+entreaties cannot fail to--"
+
+"Billings!" shouted the now thoroughly moved client. "I'll Billings
+you, you old idiot!"
+
+Turning, he hurled his satchel with fury at the lawyer's head. It
+struck that astounded peacemaker between the eyes, causing him to
+stagger backward a pace or two. When Lawyer Gooch recovered his wits
+he saw that his client had disappeared. Rushing to the window, he
+leaned out, and saw the recreant gathering himself up from the top of
+a shed upon which he had dropped from the second-story window.
+Without stopping to collect his hat he then plunged downward the
+remaining ten feet to the alley, up which he flew with prodigious
+celerity until the surrounding building swallowed him up from view.
+
+Lawyer Gooch passed his hand tremblingly across his brow. It was a
+habitual act with him, serving to clear his thoughts. Perhaps also it
+now seemed to soothe the spot where a very hard alligator-hide satchel
+had struck.
+
+The satchel lay upon the floor, wide open, with its contents spilled
+about. Mechanically, Lawyer Gooch stooped to gather up the articles.
+The first was a collar; and the omniscient eye of the man of law
+perceived, wonderingly, the initials H. K. J. marked upon it. Then
+came a comb, a brush, a folded map, and a piece of soap. Lastly, a
+handful of old business letters, addressed--every one of them--to
+"Henry K. Jessup, Esq."
+
+Lawyer Gooch closed the satchel, and set it upon the table. He
+hesitated for a moment, and then put on his hat and walked into the
+office boy's anteroom.
+
+"Archibald," he said mildly, as he opened the hall door, "I am going
+around to the Supreme Court rooms. In five minutes you may step into
+the inner office, and inform the lady who is waiting there that"--
+here Lawyer Gooch made use of the vernacular--"that there's nothing
+doing."
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+CALLOWAY'S CODE
+
+
+The New York _Enterprise_ sent H. B. Calloway as special correspondent
+to the Russo-Japanese-Portsmouth war.
+
+For two months Calloway hung about Yokohama and Tokio, shaking dice
+with the other correspondents for drinks of 'rickshaws--oh, no,
+that's something to ride in; anyhow, he wasn't earning the salary
+that his paper was paying him. But that was not Calloway's fault.
+The little brown men who held the strings of Fate between their
+fingers were not ready for the readers of the _Enterprise_ to season
+their breakfast bacon and eggs with the battles of the descendants of
+the gods.
+
+But soon the column of correspondents that were to go out with the
+First Army tightened their field-glass belts and went down to the
+Yalu with Kuroki. Calloway was one of these.
+
+Now, this is no history of the battle of the Yalu River. That has
+been told in detail by the correspondents who gazed at the shrapnel
+smoke rings from a distance of three miles. But, for justice's sake,
+let it be understood that the Japanese commander prohibited a nearer
+view.
+
+Calloway's feat was accomplished before the battle. What he did was
+to furnish the _Enterprise_ with the biggest beat of the war. That
+paper published exclusively and in detail the news of the attack on
+the lines of the Russian General on the same day that it was made.
+No other paper printed a word about it for two days afterward, except
+a London paper, whose account was absolutely incorrect and untrue.
+
+Calloway did this in face of the fact that General Kuroki was making
+his moves and laying his plans with the profoundest secrecy as far
+as the world outside his camps was concerned. The correspondents
+were forbidden to send out any news whatever of his plans; and every
+message that was allowed on the wires was censored with rigid
+severity.
+
+The correspondent for the London paper handed in a cablegram
+describing Kuroki's plans; but as it was wrong from beginning to end
+the censor grinned and let it go through.
+
+So, there they were--Kuroki on one side of the Yalu with forty-two
+thousand infantry, five thousand cavalry, and one hundred and
+twenty-four guns. On the other side, Zassulitch waited for him with
+only twenty-three thousand men, and with a long stretch of river to
+guard. And Calloway had got hold of some important inside information
+that he knew would bring the _Enterprise_ staff around a cablegram as
+thick as flies around a Park Row lemonade stand. If he could only get
+that message past the censor--the new censor who had arrived and
+taken his post that day!
+
+Calloway did the obviously proper thing. He lit his pipe and sat down
+on a gun carriage to think it over. And there we must leave him; for
+the rest of the story belongs to Vesey, a sixteen-dollar-a-week
+reporter on the _Enterprise_.
+
+
+Calloway's cablegram was handed to the managing editor at four
+o'clock in the afternoon. He read it three times; and then drew a
+pocket mirror from a pigeon-hole in his desk, and looked at his
+reflection carefully. Then he went over to the desk of Boyd, his
+assistant (he usually called Boyd when he wanted him), and laid the
+cablegram before him.
+
+"It's from Calloway," he said. "See what you make of it."
+
+The message was dated at Wi-ju, and these were the words of it:
+
+
+ Foregone preconcerted rash witching goes muffled rumour mine dark
+ silent unfortunate richmond existing great hotly brute select
+ mooted parlous beggars ye angel incontrovertible.
+
+
+Boyd read it twice.
+
+"It's either a cipher or a sunstroke," said he.
+
+"Ever hear of anything like a code in the office--a secret code?"
+asked the m. e., who had held his desk for only two years. Managing
+editors come and go.
+
+"None except the vernacular that the lady specials write in," said
+Boyd. "Couldn't be an acrostic, could it?"
+
+"I thought of that," said the m. e., "but the beginning letters
+contain only four vowels. It must be a code of some sort."
+
+"Try em in groups," suggested Boyd. "Let's see--'Rash witching
+goes'--not with me it doesn't. 'Muffled rumour mine'--must
+have an underground wire. 'Dark silent unfortunate richmond'--no
+reason why he should knock that town so hard. 'Existing great
+hotly'--no it doesn't pan out. I'll call Scott."
+
+The city editor came in a hurry, and tried his luck. A city editor
+must know something about everything; so Scott knew a little about
+cipher-writing.
+
+"It may be what is called an inverted alphabet cipher," said he.
+"I'll try that. 'R' seems to be the oftenest used initial letter,
+with the exception of 'm.' Assuming 'r' to mean 'e', the most
+frequently used vowel, we transpose the letters--so."
+
+Scott worked rapidly with his pencil for two minutes; and then showed
+the first word according to his reading--the word "Scejtzez."
+
+"Great!" cried Boyd. "It's a charade. My first is a Russian
+general. Go on, Scott."
+
+"No, that won't work," said the city editor. "It's undoubtedly a
+code. It's impossible to read it without the key. Has the office
+ever used a cipher code?"
+
+"Just what I was asking," said the m.e. "Hustle everybody up that
+ought to know. We must get at it some way. Calloway has evidently
+got hold of something big, and the censor has put the screws on, or
+he wouldn't have cabled in a lot of chop suey like this."
+
+Throughout the office of the _Enterprise_ a dragnet was sent, hauling
+in such members of the staff as would be likely to know of a code,
+past or present, by reason of their wisdom, information, natural
+intelligence, or length of servitude. They got together in a group
+in the city room, with the m. e. in the centre. No one had heard
+of a code. All began to explain to the head investigator that
+newspapers never use a code, anyhow--that is, a cipher code. Of
+course the Associated Press stuff is a sort of code--an abbreviation,
+rather--but--
+
+The m. e. knew all that, and said so. He asked each man how long he
+had worked on the paper. Not one of them had drawn pay from an
+_Enterprise_ envelope for longer than six years. Calloway had been on
+the paper twelve years.
+
+"Try old Heffelbauer," said the m. e. "He was here when Park Row was
+a potato patch."
+
+Heffelbauer was an institution. He was half janitor, half handy-man
+about the office, and half watchman--thus becoming the peer of
+thirteen and one-half tailors. Sent for, he came, radiating his
+nationality.
+
+"Heffelbauer," said the m. e., "did you ever hear of a code belonging
+to the office a long time ago--a private code? You know what a code
+is, don't you?"
+
+"Yah," said Heffelbauer. "Sure I know vat a code is. Yah, apout
+dwelf or fifteen year ago der office had a code. Der reborters in der
+city-room haf it here."
+
+"Ah!" said the m. e. "We're getting on the trail now. Where was it
+kept, Heffelbauer? What do you know about it?"
+
+"Somedimes," said the retainer, "dey keep it in der little room
+behind der library room."
+
+"Can you find it?" asked the m. e. eagerly. "Do you know where it is?"
+
+"Mein Gott!" said Heffelbauer. "How long you dink a code live? Der
+reborters call him a maskeet. But von day he butt mit his head der
+editor, und--"
+
+"Oh, he's talking about a goat," said Boyd. "Get out, Heffelbauer."
+
+Again discomfited, the concerted wit and resource of the _Enterprise_
+huddled around Calloway's puzzle, considering its mysterious words
+in vain.
+
+Then Vesey came in.
+
+Vesey was the youngest reporter. He had a thirty-two-inch chest and
+wore a number fourteen collar; but his bright Scotch plaid suit gave
+him presence and conferred no obscurity upon his whereabouts. He
+wore his hat in such a position that people followed him about to see
+him take it off, convinced that it must be hung upon a peg driven
+into the back of his head. He was never without an immense, knotted,
+hard-wood cane with a German-silver tip on its crooked handle. Vesey
+was the best photograph hustler in the office. Scott said it was
+because no living human being could resist the personal triumph it
+was to hand his picture over to Vesey. Vesey always wrote his own
+news stories, except the big ones, which were sent to the rewrite
+men. Add to this fact that among all the inhabitants, temples, and
+groves of the earth nothing existed that could abash Vesey, and his
+dim sketch is concluded.
+
+Vesey butted into the circle of cipher readers very much as
+Heffelbauer's "code" would have done, and asked what was up. Some
+one explained, with the touch of half-familiar condescension that
+they always used toward him. Vesey reached out and took the
+cablegram from the m. e.'s hand. Under the protection of some
+special Providence, he was always doing appalling things like that,
+and coming, off unscathed.
+
+"It's a code," said Vesey. "Anybody got the key?"
+
+"The office has no code," said Boyd, reaching for the message. Vesey
+held to it.
+
+"Then old Calloway expects us to read it, anyhow," said he. "He's up
+a tree, or something, and he's made this up so as to get it by the
+censor. It's up to us. Gee! I wish they had sent me, too. Say--we
+can't afford to fall down on our end of it. 'Foregone, preconcerted
+rash, witching'--h'm."
+
+Vesey sat down on a table corner and began to whistle softly,
+frowning at the cablegram.
+
+"Let's have it, please," said the m. e. "We've got to get to work on
+it."
+
+"I believe I've got a line on it," said Vesey. "Give me ten
+minutes."
+
+He walked to his desk, threw his hat into a waste-basket, spread out
+flat on his chest like a gorgeous lizard, and started his pencil
+going. The wit and wisdom of the _Enterprise_ remained in a loose
+group, and smiled at one another, nodding their heads toward Vesey.
+Then they began to exchange their theories about the cipher.
+
+It took Vesey exactly fifteen minutes. He brought to the m. e. a pad
+with the code-key written on it.
+
+"I felt the swing of it as soon as I saw it," said Vesey. "Hurrah for
+old Calloway! He's done the Japs and every paper in town that prints
+literature instead of news. Take a look at that."
+
+Thus had Vesey set forth the reading of the code:
+
+ Foregone - conclusion
+ Preconcerted - arrangement
+ Rash - act
+ Witching - hour of midnight
+ Goes - without saying
+ Muffled - report
+ Rumour - hath it
+ Mine - host
+ Dark - horse
+ Silent - majority
+ Unfortunate - pedestrians*
+ Richmond - in the field
+ Existing - conditions
+ Great - White Way
+ Hotly - contested
+ Brute - force
+ Select - few
+ Mooted - question
+ Parlous - times
+ Beggars - description
+ Ye - correspondent
+ Angel - unawares
+ Incontrovertible - fact
+
+ *Mr. Vesey afterward explained that the logical journalistic
+ complement of the word "unfortunate" was once the word
+ "victim." But, since the automobile became so popular, the
+ correct following word is now "pedestrians." Of course, in
+ Calloway's code it meant infantry.
+
+"It's simply newspaper English," explained Vesey. "I've been
+reporting on the _Enterprise_ long enough to know it by heart. Old
+Calloway gives us the cue word, and we use the word that naturally
+follows it just as we use 'em in the paper. Read it over, and you'll
+see how pat they drop into their places. Now, here's the message he
+intended us to get."
+
+Vesey handed out another sheet of paper.
+
+ Concluded arrangement to act at hour of midnight
+ without saying. Report hath it that a large body of
+ cavalry and an overwhelming force of infantry will be
+ thrown into the field. Conditions white. Way contested
+ by only a small force. Question the Times description.
+ Its correspondent is unaware of the facts.
+
+"Great stuff!" cried Boyd excitedly. "Kuroki crosses the Yalu
+to-night and attacks. Oh, we won't do a thing to the sheets that make
+up with Addison's essays, real estate transfers, and bowling scores!"
+
+"Mr. Vesey," said the m. e., with his jollying-which-you-should-regard-
+as-a-favour manner, "you have cast a serious reflection upon the
+literary standards of the paper that employs you. You have also
+assisted materially in giving us the biggest 'beat' of the year. I
+will let you know in a day or two whether you are to be discharged or
+retained at a larger salary. Somebody send Ames to me."
+
+Ames was the king-pin, the snowy-petalled Marguerite, the star-bright
+looloo of the rewrite men. He saw attempted murder in the pains of
+green-apple colic, cyclones in the summer zephyr, lost children in
+every top-spinning urchin, an uprising of the down-trodden masses in
+every hurling of a derelict potato at a passing automobile. When not
+rewriting, Ames sat on the porch of his Brooklyn villa playing
+checkers with his ten-year-old son.
+
+Ames and the "war editor" shut themselves in a room. There was a map
+in there stuck full of little pins that represented armies and
+divisions. Their fingers had been itching for days to move those
+pins along the crooked line of the Yalu. They did so now; and in
+words of fire Ames translated Calloway's brief message into a front
+page masterpiece that set the world talking. He told of the secret
+councils of the Japanese officers; gave Kuroki's flaming speeches in
+full; counted the cavalry and infantry to a man and a horse;
+described the quick and silent building, of the bridge at Suikauchen,
+across which the Mikado's legions were hurled upon the surprised
+Zassulitch, whose troops were widely scattered along the river. And
+the battle!--well, you know what Ames can do with a battle if you give
+him just one smell of smoke for a foundation. And in the same story,
+with seemingly supernatural knowledge, he gleefully scored the most
+profound and ponderous paper in England for the false and misleading
+account of the intended movements of the Japanese First Army printed
+in its issue of _the same date_.
+
+Only one error was made; and that was the fault of the cable operator
+at Wi-ju. Calloway pointed it out after he came back. The word
+"great" in his code should have been "gage," and its complemental
+words "of battle." But it went to Ames "conditions white," and of
+course he took that to mean snow. His description of the Japanese
+army struggling through the snowstorm, blinded by the whirling flakes,
+was thrillingly vivid. The artists turned out some effective
+illustrations that made a hit as pictures of the artillery dragging
+their guns through the drifts. But, as the attack was made on the
+first day of May, "conditions white" excited some amusement. But it
+in made no difference to the _Enterprise_, anyway.
+
+It was wonderful. And Calloway was wonderful in having made the new
+censor believe that his jargon of words meant no more than a
+complaint of the dearth of news and a petition for more expense
+money. And Vesey was wonderful. And most wonderful of all are
+words, and how they make friends one with another, being oft
+associated, until not even obituary notices them do part.
+
+
+On the second day following, the city editor halted at Vesey's desk
+where the reporter was writing the story of a man who had broken his
+leg by falling into a coal-hole--Ames having failed to find a
+murder motive in it.
+
+"The old man says your salary is to be raised to twenty a week," said
+Scott.
+
+"All right," said Vesey. "Every little helps. Say--Mr. Scott,
+which would you say--'We can state without fear of successful
+contradiction,' or, 'On the whole it can be safely asserted'?"
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+A MATTER OF MEAN ELEVATION
+
+
+One winter the Alcazar Opera Company of New Orleans made a speculative
+trip along the Mexican, Central American and South American coasts.
+The venture proved a most successful one. The music-loving,
+impressionable Spanish-Americans deluged the company with dollars and
+"vivas." The manager waxed plump and amiable. But for the
+prohibitive climate he would have put forth the distinctive flower of
+his prosperity--the overcoat of fur, braided, frogged and opulent.
+Almost was he persuaded to raise the salaries of his company. But
+with a mighty effort he conquered the impulse toward such an
+unprofitable effervescence of joy.
+
+At Macuto, on the coast of Venezuela, the company scored its greatest
+success. Imagine Coney Island translated into Spanish and you will
+comprehend Macuto. The fashionable season is from November to March.
+Down from La Guayra and Caracas and Valencia and other interior towns
+flock the people for their holiday season. There are bathing and
+fiestas and bull fights and scandal. And then the people have a
+passion for music that the bands in the plaza and on the sea beach
+stir but do not satisfy. The coming of the Alcazar Opera Company
+aroused the utmost ardour and zeal among the pleasure seekers.
+
+The illustrious Guzman Blanco, President and Dictator of Venezuela,
+sojourned in Macuto with his court for the season. That potent ruler
+--who himself paid a subsidy of 40,000 pesos each year to grand opera
+in Caracas--ordered one of the Government warehouses to be cleared
+for a temporary theatre. A stage was quickly constructed and rough
+wooden benches made for the audience. Private boxes were added for
+the use of the President and the notables of the army and Government.
+
+The company remained in Macuto for two weeks. Each performance filled
+the house as closely as it could be packed. Then the music-mad people
+fought for room in the open doors and windows, and crowded about,
+hundreds deep, on the outside. Those audiences formed a brilliantly
+diversified patch of colour. The hue of their faces ranged from the
+clear olive of the pure-blood Spaniards down through the yellow and
+brown shades of the Mestizos to the coal-black Carib and the Jamaica
+Negro. Scattered among them were little groups of Indians with faces
+like stone idols, wrapped in gaudy fibre-woven blankets--Indians
+down from the mountain states of Zamora and Los Andes and Miranda to
+trade their gold dust in the coast towns.
+
+The spell cast upon these denizens of the interior fastnesses was
+remarkable. They sat in petrified ecstasy, conspicuous among the
+excitable Macutians, who wildly strove with tongue and hand to give
+evidence of their delight. Only once did the sombre rapture of these
+aboriginals find expression. During the rendition of "Faust," Guzman
+Blanco, extravagantly pleased by the "Jewel Song," cast upon the stage
+a purse of gold pieces. Other distinguished citizens followed his lead
+to the extent of whatever loose coin they had convenient, while some
+of the fair and fashionable senoras were moved, in imitation, to
+fling a jewel or a ring or two at the feet of the Marguerite--who
+was, according to the bills, Mlle. Nina Giraud. Then, from different
+parts of the house rose sundry of the stolid hillmen and cast upon the
+stage little brown and dun bags that fell with soft "thumps" and did
+not rebound. It was, no doubt, pleasure at the tribute to her art
+that caused Mlle. Giraud's eyes to shine so brightly when she opened
+these little deerskin bags in her dressing room and found them to
+contain pure gold dust. If so, the pleasure was rightly hers, for her
+voice in song, pure, strong and thrilling with the feeling of the
+emotional artist, deserved the tribute that it earned.
+
+But the triumph of the Alcazar Opera Company is not the theme--it
+but leans upon and colours it. There happened in Macuto a tragic
+thing, an unsolvable mystery, that sobered for a time the gaiety of
+the happy season.
+
+One evening between the short twilight and the time when she should
+have whirled upon the stage in the red and black of the ardent Carmen,
+Mlle. Nina Giraud disappeared from the sight and ken of 6,000 pairs
+of eyes and as many minds in Macuto. There was the usual turmoil and
+hurrying to seek her. Messengers flew to the little French-kept hotel
+where she stayed; others of the company hastened here or there where
+she might be lingering in some tienda or unduly prolonging her bath
+upon the beach. All search was fruitless. Mademoiselle had
+vanished.
+
+Half an hour passed and she did not appear. The dictator, unused to
+the caprices of prime donne, became impatient. He sent an aide from
+his box to say to the manager that if the curtain did not at once rise
+he would immediately hale the entire company to the calabosa, though
+it would desolate his heart, indeed, to be compelled to such an act.
+Birds in Macuto could be made to sing.
+
+The manager abandoned hope for the time of Mlle. Giraud. A member of
+the chorus, who had dreamed hopelessly for years of the blessed
+opportunity, quickly Carmenized herself and the opera went on.
+
+Afterward, when the lost cantatrice appeared not, the aid of the
+authorities was invoked. The President at once set the army, the
+police and all citizens to the search. Not one clue to Mlle. Giraud's
+disappearance was found. The Alcazar left to fill engagements farther
+down the coast.
+
+On the way back the steamer stopped at Macuto and the manager made
+anxious inquiry. Not a trace of the lady had been discovered. The
+Alcazar could do no more. The personal belongings of the missing lady
+were stored in the hotel against her possible later reappearance and
+the opera company continued upon its homeward voyage to New Orleans.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the camino real along the beach the two saddle mules and the four
+pack mules of Don Senor Johnny Armstrong stood, patiently awaiting the
+crack of the whip of the _arriero_, Luis. That would be the signal for
+the start on another long journey into the mountains. The pack mules
+were loaded with a varied assortment of hardware and cutlery. These
+articles Don Johnny traded to the interior Indians for the gold dust
+that they washed from the Andean streams and stored in quills and bags
+against his coming. It was a profitable business, and Senor Armstrong
+expected soon to be able to purchase the coffee plantation that he
+coveted.
+
+Armstrong stood on the narrow sidewalk, exchanging garbled Spanish
+with old Peralto, the rich native merchant who had just charged him
+four prices for half a gross of pot-metal hatchets, and abridged
+English with Rucker, the little German who was Consul for the United
+States.
+
+"Take with you, senor," said Peralto, "the blessings of the saints
+upon your journey."
+
+"Better try quinine," growled Rucker through his pipe. "Take two
+grains every night. And don't make your trip too long, Johnny,
+because we haf needs of you. It is ein villainous game dot Melville
+play of whist, and dere is no oder substitute. _Auf wiedersehen_, und
+keep your eyes dot mule's ears between when you on der edge of der
+brecipices ride."
+
+The bells of Luis's mule jingled and the pack train filed after the
+warning note. Armstrong, waved a good-bye and took his place at the
+tail of the procession. Up the narrow street they turned, and passed
+the two-story wooden Hotel Ingles, where Ives and Dawson and Richards
+and the rest of the chaps were dawdling on the broad piazza, reading
+week-old newspapers. They crowded to the railing and shouted many
+friendly and wise and foolish farewells after him. Across the plaza
+they trotted slowly past the bronze statue of Guzman Blanco, within
+its fence of bayoneted rifles captured from revolutionists, and out
+of the town between the rows of thatched huts swarming with the
+unclothed youth of Macuto. They plunged into the damp coolness of
+banana groves at length to emerge upon a bright stream, where brown
+women in scant raiment laundered clothes destructively upon the rocks.
+Then the pack train, fording the stream, attacked the sudden ascent,
+and bade adieu to such civilization as the coast afforded.
+
+For weeks Armstrong, guided by Luis, followed his regular route among
+the mountains. After he had collected an arroba of the precious
+metal, winning a profit of nearly $5,000, the heads of the lightened
+mules were turned down-trail again. Where the head of the Guarico
+River springs from a great gash in the mountain-side, Luis halted the
+train.
+
+"Half a day's journey from here, Senor," said he, "is the village of
+Tacuzama, which we have never visited. I think many ounces of gold may
+be procured there. It is worth the trial."
+
+Armstrong concurred, and they turned again upward toward Tacuzama.
+The trail was abrupt and precipitous, mounting through a dense
+forest. As night fell, dark and gloomy, Luis once more halted.
+Before them was a black chasm, bisecting the path as far as they could
+see.
+
+Luis dismounted. "There should be a bridge," he called, and ran along
+the cleft a distance. "It is here," he cried, and remounting, led the
+way. In a few moments Armstrong, heard a sound as though a thunderous
+drum were beating somewhere in the dark. It was the falling of the
+mules' hoofs upon the bridge made of strong hides lashed to poles and
+stretched across the chasm. Half a mile further was Tacuzama. The
+village was a congregation of rock and mud huts set in the
+profundity of an obscure wood. As they rode in a sound inconsistent
+with that brooding solitude met their ears. From a long, low mud hut
+that they were nearing rose the glorious voice of a woman in song.
+The words were English, the air familiar to Armstrong's memory, but
+not to his musical knowledge.
+
+He slipped from his mule and stole to a narrow window in one end of
+the house. Peering cautiously inside, he saw, within three feet of
+him, a woman of marvellous, imposing beauty, clothed in a splendid
+loose robe of leopard skins. The hut was packed close to the small
+space in which she stood with the squatting figures of Indians.
+
+The woman finished her song and seated herself close to the little
+window, as if grateful for the unpolluted air that entered it.
+When she had ceased several of the audience rose and cast little
+softly-falling bags at her feet. A harsh murmur--no doubt a
+barbarous kind of applause and comment--went through the grim
+assembly.
+
+Armstrong, was used to seizing opportunities promptly. Taking
+advantage of the noise he called to the woman in a low but distinct
+voice: "Do not turn your head this way, but listen. I am an American.
+If you need assistance tell me how I can render it. Answer as briefly
+as you can."
+
+The woman was worthy of his boldness. Only by a sudden flush of her
+pale cheek did she acknowledge understanding of his words. Then she
+spoke, scarcely moving her lips.
+
+"I am held a prisoner by these Indians. God knows I need help. In
+two hours come to the little hut twenty yards toward the Mountainside.
+There will be a light and a red curtain in the window. There is
+always a guard at the door, whom you will have to overcome. For the
+love of heaven, do not fail to come."
+
+The story seems to shrink from adventure and rescue and mystery. The
+theme is one too gentle for those brave and quickening tones. And yet
+it reaches as far back as time itself. It has been named
+"environment," which is as weak a word as any to express the
+unnameable kinship of man to nature, that queer fraternity that causes
+stones and trees and salt water and clouds to play upon our emotions.
+Why are we made serious and solemn and sublime by mountain heights,
+grave and contemplative by an abundance of overhanging trees,
+reduced to inconstancy and monkey capers by the ripples on a sandy
+beach? Did the protoplasm--but enough. The chemists are looking
+into the matter, and before long they will have all life in the table
+of the symbols.
+
+Briefly, then, in order to confine the story within scientific bounds,
+John Armstrong, went to the hut, choked the Indian guard and carried
+away Mlle. Giraud. With her was also conveyed a number of pounds of
+gold dust she had collected during her six months' forced engagement
+in Tacuzama. The Carabobo Indians are easily the most enthusiastic
+lovers of music between the equator and the French Opera House in New
+Orleans. They are also strong believers that the advice of Emerson
+was good when he said: "The thing thou wantest, O discontented man
+--take it, and pay the price." A number of them had attended the
+performance of the Alcazar Opera Company in Macuto, and found Mlle.
+Giraud's style and technique satisfactory. They wanted her, so they
+took her one evening suddenly and without any fuss. They treated her
+with much consideration, exacting only one song recital each day. She
+was quite pleased at being rescued by Mr. Armstrong. So much for
+mystery and adventure. Now to resume the theory of the protoplasm.
+
+John Armstrong and Mlle. Giraud rode among the Andean peaks, enveloped
+in their greatness and sublimity. The mightiest cousins, furthest
+removed, in nature's great family become conscious of the tie. Among
+those huge piles of primordial upheaval, amid those gigantic silences
+and elongated fields of distance the littlenesses of men are
+precipitated as one chemical throws down a sediment from another.
+They moved reverently, as in a temple. Their souls were uplifted in
+unison with the stately heights. They travelled in a zone of majesty
+and peace.
+
+To Armstrong the woman seemed almost a holy thing. Yet bathed in the
+white, still dignity of her martyrdom that purified her earthly beauty
+and gave out, it seemed, an aura of transcendent loveliness, in those
+first hours of companionship she drew from him an adoration that was
+half human love, half the worship of a descended goddess.
+
+Never yet since her rescue had she smiled. Over her dress she still
+wore the robe of leopard skins, for the mountain air was cold. She
+looked to be some splendid princess belonging to those wild and
+awesome altitudes. The spirit of the region chimed with hers. Her
+eyes were always turned upon the sombre cliffs, the blue gorges and
+the snow-clad turrets, looking a sublime melancholy equal to their
+own. At times on the journey she sang thrilling te deums and
+misereres that struck the true note of the hills, and made their
+route seem like a solemn march down a cathedral aisle. The rescued
+one spoke but seldom, her mood partaking of the hush of nature that
+surrounded them. Armstrong looked upon her as an angel. He could not
+bring himself to the sacrilege of attempting to woo her as other
+women may be wooed.
+
+On the third day they had descended as far as the _tierra templada_,
+the zona of the table lands and foot hills. The mountains were
+receding in their rear, but still towered, exhibiting yet impressively
+their formidable heads. Here they met signs of man. They saw the
+white houses of coffee plantations gleam across the clearings. They
+struck into a road where they met travellers and pack-mules. Cattle
+were grazing on the slopes. They passed a little village where the
+round-eyed _ninos_ shrieked and called at sight of them.
+
+Mlle. Giraud laid aside her leopard-skin robe. It seemed to be a
+trifle incongruous now. In the mountains it had appeared fitting
+and natural. And if Armstrong was not mistaken she laid aside with
+it something of the high dignity of her demeanour. As the country
+became more populous and significant of comfortable life he saw, with
+a feeling of joy, that the exalted princess and priestess of the
+Andean peaks was changing to a woman--an earth woman, but no less
+enticing. A little colour crept to the surface of her marble cheek.
+She arranged the conventional dress that the removal of the robe now
+disclosed with the solicitous touch of one who is conscious of the
+eyes of others. She smoothed the careless sweep of her hair. A
+mundane interest, long latent in the chilling atmosphere of the
+ascetic peaks, showed in her eyes.
+
+This thaw in his divinity sent Armstrong's heart going faster. So
+might an Arctic explorer thrill at his first ken of green fields and
+liquescent waters. They were on a lower plane of earth and life and
+were succumbing to its peculiar, subtle influence. The austerity of
+the hills no longer thinned the air they breathed. About them was the
+breath of fruit and corn and builded homes, the comfortable smell of
+smoke and warm earth and the consolations man has placed between
+himself and the dust of his brother earth from which he sprung.
+While traversing those awful mountains, Mile. Giraud had seemed to
+be wrapped in their spirit of reverent reserve. Was this that same
+woman--now palpitating, warm, eager, throbbing with conscious life and
+charm, feminine to her finger-tips? Pondering over this, Armstrong
+felt certain misgivings intrude upon his thoughts. He wished he could
+stop there with this changing creature, descending no farther. Here
+was the elevation and environment to which her nature seemed to
+respond with its best. He feared to go down upon the man-dominated
+levels. Would her spirit not yield still further in that artificial
+zone to which they were descending?
+
+Now from a little plateau they saw the sea flash at the edge of the
+green lowlands. Mile. Giraud gave a little, catching sigh.
+
+"Oh! look, Mr. Armstrong, there is the sea! Isn't it lovely? I'm so
+tired of mountains." She heaved a pretty shoulder in a gesture of
+repugnance. "Those horrid Indians! Just think of what I suffered!
+Although I suppose I attained my ambition of becoming a stellar
+attraction, I wouldn't care to repeat the engagement. It was very
+nice of you to bring me away. Tell me, Mr. Armstrong--honestly, now
+--do I look such an awful, awful fright? I haven't looked into a
+mirror, you know, for months."
+
+Armstrong made answer according to his changed moods. Also he laid
+his hand upon hers as it rested upon the horn of her saddle. Luis was
+at the head of the pack train and could not see. She allowed it to
+remain there, and her eyes smiled frankly into his.
+
+Then at sundown they dropped upon the coast level under the palms and
+lemons among the vivid greens and scarlets and ochres of the _tierra
+caliente_. They rode into Macuto, and saw the line of volatile bathers
+frolicking in the surf. The mountains were very far away.
+
+Mlle. Giraud's eyes were shining with a joy that could not have
+existed under the chaperonage of the mountain-tops. There were other
+spirits calling to her--nymphs of the orange groves, pixies from the
+chattering surf, imps, born of the music, the perfumes, colours and
+the insinuating presence of humanity. She laughed aloud, musically,
+at a sudden thought.
+
+"Won't there be a sensation?" she called to Armstrong. "Don't I wish
+I had an engagement just now, though! What a picnic the press agent
+would have! 'Held a prisoner by a band of savage Indians subdued by
+the spell of her wonderful voice'--wouldn't that make great stuff?
+But I guess I quit the game winner, anyhow--there ought to be a
+couple of thousand dollars in that sack of gold dust I collected as
+encores, don't you think?"
+
+He left her at the door of the little Hotel de Buen Descansar, where
+she had stopped before. Two hours later he returned to the hotel. He
+glanced in at the open door of the little combined reception room and
+cafe.
+
+Half a dozen of Macuto's representative social and official
+_caballeros_ were distributed about the room. Senor Villablanca, the
+wealthy rubber concessionist, reposed his fat figure on two chairs,
+with an emollient smile beaming upon his chocolate-coloured face.
+Guilbert, the French mining engineer, leered through his polished
+nose-glasses. Colonel Mendez, of the regular army, in gold-laced
+uniform and fatuous grin, was busily extracting corks from champagne
+bottles. Other patterns of Macutian gallantry and fashion pranced and
+posed. The air was hazy with cigarette smoke. Wine dripped upon the
+floor.
+
+Perched upon a table in the centre of the room in an attitude of easy
+preeminence was Mlle. Giraud. A chic costume of white lawn and cherry
+ribbons supplanted her travelling garb. There was a suggestion of
+lace, and a frill or two, with a discreet, small implication of
+hand-embroidered pink hosiery. Upon her lap rested a guitar. In her
+face was the light of resurrection, the peace of elysium attained
+through fire and suffering. She was singing to a lively accompaniment
+a little song:
+
+ "When you see de big round moon
+ Comin' up like a balloon,
+ Dis nigger skips fur to kiss de lips
+ Ob his stylish, black-faced coon."
+
+The singer caught sight of Armstrong.
+
+"Hi! there, Johnny," she called; "I've been expecting you for an
+hour. What kept you? Gee! but these smoked guys are the slowest you
+ever saw. They ain't on, at all. Come along in, and I'll make this
+coffee-coloured old sport with the gold epaulettes open one for you
+right off the ice."
+
+"Thank you," said Armstrong; "not just now, I believe. I've several
+things to attend to."
+
+He walked out and down the street, and met Rucker coming up from the
+Consulate.
+
+"Play you a game of billiards," said Armstrong. "I want something to
+take the taste of the sea level out of my mouth."
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+"GIRL"
+
+
+In gilt letters on the ground glass of the door of room No. 962 were
+the words: "Robbins & Hartley, Brokers." The clerks had gone. It was
+past five, and with the solid tramp of a drove of prize Percherons,
+scrub-women were invading the cloud-capped twenty-story office
+building. A puff of red-hot air flavoured with lemon peelings,
+soft-coal smoke and train oil came in through the half-open windows.
+
+Robbins, fifty, something of an overweight beau, and addicted to first
+nights and hotel palm-rooms, pretended to be envious of his partner's
+commuter's joys.
+
+"Going to be something doing in the humidity line to-night," he said.
+"You out-of-town chaps will be the people, with your katydids and
+moonlight and long drinks and things out on the front porch."
+
+Hartley, twenty-nine, serious, thin, good-looking, nervous, sighed
+and frowned a little.
+
+"Yes," said he, "we always have cool nights in Floralhurst, especially
+in the winter."
+
+A man with an air of mystery came in the door and went up to Hartley.
+
+"I've found where she lives," he announced in the portentous
+half-whisper that makes the detective at work a marked being to his
+fellow men.
+
+Hartley scowled him into a state of dramatic silence and quietude.
+But by that time Robbins had got his cane and set his tie pin to his
+liking, and with a debonair nod went out to his metropolitan
+amusements.
+
+"Here is the address," said the detective in a natural tone, being
+deprived of an audience to foil.
+
+Hartley took the leaf torn out of the sleuth's dingy memorandum book.
+On it were pencilled the words "Vivienne Arlington, No. 341 East
+----th Street, care of Mrs. McComus."
+
+"Moved there a week ago," said the detective. "Now, if you want any
+shadowing done, Mr. Hartley, I can do you as fine a job in that line
+as anybody in the city. It will be only $7 a day and expenses. Can
+send in a daily typewritten report, covering--"
+
+"You needn't go on," interrupted the broker. "It isn't a case of that
+kind. I merely wanted the address. How much shall I pay you?"
+
+"One day's work," said the sleuth. "A tenner will cover it."
+
+Hartley paid the man and dismissed him. Then he left the office and
+boarded a Broadway car. At the first large crosstown artery of travel
+he took an eastbound car that deposited him in a decaying avenue,
+whose ancient structures once sheltered the pride and glory of the
+town.
+
+Walking a few squares, he came to the building that he sought. It was
+a new flathouse, bearing carved upon its cheap stone portal its
+sonorous name, "The Vallambrosa." Fire-escapes zigzagged down its
+front--these laden with household goods, drying clothes, and
+squalling children evicted by the midsummer heat. Here and there a
+pale rubber plant peeped from the miscellaneous mass, as if wondering
+to what kingdom it belonged--vegetable, animal or artificial.
+
+Hartley pressed the "McComus" button. The door latch clicked
+spasmodically--now hospitably, now doubtfully, as though in
+anxiety whether it might be admitting friends or duns. Hartley
+entered and began to climb the stairs after the manner of those who
+seek their friends in city flat-houses--which is the manner of a boy
+who climbs an apple-tree, stopping when he comes upon what he wants.
+
+On the fourth floor he saw Vivienne standing in an open door. She
+invited him inside, with a nod and a bright, genuine smile. She
+placed a chair for him near a window, and poised herself gracefully
+upon the edge of one of those Jekyll-and-Hyde pieces of furniture that
+are masked and mysteriously hooded, unguessable bulks by day and
+inquisitorial racks of torture by night.
+
+Hartley cast a quick, critical, appreciative glance at her before
+speaking, and told himself that his taste in choosing had been
+flawless.
+
+Vivienne was about twenty-one. She was of the purest Saxon type. Her
+hair was a ruddy golden, each filament of the neatly gathered mass
+shining with its own lustre and delicate graduation of colour. In
+perfect harmony were her ivory-clear complexion and deep sea-blue eyes
+that looked upon the world with the ingenuous calmness of a mermaid or
+the pixie of an undiscovered mountain stream. Her frame was strong
+and yet possessed the grace of absolute naturalness. And yet with all
+her Northern clearness and frankness of line and colouring, there
+seemed to be something of the tropics in her--something of languor
+in the droop of her pose, of love of ease in her ingenious complacency
+of satisfaction and comfort in the mere act of breathing--something
+that seemed to claim for her a right as a perfect work of nature to
+exist and be admired equally with a rare flower or some beautiful,
+milk-white dove among its sober-hued companions.
+
+She was dressed in a white waist and dark skirt--that discreet
+masquerade of goose-girl and duchess.
+
+"Vivienne," said Hartley, looking at her pleadingly, "you did not
+answer my last letter. It was only by nearly a week's search that I
+found where you had moved to. Why have you kept me in suspense when
+you knew how anxiously I was waiting to see you and hear from you?"
+
+The girl looked out the window dreamily.
+
+"Mr. Hartley," she said hesitatingly, "I hardly know what to say to
+you. I realize all the advantages of your offer, and sometimes I feel
+sure that I could be contented with you. But, again, I am doubtful.
+I was born a city girl, and I am afraid to bind myself to a quiet
+suburban life."
+
+"My dear girl," said Hartley, ardently, "have I not told you that you
+shall have everything that your heart can desire that is in my power
+to give you? You shall come to the city for the theatres, for
+shopping and to visit your friends as often as you care to. You can
+trust me, can you not?"
+
+"To the fullest," she said, turning her frank eyes upon him with a
+smile. "I know you are the kindest of men, and that the girl you get
+will be a lucky one. I learned all about you when I was at the
+Montgomerys'."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Hartley, with a tender, reminiscent light in his eye;
+"I remember well the evening I first saw you at the Montgomerys'.
+Mrs. Montgomery was sounding your praises to me all the evening.
+And she hardly did you justice. I shall never forget that supper.
+Come, Vivienne, promise me. I want you. You'll never regret coming
+with me. No one else will ever give you as pleasant a home."
+
+The girl sighed and looked down at her folded hands.
+
+A sudden jealous suspicion seized Hartley.
+
+"Tell me, Vivienne," he asked, regarding her keenly, "is there
+another--is there some one else?"
+
+A rosy flush crept slowly over her fair cheeks and neck.
+
+"You shouldn't ask that, Mr. Hartley," she said, in some confusion.
+"But I will tell you. There is one other--but he has no right--I
+have promised him nothing."
+
+"His name?" demanded Hartley, sternly.
+
+"Townsend."
+
+"Rafford Townsend!" exclaimed Hartley, with a grim tightening of his
+jaw. "How did that man come to know you? After all I've done for
+him--"
+
+"His auto has just stopped below," said Vivienne, bending over the
+window-sill. "He's coming for his answer. Oh I don't know what to
+do!"
+
+The bell in the flat kitchen whirred. Vivienne hurried to press the
+latch button.
+
+"Stay here," said Hartley. "I will meet him in the hall."
+
+Townsend, looking like a Spanish grandee in his light tweeds, Panama
+hat and curling black mustache, came up the stairs three at a time.
+He stopped at sight of Hartley and looked foolish.
+
+"Go back," said Hartley, firmly, pointing downstairs with his
+forefinger.
+
+"Hullo!" said Townsend, feigning surprise. "What's up? What are you
+doing here, old man?"
+
+"Go back," repeated Hartley, inflexibly. "The Law of the Jungle. Do
+you want the Pack to tear you in pieces? The kill is mine."
+
+"I came here to see a plumber about the bathroom connections," said
+Townsend, bravely.
+
+"All right," said Hartley. "You shall have that lying plaster to
+stick upon your traitorous soul. But, go back." Townsend went
+downstairs, leaving a bitter word to be wafted up the draught of the
+staircase. Hartley went back to his wooing.
+
+"Vivienne," said he, masterfully. "I have got to have you. I will
+take no more refusals or dilly-dallying."
+
+"When do you want me?" she asked.
+
+"Now. As soon as you can get ready."
+
+She stood calmly before him and looked him in the eye.
+
+"Do you think for one moment," she said, "that I would enter your home
+while Heloise is there?"
+
+Hartley cringed as if from an unexpected blow. He folded his arms and
+paced the carpet once or twice.
+
+"She shall go," he declared grimly. Drops stood upon his brow. "Why
+should I let that woman make my life miserable? Never have I seen one
+day of freedom from trouble since I have known her. You are right,
+Vivienne. Heloise must be sent away before I can take you home. But
+she shall go. I have decided. I will turn her from my doors."
+
+"When will you do this?" asked the girl.
+
+Hartley clinched his teeth and bent his brows together.
+
+"To-night," he said, resolutely. "I will send her away to-night."
+
+"Then," said Vivienne, "my answer is 'yes.' Come for me when you
+will."
+
+She looked into his eyes with a sweet, sincere light in her own.
+Hartley could scarcely believe that her surrender was true, it was
+so swift and complete.
+
+"Promise me," he said feelingly, "on your word and honour."
+
+"On my word and honour," repeated Vivienne, softly.
+
+At the door he turned and gazed at her happily, but yet as one who
+scarcely trusts the foundations of his joy.
+
+"To-morrow," he said, with a forefinger of reminder uplifted.
+
+"To-morrow," she repeated with a smile of truth and candour.
+
+In an hour and forty minutes Hartley stepped off the train at
+Floralhurst. A brisk walk of ten minutes brought him to the gate of a
+handsome two-story cottage set upon a wide and well-tended lawn.
+Halfway to the house he was met by a woman with jet-black braided hair
+and flowing white summer gown, who half strangled him without apparent
+cause.
+
+When they stepped into the hall she said:
+
+"Mamma's here. The auto is coming for her in half an hour. She came
+to dinner, but there's no dinner."
+
+"I've something to tell you," said Hartley. "I thought to break it to
+you gently, but since your mother is here we may as well out with it."
+
+He stooped and whispered something at her ear.
+
+His wife screamed. Her mother came running into the hall. The
+dark-haired woman screamed again--the joyful scream of a well-beloved
+and petted woman.
+
+"Oh, mamma!" she cried ecstatically, "what do you think? Vivienne is
+coming to cook for us! She is the one that stayed with the
+Montgomerys a whole year. And now, Billy, dear," she concluded, "you
+must go right down into the kitchen and discharge Heloise. She has
+been drunk again the whole day long."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW
+
+
+The season of irresponsibility is at hand. Come, let us twine round
+our brows wreaths of poison ivy (that is for idiocy), and wander hand
+in hand with sociology in the summer fields.
+
+Likely as not the world is flat. The wise men have tried to prove
+that it is round, with indifferent success. They pointed out to us a
+ship going to sea, and bade us observe that, at length, the convexity
+of the earth hid from our view all but the vessel's topmast. But we
+picked up a telescope and looked, and saw the decks and hull again.
+Then the wise men said: "Oh, pshaw! anyhow, the variation of the
+intersection of the equator and the ecliptic proves it." We could not
+see this through our telescope, so we remained silent. But it stands
+to reason that, if the world were round, the queues of Chinamen
+would stand straight up from their heads instead of hanging down their
+backs, as travellers assure us they do.
+
+Another hot-weather corroboration of the flat theory is the fact that
+all of life, as we know it, moves in little, unavailing circles.
+More justly than to anything else, it can be likened to the game
+of baseball. Crack! we hit the ball, and away we go. If we earn a
+run (in life we call it success) we get back to the home plate and
+sit upon a bench. If we are thrown out, we walk back to the home
+plate--and sit upon a bench.
+
+The circumnavigators of the alleged globe may have sailed the rim of a
+watery circle back to the same port again. The truly great return at
+the high tide of their attainments to the simplicity of a child. The
+billionaire sits down at his mahogany to his bowl of bread and milk.
+When you reach the end of your career, just take down the sign "Goal"
+and look at the other side of it. You will find "Beginning Point"
+there. It has been reversed while you were going around the track.
+
+But this is humour, and must be stopped. Let us get back to the
+serious questions that arise whenever Sociology turns summer boarder.
+You are invited to consider the scene of the story--wild, Atlantic
+waves, thundering against a wooded and rock-bound shore--in the
+Greater City of New York.
+
+The town of Fishampton, on the south shore of Long Island, is noted
+for its clam fritters and the summer residence of the Van Plushvelts.
+
+The Van Plushvelts have a hundred million dollars, and their name is a
+household word with tradesmen and photographers.
+
+On the fifteenth of June the Van Plushvelts boarded up the front door
+of their city house, carefully deposited their cat on the sidewalk,
+instructed the caretaker not to allow it to eat any of the ivy on the
+walls, and whizzed away in a 40-horse-power to Fishampton to stray
+alone in the shade--Amaryllis not being in their class. If you are a
+subscriber to the _Toadies' Magazine_, you have often--You say you are
+not? Well, you buy it at a news-stand, thinking that the newsdealer
+is not wise to you. But he knows about it all. HE knows--HE knows!
+I say that you have often seen in the _Toadies' Magazine_ pictures of
+the Van Plushvelts' summer home; so it will not be described here.
+Our business is with young Haywood Van Plushvelt, sixteen years old,
+heir to the century of millions, darling of the financial gods and
+great grandson of Peter Van Plushvelt, former owner of a particularly
+fine cabbage patch that has been ruined by an intrusive lot of
+downtown skyscrapers.
+
+One afternoon young Haywood Van Plushvelt strolled out between the
+granite gate posts of "Dolce far Niente"--that's what they called
+the place; and it was an improvement on dolce Far Rockaway, I can
+tell you.
+
+Haywood walked down into the village. He was human, after all, and
+his prospective millions weighed upon him. Wealth had wreaked upon
+him its direfullest. He was the product of private tutors. Even under
+his first hobby-horse had tan bark been strewn. He had been born with
+a gold spoon, lobster fork and fish-set in his mouth. For which I
+hope, later, to submit justification, I must ask your consideration of
+his haberdashery and tailoring.
+
+Young Fortunatus was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a
+neat, white straw hat, neat low-cut tan shoes, of the well-known
+"immaculate" trade mark, a neat, narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried
+a slender, neat, bamboo cane.
+
+Down Persimmon Street (there's never tree north of Hagerstown, Md.)
+came from the village "Smoky" Dodson, fifteen and a half, worst boy in
+Fishampton. "Smoky" was dressed in a ragged red sweater, wrecked and
+weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and trousers of the
+"serviceable" brand. Dust, clinging to the moisture induced by free
+exercise, darkened wide areas of his face. "Smoky" carried a baseball
+bat, and a league ball that advertised itself in the rotundity of his
+trousers pocket. Haywood stopped and passed the time of day.
+
+"Going to play ball?" he asked.
+
+"Smoky's" eyes and countenance confronted him with a frank
+blue-and-freckled scrutiny.
+
+"Me?" he said, with deadly mildness; "sure not. Can't you see I've
+got a divin' suit on? I'm goin' up in a submarine balloon to catch
+butterflies with a two-inch auger.
+
+"Excuse me," said Haywood, with the insulting politeness of his
+caste, "for mistaking you for a gentleman. I might have known
+better."
+
+"How might you have known better if you thought I was one?" said
+"Smoky," unconsciously a logician.
+
+"By your appearance," said Haywood. "No gentleman is dirty, ragged
+and a liar."
+
+"Smoky" hooted once like a ferry-boat, spat on his hand, got a firm
+grip on his baseball bat and then dropped it against the fence.
+
+"Say," said he, "I knows you. You're the pup that belongs in that
+swell private summer sanitarium for city-guys over there. I seen you
+come out of the gate. You can't bluff nobody because you're rich.
+And because you got on swell clothes. Arabella! Yah!"
+
+"Ragamuffin!" said Haywood.
+
+"Smoky" picked up a fence-rail splinter and laid it on his shoulder.
+
+"Dare you to knock it off," he challenged.
+
+"I wouldn't soil my hands with you," said the aristocrat.
+
+"'Fraid," said "Smoky" concisely. "Youse city-ducks ain't got the I
+sand. I kin lick you with one-hand."
+
+"I don't wish to have any trouble with you," said Haywood. "I asked
+you a civil question; and you replied, like a--like a--a cad."
+
+"Wot's a cad?" asked "Smoky."
+
+"A cad is a disagreeable person," answered Haywood, "who lacks manners
+and doesn't know his place. They sometimes play baseball."
+
+"I can tell you what a mollycoddle is," said "Smoky." "It's a monkey
+dressed up by its mother and sent out to pick daisies on the lawn."
+
+"When you have the honour to refer to the members of my family," said
+Haywood, with some dim ideas of a code in his mind, "you'd better
+leave the ladies out of your remarks."
+
+"Ho! ladies!" mocked the rude one. "I say ladies! I know what them
+rich women in the city does. They, drink cocktails and swear and give
+parties to gorillas. The papers say so."
+
+Then Haywood knew that it must be. He took off his coat, folded it
+neatly and laid it on the roadside grass, placed his hat upon it and
+began to unknot his blue silk tie.
+
+"Hadn't yer better ring fer yer maid, Arabella?" taunted "Smoky."
+"Wot yer going to do--go to bed?"
+
+"I'm going to give you a good trouncing," said the hero. He did not
+hesitate, although the enemy was far beneath him socially. He
+remembered that his father once thrashed a cabman, and the papers gave
+it two columns, first page. And the _Toadies' Magazine_ had a special
+article on Upper Cuts by the Upper Classes, and ran new pictures of
+the Van Plushvelt country seat, at Fishampton.
+
+"Wot's trouncing?" asked "Smoky," suspiciously. "I don't want your
+old clothes. I'm no--oh, you mean to scrap! My, my! I won't do a
+thing to mamma's pet. Criminy! I'd hate to be a hand-laundered thing
+like you.
+
+"Smoky" waited with some awkwardness for his adversary to prepare for
+battle. His own decks were always clear for action. When he should
+spit upon the palm of his terrible right it was equivalent to "You may
+fire now, Gridley."
+
+The hated patrician advanced, with his shirt sleeves neatly rolled up.
+"Smoky" waited, in an attitude of ease, expecting the affair to be
+conducted according to Fishampton's rules of war. These allowed
+combat to be prefaced by stigma, recrimination, epithet, abuse and
+insult gradually increasing in emphasis and degree. After a round of
+these "you're anothers" would come the chip knocked from the shoulder,
+or the advance across the "dare" line drawn with a toe on the ground.
+Next light taps given and taken, these also increasing in force until
+finally the blood was up and fists going at their best.
+
+But Haywood did not know Fishampton's rules. Noblesse oblige kept a
+faint smile on his face as he walked slowly up to "Smoky" and said:
+
+"Going to play ball?"
+
+"Smoky" quickly understood this to be a putting of the previous
+question, giving him the chance to make practical apology by answering
+it with civility and relevance.
+
+"Listen this time," said he. "I'm goin' skatin' on the river. Don't
+you see me automobile with Chinese lanterns on it standin' and waitin'
+for me?"
+
+Haywood knocked him down.
+
+"Smoky" felt wronged. To thus deprive him of preliminary wrangle and
+objurgation was to send an armoured knight full tilt against a
+crashing lance without permitting him first to caracole around the
+list to the flourish of trumpets. But he scrambled up and fell upon
+his foe, head, feet and fists.
+
+The fight lasted one round of an hour and ten minutes. It was
+lengthened until it was more like a war or a family feud than a fight.
+Haywood had learned some of the science of boxing and wrestling from
+his tutors, but these he discarded for the more instinctive methods of
+battle handed down by the cave-dwelling Van Plushvelts.
+
+So, when he found himself, during the melee, seated upon the kicking
+and roaring "Smoky's" chest, he improved the opportunity by vigorously
+kneading handfuls of sand and soil into his adversary's ears, eyes
+and mouth, and when "Smoky" got the proper leg hold and "turned" him,
+he fastened both hands in the Plushvelt hair and pounded the Plushvelt
+head against the lap of mother earth. Of course, the strife was not
+incessantly active. There were seasons when one sat upon the other,
+holding him down, while each blew like a grampus, spat out the more
+inconveniently large sections of gravel and earth and strove to subdue
+the spirit of his opponent with a frightful and soul-paralyzing glare.
+
+At last, it seemed that in the language of the ring, their efforts
+lacked steam. They broke away, and each disappeared in a cloud as he
+brushed away the dust of the conflict. As soon as his breath
+permitted, Haywood walked close to "Smoky" and said:
+
+"Going to play ball?"
+
+"Smoky" looked pensively at the sky, at his bat lying on the ground,
+and at the "leaguer" rounding his pocket.
+
+"Sure," he said, offhandedly. "The 'Yellowjackets' plays the 'Long
+Islands.' I'm cap'n of the 'Long Islands.'"
+
+"I guess I didn't mean to say you were ragged," said Haywood. "But
+you are dirty, you know."
+
+"Sure," said "Smoky." "Yer get that way knockin' around. Say, I
+don't believe them New York papers about ladies drinkin' and havin'
+monkeys dinin' at the table with 'em. I guess they're lies, like they
+print about people eatin' out of silver plates, and ownin' dogs that
+cost $100."
+
+"Certainly," said Haywood. "What do you play on your team?"
+
+"Ketcher. Ever play any?"
+
+"Never in my life," said Haywood. "I've never known any fellows
+except one or two of my cousins."
+
+"Jer like to learn? We're goin' to have a practice-game before the
+match. Wanter come along? I'll put yer in left-field, and yer won't
+be long ketchin' on."
+
+"I'd like it bully," said Haywood. "I've always wanted to play
+baseball."
+
+The ladies' maids of New York and the families of Western mine owners
+with social ambitions will remember well the sensation that was
+created by the report that the young multi-millionaire, Haywood Van
+Plushvelt, was playing ball with the village youths of Fishampton. It
+was conceded that the millennium of democracy had come. Reporters and
+photographers swarmed to the island. The papers printed half-page
+pictures of him as short-stop stopping a hot grounder. The _Toadies'
+Magazine_ got out a Bat and Ball number that covered the subject
+historically, beginning with the vampire bat and ending with the
+Patriarchs' ball--illustrated with interior views of the Van
+Plushvelt country seat. Ministers, educators and sociologists
+everywhere hailed the event as the tocsin call that proclaimed the
+universal brotherhood of man.
+
+One afternoon I was reclining under the trees near the shore at
+Fishampton in the esteemed company of an eminent, bald-headed young
+sociologist. By way of note it may be inserted that all sociologists
+are more or less bald, and exactly thirty-two. Look 'em over.
+
+The sociologist was citing the Van Plushvelt case as the most
+important "uplift" symptom of a generation, and as an excuse for his
+own existence.
+
+Immediately before us were the village baseball grounds. And now came
+the sportive youth of Fishampton and distributed themselves, shouting,
+about the diamond.
+
+"There," said the sociologist, pointing, "there is young Van
+Plushvelt."
+
+I raised myself (so far a cosycophant with Mary Ann) and gazed.
+
+Young Van Plushvelt sat upon the ground. He was dressed in a ragged
+red sweater, wrecked and weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and
+trousers of the "serviceable" brand. Dust clinging to the moisture
+induced by free exercise, darkened wide areas of his face.
+
+"That is he," repeated the sociologist. If he had said "him" I could
+have been less vindictive.
+
+On a bench, with an air, sat the young millionaire's chum.
+
+He was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a neat white straw
+hat, neat low-cut tan shoes, linen of the well-known "immaculate"
+trade mark, a neat, narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried a slender,
+neat bamboo cane.
+
+I laughed loudly and vulgarly.
+
+"What you want to do," said I to the sociologist, "is to establish a
+reformatory for the Logical Vicious Circle. Or else I've got wheels.
+It looks to me as if things are running round and round in circles
+instead of getting anywhere."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked the man of progress.
+
+"Why, look what he has done to 'Smoky'," I replied.
+
+"You will always be a fool," said my friend, the sociologist,
+getting up and walking away.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF
+
+
+It looked like a good thing: but wait till I tell you. We were down
+South, in Alabama--Bill Driscoll and myself--when this kidnapping
+idea struck us. It was, as Bill afterward expressed it, "during a
+moment of temporary mental apparition"; but we didn't find that out
+till later.
+
+There was a town down there, as flat as a flannel-cake, and called
+Summit, of course. It contained inhabitants of as undeleterious and
+self-satisfied a class of peasantry as ever clustered around a
+Maypole.
+
+Bill and me had a joint capital of about six hundred dollars, and
+we needed just two thousand dollars more to pull off a fraudulent
+town-lot scheme in Western Illinois with. We talked it over on the
+front steps of the hotel. Philoprogenitiveness, says we, is strong
+in semi-rural communities; therefore and for other reasons, a
+kidnapping project ought to do better there than in the radius of
+newspapers that send reporters out in plain clothes to stir up talk
+about such things. We knew that Summit couldn't get after us with
+anything stronger than constables and maybe some lackadaisical
+bloodhounds and a diatribe or two in the _Weekly Farmers' Budget_.
+So, it looked good.
+
+We selected for our victim the only child of a prominent citizen named
+Ebenezer Dorset. The father was respectable and tight, a mortgage
+fancier and a stern, upright collection-plate passer and forecloser.
+The kid was a boy of ten, with bas-relief freckles, and hair the
+colour of the cover of the magazine you buy at the news-stand when you
+want to catch a train. Bill and me figured that Ebenezer would melt
+down for a ransom of two thousand dollars to a cent. But wait till I
+tell you.
+
+About two miles from Summit was a little mountain, covered with a
+dense cedar brake. On the rear elevation of this mountain was a cave.
+There we stored provisions. One evening after sundown, we drove in a
+buggy past old Dorset's house. The kid was in the street, throwing
+rocks at a kitten on the opposite fence.
+
+"Hey, little boy!" says Bill, "would you like to have a bag of candy
+and a nice ride?"
+
+The boy catches Bill neatly in the eye with a piece of brick.
+
+"That will cost the old man an extra five hundred dollars," says Bill,
+climbing over the wheel.
+
+That boy put up a fight like a welter-weight cinnamon bear; but, at
+last, we got him down in the bottom of the buggy and drove away. We
+took him up to the cave and I hitched the horse in the cedar brake.
+After dark I drove the buggy to the little village, three miles away,
+where we had hired it, and walked back to the mountain.
+
+Bill was pasting court-plaster over the scratches and bruises on his
+features. There was a fire burning behind the big rock at the entrance
+of the cave, and the boy was watching a pot of boiling coffee, with
+two buzzard tail-feathers stuck in his red hair. He points a stick
+at me when I come up, and says:
+
+"Ha! cursed paleface, do you dare to enter the camp of Red Chief, the
+terror of the plains?
+
+"He's all right now," says Bill, rolling up his trousers and examining
+some bruises on his shins. "We're playing Indian. We're making
+Buffalo Bill's show look like magic-lantern views of Palestine in the
+town hall. I'm Old Hank, the Trapper, Red Chief's captive, and I'm to
+be scalped at daybreak. By Geronimo! that kid can kick hard."
+
+Yes, sir, that boy seemed to be having the time of his life. The fun
+of camping out in a cave had made him forget that he was a captive
+himself. He immediately christened me Snake-eye, the Spy, and
+announced that, when his braves returned from the warpath, I was to be
+broiled at the stake at the rising of the sun.
+
+Then we had supper; and he filled his mouth full of bacon and bread
+and gravy, and began to talk. He made a during-dinner speech
+something like this:
+
+"I like this fine. I never camped out before; but I had a pet 'possum
+once, and I was nine last birthday. I hate to go to school. Rats ate
+up sixteen of Jimmy Talbot's aunt's speckled hen's eggs. Are there
+any real Indians in these woods? I want some more gravy. Does the
+trees moving make the wind blow? We had five puppies. What makes your
+nose so red, Hank? My father has lots of money. Are the stars hot? I
+whipped Ed Walker twice, Saturday. I don't like girls. You dassent
+catch toads unless with a string. Do oxen make any noise? Why are
+oranges round? Have you got beds to sleep on in this cave? Amos Murray
+has got six toes. A parrot can talk, but a monkey or a fish can't.
+How many does it take to make twelve?"
+
+Every few minutes he would remember that he was a pesky redskin, and
+pick up his stick rifle and tiptoe to the mouth of the cave to rubber
+for the scouts of the hated paleface. Now and then he would let out a
+war-whoop that made Old Hank the Trapper shiver. That boy had Bill
+terrorized from the start.
+
+"Red Chief," says I to the kid, "would you like to go home?"
+
+"Aw, what for?" says he. "I don't have any fun at home. I hate to
+go to school. I like to camp out. You won't take me back home again,
+Snake-eye, will you?"
+
+"Not right away," says I. "We'll stay here in the cave a while."
+
+"All right!" says he. "That'll be fine. I never had such fun in all
+my life."
+
+We went to bed about eleven o'clock. We spread down some wide
+blankets and quilts and put Red Chief between us. We weren't afraid
+he'd run away. He kept us awake for three hours, jumping up and
+reaching for his rifle and screeching: "Hist! pard," in mine and
+Bill's ears, as the fancied crackle of a twig or the rustle of a leaf
+revealed to his young imagination the stealthy approach of the outlaw
+band. At last, I fell into a troubled sleep, and dreamed that I had
+been kidnapped and chained to a tree by a ferocious pirate with red
+hair.
+
+Just at daybreak, I was awakened by a series of awful screams from
+Bill. They weren't yells, or howls, or shouts, or whoops, or yawps,
+such as you'd expect from a manly set of vocal organs--they were
+simply indecent, terrifying, humiliating screams, such as women emit
+when they see ghosts or caterpillars. It's an awful thing to hear a
+strong, desperate, fat man scream incontinently in a cave at daybreak.
+
+I jumped up to see what the matter was. Red Chief was sitting on
+Bill's chest, with one hand twined in Bill's hair. In the other he
+had the sharp case-knife we used for slicing bacon; and he was
+industriously and realistically trying to take Bill's scalp, according
+to the sentence that had been pronounced upon him the evening before.
+
+I got the knife away from the kid and made him lie down again. But,
+from that moment, Bill's spirit was broken. He laid down on his side
+of the bed, but he never closed an eye again in sleep as long as that
+boy was with us. I dozed off for a while, but along toward sun-up I
+remembered that Red Chief had said I was to be burned at the stake
+at the rising of the sun. I wasn't nervous or afraid; but I sat up
+and lit my pipe and leaned against a rock.
+
+"What you getting up so soon for, Sam?" asked Bill.
+
+"Me?" says I. "Oh, I got a kind of a pain in my shoulder. I thought
+sitting up would rest it."
+
+"You're a liar!" says Bill. "You're afraid. You was to be burned at
+sunrise, and you was afraid he'd do it. And he would, too, if he
+could find a match. Ain't it awful, Sam? Do you think anybody will pay
+out money to get a little imp like that back home?"
+
+"Sure," said I. "A rowdy kid like that is just the kind that parents
+dote on. Now, you and the Chief get up and cook breakfast, while I go
+up on the top of this mountain and reconnoitre."
+
+I went up on the peak of the little mountain and ran my eye over the
+contiguous vicinity. Over toward Summit I expected to see the sturdy
+yeomanry of the village armed with scythes and pitchforks beating the
+countryside for the dastardly kidnappers. But what I saw was a
+peaceful landscape dotted with one man ploughing with a dun mule.
+Nobody was dragging the creek; no couriers dashed hither and yon,
+bringing tidings of no news to the distracted parents. There was a
+sylvan attitude of somnolent sleepiness pervading that section of the
+external outward surface of Alabama that lay exposed to my view.
+"Perhaps," says I to myself, "it has not yet been discovered that
+the wolves have borne away the tender lambkin from the fold. Heaven
+help the wolves!" says I, and I went down the mountain to breakfast.
+
+When I got to the cave I found Bill backed up against the side of it,
+breathing hard, and the boy threatening to smash him with a rock half
+as big as a cocoanut.
+
+"He put a red-hot boiled potato down my back," explained Bill, "and
+then mashed it with his foot; and I boxed his ears. Have you got a gun
+about you, Sam?"
+
+I took the rock away from the boy and kind of patched up the argument.
+"I'll fix you," says the kid to Bill. "No man ever yet struck the Red
+Chief but what he got paid for it. You better beware!"
+
+After breakfast the kid takes a piece of leather with strings wrapped
+around it out of his pocket and goes outside the cave unwinding it.
+
+"What's he up to now?" says Bill, anxiously. "You don't think he'll
+run away, do you, Sam?"
+
+"No fear of it," says I. "He don't seem to be much of a home body.
+But we've got to fix up some plan about the ransom. There don't seem
+to be much excitement around Summit on account of his disappearance;
+but maybe they haven't realized yet that he's gone. His folks may
+think he's spending the night with Aunt Jane or one of the neighbours.
+Anyhow, he'll be missed to-day. To-night we must get a message to his
+father demanding the two thousand dollars for his return."
+
+Just then we heard a kind Of war-whoop, such as David might have
+emitted when he knocked out the champion Goliath. It was a sling that
+Red Chief had pulled out of his pocket, and he was whirling it around
+his head.
+
+I dodged, and heard a heavy thud and a kind of a sigh from Bill, like
+a horse gives out when you take his saddle off. A niggerhead rock the
+size of an egg had caught Bill just behind his left ear. He loosened
+himself all over and fell in the fire across the frying pan of hot
+water for washing the dishes. I dragged him out and poured cold water
+on his head for half an hour.
+
+By and by, Bill sits up and feels behind his ear and says: "Sam, do
+you know who my favourite Biblical character is?"
+
+"Take it easy," says I. "You'll come to your senses presently."
+
+"King Herod," says he. "You won't go away and leave me here alone,
+will you, Sam?"
+
+I went out and caught that boy and shook him until his freckles
+rattled.
+
+"If you don't behave," says I, "I'll take you straight home. Now, are
+you going to be good, or not?"
+
+"I was only funning," says he sullenly. "I didn't mean to hurt Old
+Hank. But what did he hit me for? I'll behave, Snake-eye, if you
+won't send me home, and if you'll let me play the Black Scout to-day."
+
+"I don't know the game," says I. "That's for you and Mr. Bill to
+decide. He's your playmate for the day. I'm going away for a while,
+on business. Now, you come in and make friends with him and say you
+are sorry for hurting him, or home you go, at once."
+
+I made him and Bill shake hands, and then I took Bill aside and told
+him I was going to Poplar Cove, a little village three miles from the
+cave, and find out what I could about how the kidnapping had been
+regarded in Summit. Also, I thought it best to send a peremptory
+letter to old man Dorset that day, demanding the ransom and dictating
+how it should be paid.
+
+"You know, Sam," says Bill, "I've stood by you without batting an
+eye in earthquakes, fire and flood--in poker games, dynamite
+outrages, police raids, train robberies and cyclones. I never lost my
+nerve yet till we kidnapped that two-legged skyrocket of a kid. He's
+got me going. You won't leave me long with him, will you, Sam?"
+
+"I'll be back some time this afternoon," says I. "You must keep the
+boy amused and quiet till I return. And now we'll write the letter to
+old Dorset."
+
+Bill and I got paper and pencil and worked on the letter while Red
+Chief, with a blanket wrapped around him, strutted up and down,
+guarding the mouth of the cave. Bill begged me tearfully to make the
+ransom fifteen hundred dollars instead of two thousand. "I ain't
+attempting," says he, "to decry the celebrated moral aspect of
+parental affection, but we're dealing with humans, and it ain't human
+for anybody to give up two thousand dollars for that forty-pound chunk
+of freckled wildcat. I'm willing to take a chance at fifteen hundred
+dollars. You can charge the difference up to me."
+
+So, to relieve Bill, I acceded, and we collaborated a letter that ran
+this way:
+
+ _Ebenezer Dorset, Esq.:_
+
+ We have your boy concealed in a place far from Summit. It is useless
+ for you or the most skilful detectives to attempt to find him.
+ Absolutely, the only terms on which you can have him restored to you
+ are these: We demand fifteen hundred dollars in large bills for his
+ return; the money to be left at midnight to-night at the same spot
+ and in the same box as your reply--as hereinafter described. If
+ you agree to these terms, send your answer in writing by a solitary
+ messenger to-night at half-past eight o'clock. After crossing Owl
+ Creek, on the road to Poplar Cove, there are three large trees about
+ a hundred yards apart, close to the fence of the wheat field on the
+ right-hand side. At the bottom of the fence-post, opposite the
+ third tree, will be found a small pasteboard box.
+
+ The messenger will place the answer in this box and return
+ immediately to Summit.
+
+ If you attempt any treachery or fail to comply with our demand as
+ stated, you will never see your boy again.
+
+ If you pay the money as demanded, he will be returned to you safe
+ and well within three hours. These terms are final, and if you do
+ not accede to them no further communication will be attempted.
+
+ TWO DESPERATE MEN.
+
+I addressed this letter to Dorset, and put it in my pocket. As I was
+about to start, the kid comes up to me and says:
+
+"Aw, Snake-eye, you said I could play the Black Scout while you was
+gone."
+
+"Play it, of course," says I. "Mr. Bill will play with you. What
+kind of a game is it?"
+
+"I'm the Black Scout," says Red Chief, "and I have to ride to the
+stockade to warn the settlers that the Indians are coming. I'm tired
+of playing Indian myself. I want to be the Black Scout."
+
+"All right," says I. "It sounds harmless to me. I guess Mr. Bill will
+help you foil the pesky savages."
+
+"What am I to do?" asks Bill, looking at the kid suspiciously.
+
+"You are the hoss," says Black Scout. "Get down on your hands and
+knees. How can I ride to the stockade without a hoss?"
+
+"You'd better keep him interested," said I, "till we get the scheme
+going. Loosen up."
+
+Bill gets down on his all fours, and a look comes in his eye like a
+rabbit's when you catch it in a trap.
+
+"How far is it to the stockade, kid?" he asks, in a husky manner of
+voice.
+
+"Ninety miles," says the Black Scout. "And you have to hump yourself
+to get there on time. Whoa, now!"
+
+The Black Scout jumps on Bill's back and digs his heels in his side.
+
+"For Heaven's sake," says Bill, "hurry back, Sam, as soon as you can.
+I wish we hadn't made the ransom more than a thousand. Say, you quit
+kicking me or I'll get up and warm you good."
+
+I walked over to Poplar Cove and sat around the postoffice and
+store, talking with the chawbacons that came in to trade. One
+whiskerando says that he hears Summit is all upset on account of Elder
+Ebenezer Dorset's boy having been lost or stolen. That was all I
+wanted to know. I bought some smoking tobacco, referred casually to
+the price of black-eyed peas, posted my letter surreptitiously and
+came away. The postmaster said the mail-carrier would come by in an
+hour to take the mail on to Summit.
+
+When I got back to the cave Bill and the boy were not to be found. I
+explored the vicinity of the cave, and risked a yodel or two, but
+there was no response.
+
+So I lighted my pipe and sat down on a mossy bank to await
+developments.
+
+In about half an hour I heard the bushes rustle, and Bill wabbled out
+into the little glade in front of the cave. Behind him was the kid,
+stepping softly like a scout, with a broad grin on his face. Bill
+stopped, took off his hat and wiped his face with a red handkerchief.
+The kid stopped about eight feet behind him.
+
+"Sam," says Bill, "I suppose you'll think I'm a renegade, but I
+couldn't help it. I'm a grown person with masculine proclivities and
+habits of self-defense, but there is a time when all systems of
+egotism and predominance fail. The boy is gone. I have sent him
+home. All is off. There was martyrs in old times," goes on Bill,
+"that suffered death rather than give up the particular graft they
+enjoyed. None of 'em ever was subjugated to such supernatural
+tortures as I have been. I tried to be faithful to our articles of
+depredation; but there came a limit."
+
+"What's the trouble, Bill?" I asks him.
+
+"I was rode," says Bill, "the ninety miles to the stockade, not
+barring an inch. Then, when the settlers was rescued, I was given
+oats. Sand ain't a palatable substitute. And then, for an hour I
+had to try to explain to him why there was nothin' in holes, how
+a road can run both ways and what makes the grass green. I tell
+you, Sam, a human can only stand so much. I takes him by the neck
+of his clothes and drags him down the mountain. On the way he
+kicks my legs black-and-blue from the knees down; and I've got to
+have two or three bites on my thumb and hand cauterized.
+
+"But he's gone"--continues Bill--"gone home. I showed him the
+road to Summit and kicked him about eight feet nearer there at one
+kick. I'm sorry we lose the ransom; but it was either that or Bill
+Driscoll to the madhouse."
+
+Bill is puffing and blowing, but there is a look of ineffable peace
+and growing content on his rose-pink features.
+
+"Bill," says I, "there isn't any heart disease in your family, is
+there?
+
+"No," says Bill, "nothing chronic except malaria and accidents. Why?"
+
+"Then you might turn around," says I, "and have a took behind you."
+
+Bill turns and sees the boy, and loses his complexion and sits down
+plump on the round and begins to pluck aimlessly at grass and little
+sticks. For an hour I was afraid for his mind. And then I told him
+that my scheme was to put the whole job through immediately and that
+we would get the ransom and be off with it by midnight if old Dorset
+fell in with our proposition. So Bill braced up enough to give the
+kid a weak sort of a smile and a promise to play the Russian in a
+Japanese war with him is soon as he felt a little better.
+
+I had a scheme for collecting that ransom without danger of being
+caught by counterplots that ought to commend itself to professional
+kidnappers. The tree under which the answer was to be left--and the
+money later on--was close to the road fence with big, bare fields on
+all sides. If a gang of constables should be watching for any one to
+come for the note they could see him a long way off crossing the
+fields or in the road. But no, sirree! At half-past eight I was up in
+that tree as well hidden as a tree toad, waiting for the messenger to
+arrive.
+
+Exactly on time, a half-grown boy rides up the road on a bicycle,
+locates the pasteboard box at the foot of the fence-post, slips a
+folded piece of paper into it and pedals away again back toward
+Summit.
+
+I waited an hour and then concluded the thing was square. I slid down
+the tree, got the note, slipped along the fence till I struck the
+woods, and was back at the cave in another half an hour. I opened the
+note, got near the lantern and read it to Bill. It was written with a
+pen in a crabbed hand, and the sum and substance of it was this:
+
+ _Two Desperate Men.
+
+ Gentlemen:_ I received your letter to-day by post, in regard to the
+ ransom you ask for the return of my son. I think you are a little
+ high in your demands, and I hereby make you a counter-proposition,
+ which I am inclined to believe you will accept. You bring Johnny
+ home and pay me two hundred and fifty dollars in cash, and I agree
+ to take him off your hands. You had better come at night, for the
+ neighbours believe he is lost, and I couldn't be responsible for
+ what they would do to anybody they saw bringing him back. Very
+ respectfully,
+
+ EBENEZER DORSET.
+
+"Great pirates of Penzance!" says I; "of all the impudent--"
+
+But I glanced at Bill, and hesitated. He had the most appealing look
+in his eyes I ever saw on the face of a dumb or a talking brute.
+
+"Sam," says he, "what's two hundred and fifty dollars, after all?
+We've got the money. One more night of this kid will send me to a bed
+in Bedlam. Besides being a thorough gentleman, I think Mr. Dorset is
+a spendthrift for making us such a liberal offer. You ain't going
+to let the chance go, are you?"
+
+"Tell you the truth, Bill," says I, "this little he ewe lamb has
+somewhat got on my nerves too. We'll take him home, pay the ransom
+and make our get-away."
+
+We took him home that night. We got him to go by telling him that his
+father had bought a silver-mounted rifle and a pair of moccasins for
+him, and we were going to hunt bears the next day.
+
+It was just twelve o'clock when we knocked at Ebenezer's front door.
+Just at the moment when I should have been abstracting the fifteen
+hundred dollars from the box under the tree, according to the original
+proposition, Bill was counting out two hundred and fifty dollars into
+Dorset's hand.
+
+When the kid found out we were going to leave him at home he started
+up a howl like a calliope and fastened himself as tight as a leech to
+Bill's leg. His father peeled him away gradually, like a porous
+plaster.
+
+"How long can you hold him?" asks Bill.
+
+"I'm not as strong as I used to be," says old Dorset, "but I think I
+can promise you ten minutes."
+
+"Enough," says Bill. "In ten minutes I shall cross the Central,
+Southern and Middle Western States, and be legging it trippingly for
+the Canadian border."
+
+And, as dark as it was, and as fat as Bill was, and as good a runner
+as I am, he was a good mile and a half out of Summit before I could
+catch up with him.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+THE MARRY MONTH OF MAY
+
+
+Prithee, smite the poet in the eye when he would sing to you praises
+of the month of May. It is a month presided over by the spirits of
+mischief and madness. Pixies and flibbertigibbets haunt the budding
+woods: Puck and his train of midgets are busy in town and country.
+
+In May nature holds up at us a chiding finger, bidding us remember
+that we are not gods, but overconceited members of her own great
+family. She reminds us that we are brothers to the chowder-doomed
+clam and the donkey; lineal scions of the pansy and the chimpanzee,
+and but cousins-german to the cooing doves, the quacking ducks and the
+housemaids and policemen in the parks.
+
+In May Cupid shoots blindfolded--millionaires marry stenographers;
+wise professors woo white-aproned gum-chewers behind quick-lunch
+counters; schoolma'ams make big bad boys remain after school; lads
+with ladders steal lightly over lawns where Juliet waits in her
+trellissed window with her telescope packed; young couples out for a
+walk come home married; old chaps put on white spats and promenade
+near the Normal School; even married men, grown unwontedly tender and
+sentimental, whack their spouses on the back and growl: "How goes it,
+old girl:"
+
+This May, who is no goddess, but Circe, masquerading at the dance
+given in honour of the fair debutante, Summer, puts the kibosh on us
+all.
+
+Old Mr. Coulson groaned a little, and then sat up straight in his
+invalid's chair. He had the gout very bad in one foot, a house near
+Gramercy Park, half a million dollars and a daughter. And he had a
+housekeeper, Mrs. Widdup. The fact and the name deserve a sentence
+each. They have it.
+
+When May poked Mr. Coulson he became elder brother to the turtle-dove.
+In the window near which he sat were boxes of jonquils, of hyacinths,
+geraniums and pansies. The breeze brought their odour into the room.
+Immediately there was a well-contested round between the breath of the
+flowers and the able and active effluvium from gout liniment. The
+liniment won easily; but not before the flowers got an uppercut to
+old Mr. Coulson's nose. The deadly work of the implacable, false
+enchantress May was done.
+
+Across the park to the olfactories of Mr. Coulson came other
+unmistakable, characteristic, copyrighted smells of spring that belong
+to the-big-city-above-the-Subway, alone. The smells of hot asphalt,
+underground caverns, gasoline, patchouli, orange peel, sewer gas,
+Albany grabs, Egyptian cigarettes, mortar and the undried ink on
+newspapers. The inblowing air was sweet and mild. Sparrows wrangled
+happily everywhere outdoors. Never trust May.
+
+Mr. Coulson twisted the ends of his white mustache, cursed his foot,
+and pounded a bell on the table by his side.
+
+In came Mrs. Widdup. She was comely to the eye, fair, flustered,
+forty and foxy.
+
+"Higgins is out, sir," she said, with a smile suggestive of vibratory
+massage. "He went to post a letter. Can I do anything for you, sir?"
+
+"It's time for my aconite," said old Mr. Coulson. "Drop it for me.
+The bottle's there. Three drops. In water. D---- that is, confound
+Higgins! There's nobody in this house cares if I die here in this
+chair for want of attention."
+
+Mrs. Widdup sighed deeply.
+
+"Don't be saying that, sir," she said. "There's them that would care
+more than any one knows. Thirteen drops, you said, sir?"
+
+"Three," said old man Coulson.
+
+He took his dose and then Mrs. Widdup's hand. She blushed. Oh, yes,
+it can be done. Just hold your breath and compress the diaphragm.
+
+"Mrs. Widdup," said Mr. Coulson, "the springtime's full upon us."
+
+"Ain't that right?" said Mrs. Widdup. "The air's real warm. And
+there's bock-beer signs on every corner. And the park's all yaller and
+pink and blue with flowers; and I have such shooting pains up my legs
+and body."
+
+"'In the spring,'" quoted Mr. Coulson, curling his mustache, "'a y----
+that is, a man's--fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.'"
+
+"Lawsy, now!" exclaimed Mrs. Widdup; "ain't that right? Seems like
+it's in the air."
+
+"'In the spring,'" continued old Mr. Coulson, "'a livelier iris shines
+upon the burnished dove.'"
+
+"They do be lively, the Irish," sighed Mrs. Widdup pensively.
+
+"Mrs. Widdup," said Mr. Coulson, making a face at a twinge of his gouty
+foot, "this would be a lonesome house without you. I'm an--that is,
+I'm an elderly man--but I'm worth a comfortable lot of money. If half
+a million dollars' worth of Government bonds and the true affection of
+a heart that, though no longer beating with the first ardour of youth,
+can still throb with genuine--"
+
+The loud noise of an overturned chair near the portieres of the
+adjoining room interrupted the venerable and scarcely suspecting
+victim of May.
+
+In stalked Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson, bony, durable, tall,
+high-nosed, frigid, well-bred, thirty-five, in-the-neighbourhood-of-
+Gramercy-Parkish. She put up a lorgnette. Mrs. Widdup hastily
+stooped and arranged the bandages on Mr. Coulson's gouty foot.
+
+"I thought Higgins was with you," said Miss Van Meeker Constantia.
+
+"Higgins went out," explained her father, "and Mrs. Widdup answered
+the bell. That is better now, Mrs. Widdup, thank you. No; there is
+nothing else I require."
+
+The housekeeper retired, pink under the cool, inquiring stare of Miss
+Coulson.
+
+"This spring weather is lovely, isn't it, daughter?" said the old man,
+consciously conscious.
+
+"That's just it," replied Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson, somewhat
+obscurely. "When does Mrs. Widdup start on her vacation, papa?"
+
+"I believe she said a week from to-day," said Mr. Coulson.
+
+Miss Van Meeker Constantia stood for a minute at the window gazing,
+toward the little park, flooded with the mellow afternoon sunlight.
+With the eye of a botanist she viewed the flowers--most potent
+weapons of insidious May. With the cool pulses of a virgin of
+Cologne she withstood the attack of the ethereal mildness. The arrows
+of the pleasant sunshine fell back, frostbitten, from the cold panoply
+of her unthrilled bosom. The odour of the flowers waked no soft
+sentiments in the unexplored recesses of her dormant heart. The chirp
+of the sparrows gave her a pain. She mocked at May.
+
+But although Miss Coulson was proof against the season, she was
+keen enough to estimate its power. She knew that elderly men and
+thick-waisted women jumped as educated fleas in the ridiculous train
+of May, the merry mocker of the months. She had heard of foolish old
+gentlemen marrying their housekeepers before. What a humiliating
+thing, after all, was this feeling called love!
+
+The next morning at 8 o'clock, when the iceman called, the cook told
+him that Miss Coulson wanted to see him in the basement.
+
+"Well, ain't I the Olcott and Depew; not mentioning the first name at
+all?" said the iceman, admiringly, of himself.
+
+As a concession he rolled his sleeves down, dropped his icehooks on a
+syringa and went back. When Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson
+addressed him he took off his hat.
+
+"There is a rear entrance to this basement," said Miss Coulson, "which
+can be reached by driving into the vacant lot next door, where they
+are excavating for a building. I want you to bring in that way within
+two hours 1,000 pounds of ice. You may have to bring another man or
+two to help you. I will show you where I want it placed. I also want
+1,000 pounds a day delivered the same way for the next four days.
+Your company may charge the ice on our regular bill. This is for your
+extra trouble."
+
+Miss Coulson tendered a ten-dollar bill. The iceman bowed, and held
+his hat in his two hands behind him.
+
+"Not if you'll excuse me, lady. It'll be a pleasure to fix things up
+for you any way you please."
+
+Alas for May!
+
+About noon Mr. Coulson knocked two glasses off his table, broke the
+spring of his bell and yelled for Higgins at the same time.
+
+"Bring an axe," commanded Mr. Coulson, sardonically, "or send out
+for a quart of prussic acid, or have a policeman come in and shoot me.
+I'd rather that than be frozen to death."
+
+"It does seem to be getting cool, Sir," said Higgins. "I hadn't
+noticed it before. I'll close the window, Sir."
+
+"Do," said Mr. Coulson. "They call this spring, do they? If it keeps
+up long I'll go back to Palm Beach. House feels like a morgue."
+
+Later Miss Coulson dutifully came in to inquire how the gout was
+progressing.
+
+"'Stantia," said the old man, "how is the weather outdoors?"
+
+"Bright," answered Miss Coulson, "but chilly."
+
+"Feels like the dead of winter to me," said Mr. Coulson.
+
+"An instance," said Constantia, gazing abstractedly out the window,
+"of 'winter lingering in the lap of spring,' though the metaphor is
+not in the most refined taste."
+
+A little later she walked down by the side of the little park and on
+westward to Broadway to accomplish a little shopping.
+
+A little later than that Mrs. Widdup entered the invalid's room.
+
+"Did you ring, Sir?" she asked, dimpling in many places. "I asked
+Higgins to go to the drug store, and I thought I heard your bell."
+
+"I did not," said Mr. Coulson.
+
+"I'm afraid," said Mrs. Widdup, "I interrupted you sir, yesterday when
+you were about to say something."
+
+"How comes it, Mrs. Widdup," said old man Coulson sternly, "that I
+find it so cold in this house?"
+
+"Cold, Sir?" said the housekeeper, "why, now, since you speak of it
+it do seem cold in this room. But, outdoors it's as warm and fine
+as June, sir. And how this weather do seem to make one's heart jump
+out of one's shirt waist, sir. And the ivy all leaved out on the side
+of the house, and the hand-organs playing, and the children dancing on
+the sidewalk--'tis a great time for speaking out what's in the
+heart. You were saying yesterday, sir--"
+
+"Woman!" roared Mr. Coulson; "you are a fool. I pay you to take care
+of this house. I am freezing to death in my own room, and you come in
+and drivel to me about ivy and hand-organs. Get me an overcoat at
+once. See that all doors and windows are closed below. An old, fat,
+irresponsible, one-sided object like you prating about springtime
+and flowers in the middle of winter! When Higgins comes back, tell him
+to bring me a hot rum punch. And now get out!"
+
+But who shall shame the bright face of May? Rogue though she be and
+disturber of sane men's peace, no wise virgins cunning nor cold
+storage shall make her bow her head in the bright galaxy of months.
+
+Oh, yes, the story was not quite finished.
+
+A night passed, and Higgins helped old man Coulson in the morning to
+his chair by the window. The cold of the room was gone. Heavenly
+odours and fragrant mildness entered.
+
+In hurried Mrs. Widdup, and stood by his chair. Mr. Coulson reached
+his bony hand and grasped her plump one.
+
+"Mrs. Widdup," he said, "this house would be no home without you. I
+have half a million dollars. If that and the true affection of a
+heart no longer in its youthful prime, but still not cold, could--"
+
+"I found out what made it cold," said Mrs. Widdup, leanin' against his
+chair. "'Twas ice--tons of it--in the basement and in the furnace
+room, everywhere. I shut off the registers that it was coming through
+into your room, Mr. Coulson, poor soul! And now it's Maytime again."
+
+"A true heart," went on old man Coulson, a little wanderingly, "that
+the springtime has brought to life again, and--but what will my
+daughter say, Mrs. Widdup?"
+
+"Never fear, sir," said Mrs. Widdup, cheerfully. "Miss Coulson, she
+ran away with the iceman last night, sir!"
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+A TECHNICAL ERROR
+
+
+I never cared especially for feuds, believing them to be even more
+overrated products of our country than grapefruit, scrapple, or
+honeymoons. Nevertheless, if I may be allowed, I will tell you of an
+Indian Territory feud of which I was press-agent, camp-follower, and
+inaccessory during the fact.
+
+I was on a visit to Sam Durkee's ranch, where I had a great time
+falling off unmanicured ponies and waving my bare hand at the lower
+jaws of wolves about two miles away. Sam was a hardened person of
+about twenty-five, with a reputation for going home in the dark with
+perfect equanimity, though often with reluctance.
+
+Over in the Creek Nation was a family bearing the name of Tatum. I
+was told that the Durkees and Tatums had been feuding for years.
+Several of each family had bitten the grass, and it was expected that
+more Nebuchadnezzars would follow. A younger generation of each
+family was growing up, and the grass was keeping pace with them. But I
+gathered that they had fought fairly; that they had not lain in
+cornfields and aimed at the division of their enemies' suspenders in
+the back--partly, perhaps, because there were no cornfields, and
+nobody wore more than one suspender. Nor had any woman or child of
+either house ever been harmed. In those days--and you will find it
+so yet--their women were safe.
+
+Sam Durkee had a girl. (If it were an all-fiction magazine that I
+expect to sell this story to, I should say, "Mr. Durkee rejoiced in a
+fiancee.") Her name was Ella Baynes. They appeared to be devoted to
+each other, and to have perfect confidence in each other, as all
+couples do who are and have or aren't and haven't. She was tolerably
+pretty, with a heavy mass of brown hair that helped her along. He
+introduced me to her, which seemed not to lessen her preference for
+him; so I reasoned that they were surely soul-mates.
+
+Miss Baynes lived in Kingfisher, twenty miles from the ranch. Sam
+lived on a gallop between the two places.
+
+One day there came to Kingfisher a courageous young man, rather small,
+with smooth face and regular features. He made many inquiries about
+the business of the town, and especially of the inhabitants
+cognominally. He said he was from Muscogee, and he looked it, with
+his yellow shoes and crocheted four-in-hand. I met him once when I
+rode in for the mail. He said his name was Beverly Travers, which
+seemed rather improbable.
+
+There were active times on the ranch, just then, and Sam was too busy
+to go to town often. As an incompetent and generally worthless guest,
+it devolved upon me to ride in for little things such as post cards,
+barrels of flour, baking-powder, smoking-tobacco, and--letters from
+Ella.
+
+One day, when I was messenger for half a gross of cigarette papers
+and a couple of wagon tires, I saw the alleged Beverly Travers in a
+yellow-wheeled buggy with Ella Baynes, driving about town as
+ostentatiously as the black, waxy mud would permit. I knew that
+this information would bring no balm of Gilead to Sam's soul, so I
+refrained from including it in the news of the city that I retailed
+on my return. But on the next afternoon an elongated ex-cowboy of
+the name of Simmons, an old-time pal of Sam's, who kept a feed store
+in Kingfisher, rode out to the ranch and rolled and burned many
+cigarettes before he would talk. When he did make oration, his words
+were these:
+
+"Say, Sam, there's been a description of a galoot miscallin' himself
+Bevel-edged Travels impairing the atmospheric air of Kingfisher for
+the past two weeks. You know who he was? He was not otherwise than
+Ben Tatum, from the Creek Nation, son of old Gopher Tatum that your
+Uncle Newt shot last February. You know what he done this morning?
+He killed your brother Lester--shot him in the co't-house yard."
+
+I wondered if Sam had heard. He pulled a twig from a mesquite bush,
+chewed it gravely, and said:
+
+"He did, did he? He killed Lester?"
+
+"The same," said Simmons. "And he did more. He run away with your
+girl, the same as to say Miss Ella Baynes. I thought you might like
+to know, so I rode out to impart the information."
+
+"I am much obliged, Jim," said Sam, taking the chewed twig from his
+mouth. "Yes, I'm glad you rode Out. Yes, I'm right glad."
+
+"Well, I'll be ridin' back, I reckon. That boy I left in the feed
+store don't know hay from oats. He shot Lester in the back."
+
+"Shot him in the back?"
+
+"Yes, while he was hitchin' his hoss."
+
+"I'm much obliged, Jim."
+
+"I kind of thought you'd like to know as soon as you could."
+
+"Come in and have some coffee before you ride back, Jim?"
+
+"Why, no, I reckon not; I must get back to the store."
+
+"And you say--"
+
+"Yes, Sam. Everybody seen 'em drive away together in a buckboard,
+with a big bundle, like clothes, tied up in the back of it. He was
+drivin' the team he brought over with him from Muscogee. They'll be
+hard to overtake right away."
+
+"And which--"
+
+"I was goin' on to tell you. They left on the Guthrie road; but
+there's no tellin' which forks they'll take--you know that."
+
+"All right, Jim; much obliged."
+
+"You're welcome, Sam."
+
+Simmons rolled a cigarette and stabbed his pony with both heels.
+Twenty yards away he reined up and called back:
+
+"You don't want no--assistance, as you might say?"
+
+"Not any, thanks."
+
+"I didn't think you would. Well, so long!"
+
+Sam took out and opened a bone-handled pocket-knife and scraped a
+dried piece of mud from his left boot. I thought at first he was
+going to swear a vendetta on the blade of it, or recite "The Gipsy's
+Curse." The few feuds I had ever seen or read about usually opened
+that way. This one seemed to be presented with a new treatment.
+Thus offered on the stage, it would have been hissed off, and one of
+Belasco's thrilling melodramas demanded instead.
+
+"I wonder," said Sam, with a profoundly thoughtful expression, "if the
+cook has any cold beans left over!"
+
+He called Wash, the Negro cook, and finding that he had some, ordered
+him to heat up the pot and make some strong coffee. Then we went into
+Sam's private room, where he slept, and kept his armoury, dogs, and the
+saddles of his favourite mounts. He took three or four six-shooters
+out of a bookcase and began to look them over, whistling "The Cowboy's
+Lament" abstractedly. Afterward he ordered the two best horses on the
+ranch saddled and tied to the hitching-post.
+
+Now, in the feud business, in all sections of the country, I have
+observed that in one particular there is a delicate but strict
+etiquette belonging. You must not mention the word or refer to the
+subject in the presence of a feudist. It would be more reprehensible
+than commenting upon the mole on the chin of your rich aunt. I found,
+later on, that there is another unwritten rule, but I think that
+belongs solely to the West.
+
+It yet lacked two hours to supper-time; but in twenty minutes Sam and
+I were plunging deep into the reheated beans, hot coffee, and cold
+beef.
+
+"Nothing like a good meal before a long ride," said Sam. "Eat hearty."
+
+I had a sudden suspicion.
+
+"Why did you have two horses saddled?" I asked.
+
+"One, two--one, two," said Sam. "You can count, can't you?"
+
+His mathematics carried with it a momentary qualm and a lesson. The
+thought had not occurred to him that the thought could possibly occur
+to me not to ride at his side on that red road to revenge and justice.
+It was the higher calculus. I was booked for the trail. I began to
+eat more beans.
+
+In an hour we set forth at a steady gallop eastward. Our horses were
+Kentucky-bred, strengthened by the mesquite grass of the west. Ben
+Tatum's steeds may have been swifter, and he had a good lead; but if
+he had heard the punctual thuds of the hoofs of those trailers of
+ours, born in the heart of feudland, he might have felt that
+retribution was creeping up on the hoof-prints of his dapper nags.
+
+I knew that Ben Tatum's card to play was flight--flight until he
+came within the safer territory of his own henchmen and supporters.
+He knew that the man pursuing him would follow the trail to any end
+where it might lead.
+
+During the ride Sam talked of the prospect for rain, of the price of
+beef, and of the musical glasses. You would have thought he had never
+had a brother or a sweetheart or an enemy on earth. There are some
+subjects too big even for the words in the "Unabridged." Knowing
+this phase of the feud code, but not having practised it sufficiently,
+I overdid the thing by telling some slightly funny anecdotes. Sam
+laughed at exactly the right place--laughed with his mouth. When I
+caught sight of his mouth, I wished I had been blessed with enough
+sense of humour to have suppressed those anecdotes.
+
+Our first sight of them we had in Guthrie. Tired and hungry, we
+stumbled, unwashed, into a little yellow-pine hotel and sat at a
+table. In the opposite corner we saw the fugitives. They were bent
+upon their meal, but looked around at times uneasily.
+
+The girl was dressed in brown--one of these smooth, half-shiny,
+silky-looking affairs with lace collar and cuffs, and what I believe
+they call an accordion-plaited skirt. She wore a thick brown veil down
+to her nose, and a broad-brimmed straw hat with some kind of feathers
+adorning it. The man wore plain, dark clothes, and his hair was
+trimmed very short. He was such a man as you might see anywhere.
+
+There they were--the murderer and the woman he had stolen. There we
+were--the rightful avenger, according to the code, and the
+supernumerary who writes these words.
+
+For one time, at least, in the heart of the supernumerary there rose
+the killing instinct. For one moment he joined the force of
+combatants--orally.
+
+"What are you waiting for, Sam?" I said in a whisper. "Let him have
+it now!"
+
+Sam gave a melancholy sigh.
+
+"You don't understand; but _he_ does," he said. "_He_ knows. Mr.
+Tenderfoot, there's a rule out here among white men in the Nation that
+you can't shoot a man when he's with a woman. I never knew it to be
+broke yet. You _can't_ do it. You've got to get him in a gang of men or
+by himself. That's why. He knows it, too. We all know. So, that's
+Mr. Ben Tatum! One of the 'pretty men'! I'll cut him out of the herd
+before they leave the hotel, and regulate his account!"
+
+After supper the flying pair disappeared quickly. Although Sam haunted
+lobby and stairway and halls half the night, in some mysterious way
+the fugitives eluded him; and in the morning the veiled lady in the
+brown dress with the accordion-plaited skirt and the dapper young man
+with the close-clipped hair, and the buckboard with the prancing nags,
+were gone.
+
+
+It is a monotonous story, that of the ride; so it shall be
+curtailed. Once again we overtook them on a road. We were about
+fifty yards behind. They turned in the buckboard and looked at us;
+then drove on without whipping up their horses. Their safety no
+longer lay in speed. Ben Tatum knew. He knew that the only rock of
+safety left to him was the code. There is no doubt that, had he
+been alone, the matter would have been settled quickly with Sam
+Durkee in the usual way; but he had something at his side that
+kept still the trigger-finger of both. It seemed likely that he
+was no coward.
+
+So, you may perceive that woman, on occasions, may postpone instead of
+precipitating conflict between man and man. But not willingly or
+consciously. She is oblivious of codes.
+
+Five miles farther, we came upon the future great Western city of
+Chandler. The horses of pursuers and pursued were starved and weary.
+There was one hotel that offered danger to man and entertainment to
+beast; so the four of us met again in the dining room at the ringing
+of a bell so resonant and large that it had cracked the welkin long
+ago. The dining room was not as large as the one at Guthrie.
+
+Just as we were eating apple pie--how Ben Davises and tragedy
+impinge upon each other!--I noticed Sam looking with keen
+intentness at our quarry where they were seated at a table across the
+room. The girl still wore the brown dress with lace collar and cuffs,
+and the veil drawn down to her nose. The man bent over his plate,
+with his close cropped head held low.
+
+"There's a code," I heard Sam say, either to me or to himself, "that
+won't let you shoot a man in the company of a woman; but, by thunder,
+there ain't one to keep you from killing a woman in the company of a
+man!"
+
+And, quicker than my mind could follow his argument, he whipped a
+Colt's automatic from under his left arm and pumped six bullets into
+the body that the brown dress covered--the brown dress with the lace
+collar and cuffs and the accordion-plaited skirt.
+
+The young person in the dark sack suit, from whose head and from whose
+life a woman's glory had been clipped, laid her head on her arms
+stretched upon the table; while people came running to raise Ben Tatum
+from the floor in his feminine masquerade that had given Sam the
+opportunity to set aside, technically, the obligations of the code.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE
+
+
+Few young couples in the Big-City-of-Bluff began their married
+existence with greater promise of happiness than did Mr. and Mrs.
+Claude Turpin. They felt no especial animosity toward each other;
+they were comfortably established in a handsome apartment house that
+had a name and accommodations like those of a sleeping-car; they were
+living as expensively as the couple on the next floor above who had
+twice their income; and their marriage had occurred on a wager, a
+ferry-boat and first acquaintance, thus securing a sensational
+newspaper notice with their names attached to pictures of the Queen of
+Roumania and M. Santos-Dumont.
+
+Turpin's income was $200 per month. On pay day, after calculating the
+amounts due for rent, instalments on furniture and piano, gas, and
+bills owed to the florist, confectioner, milliner, tailor, wine
+merchant and cab company, the Turpins would find that they still had
+$200 left to spend. How to do this is one of the secrets of
+metropolitan life.
+
+The domestic life of the Turpins was a beautiful picture to see. But
+you couldn't gaze upon it as you could at an oleograph of "Don't Wake
+Grandma," or "Brooklyn by Moonlight."
+
+You had to blink when looked at it; and you heard a fizzing sound just
+like the machine with a "scope" at the end of it. Yes; there wasn't
+much repose about the picture of the Turpins' domestic life. It was
+something like "Spearing Salmon in the Columbia River," or "Japanese
+Artillery in Action."
+
+Every day was just like another; as the days are in New York. In the
+morning Turpin would take bromo-seltzer, his pocket change from under
+the clock, his hat, no breakfast and his departure for the office. At
+noon Mrs. Turpin would get out of bed and humour, put on a kimono,
+airs, and the water to boil for coffee.
+
+Turpin lunched downtown. He came home at 6 to dress for dinner. They
+always dined out. They strayed from the chop-house to chop-sueydom,
+from terrace to table d'hote, from rathskeller to roadhouse, from cafe
+to casino, from Maria's to the Martha Washington. Such is domestic
+life in the great city. Your vine is the mistletoe; your fig tree
+bears dates. Your household gods are Mercury and John Howard Payne.
+For the wedding march you now hear only "Come with the Gypsy Bride."
+You rarely dine at the same place twice in succession. You tire of
+the food; and, besides, you want to give them time for the question of
+that souvenir silver sugar bowl to blow over.
+
+The Turpins were therefore happy. They made many warm and delightful
+friends, some of whom they remembered the next day. Their home life
+was an ideal one, according to the rules and regulations of the Book
+of Bluff.
+
+There came a time when it dawned upon Turpin that his wife was getting
+away with too much money. If you belong to the near-swell class in the
+Big City, and your income is $200 per month, and you find at the end
+of the month, after looking over the bills for current expenses, that
+you, yourself, have spent $150, you very naturally wonder what has
+become of the other $50. So you suspect your wife. And perhaps you
+give her a hint that something needs explanation.
+
+"I say, Vivien," said Turpin, one afternoon when they were enjoying in
+rapt silence the peace and quiet of their cozy apartment, "you've been
+creating a hiatus big enough for a dog to crawl through in this
+month's honorarium. You haven't been paying your dressmaker
+anything on account, have you?"
+
+There was a moment's silence. No sounds could be heard except the
+breathing of the fox terrier, and the subdued, monotonous sizzling of
+Vivien's fulvous locks against the insensate curling irons. Claude
+Turpin, sitting upon a pillow that he had thoughtfully placed upon the
+convolutions of the apartment sofa, narrowly watched the riante,
+lovely face of his wife.
+
+"Claudie, dear," said she, touching her finger to her ruby tongue and
+testing the unresponsive curling irons, "you do me an injustice. Mme.
+Toinette has not seen a cent of mine since the day you paid your
+tailor ten dollars on account."
+
+Turpin's suspicions were allayed for the time. But one day soon there
+came an anonymous letter to him that read:
+
+
+ "Watch your wife. She is blowing in your money secretly. I was
+ a sufferer just as you are. The place is No. 345 Blank Street.
+ A word to the wise, etc.
+ A MAN WHO KNOWS"
+
+
+Turpin took this letter to the captain of police of the precinct that
+he lived in.
+
+"My precinct is as clean as a hound's tooth," said the captain. "The
+lid's shut down as close there as it is over the eye of a Williamsburg
+girl when she's kissed at a party. But if you think there's anything
+queer at the address, I'll go there with ye."
+
+On the next afternoon at 3, Turpin and the captain crept softly up the
+stairs of No. 345 Blank Street. A dozen plain-clothes men, dressed in
+full police uniforms, so as to allay suspicion, waited in the hall
+below.
+
+At the top of the stairs was a door, which was found to be locked.
+The captain took a key from his pocket and unlocked it. The two men
+entered.
+
+They found themselves in a large room, occupied by twenty or
+twenty-five elegantly clothed ladies. Racing charts hung against the
+walls, a ticker clicked in one corner; with a telephone receiver to
+his ear a man was calling out the various positions of the horses in
+a very exciting race. The occupants of the room looked up at the
+intruders; but, as if reassured by the sight of the captain's uniform,
+they reverted their attention to the man at the telephone.
+
+"You see," said the captain to Turpin, "the value of an anonymous
+letter! No high-minded and self-respecting gentleman should
+consider one worthy of notice. Is your wife among this assembly, Mr.
+Turpin?"
+
+"She is not," said Turpin.
+
+"And if she was," continued the captain, "would she be within the
+reach of the tongue of slander? These ladies constitute a Browning
+Society. They meet to discuss the meaning of the great poet. The
+telephone is connected with Boston, whence the parent society
+transmits frequently its interpretations of the poems. Be ashamed of
+yer suspicions, Mr. Turpin."
+
+"Go soak your shield," said Turpin. "Vivien knows how to take care of
+herself in a pool-room. She's not dropping anything on the ponies.
+There must be something queer going on here."
+
+"Nothing but Browning," said the captain. "Hear that?"
+
+"Thanatopsis by a nose," drawled the man at the telephone.
+
+"That's not Browning; that's Longfellow," said Turpin, who sometimes
+read books.
+
+"Back to the pasture!" exclaimed the captain. "Longfellow made the
+pacing-to-wagon record of 7.53 'way back in 1868."
+
+"I believe there's something queer about this joint," repeated Turpin.
+
+"I don't see it," said the captain.
+
+"I know it looks like a pool-room, all right," persisted Turpin, "but
+that's all a blind. Vivien has been dropping a lot of coin somewhere.
+I believe there's some under-handed work going on here."
+
+A number of racing sheets were tacked close together, covering a large
+space on one of the walls. Turpin, suspicious, tore several of them
+down. A door, previously hidden, was revealed. Turpin placed an
+ear to the crack and listened intently. He heard the soft hum of many
+voices, low and guarded laughter, and a sharp, metallic clicking and
+scraping as if from a multitude of tiny but busy objects.
+
+"My God! It is as I feared!" whispered Turpin to himself. "Summon
+your men at once!" he called to the captain. "She is in there, I
+know."
+
+At the blowing of the captain's whistle the uniformed plain-clothes
+men rushed up the stairs into the pool-room. When they saw the
+betting paraphernalia distributed around they halted, surprised and
+puzzled to know why they had been summoned.
+
+But the captain pointed to the locked door and bade them break it
+down. In a few moments they demolished it with the axes they carried.
+Into the other room sprang Claude Turpin, with the captain at his
+heels.
+
+The scene was one that lingered long in Turpin's mind. Nearly a score
+of women--women expensively and fashionably clothed, many beautiful
+and of refined appearance--had been seated at little marble-topped
+tables. When the police burst open the door they shrieked and ran
+here and there like gayly plumed birds that had been disturbed in a
+tropical grove. Some became hysterical; one or two fainted; several
+knelt at the feet of the officers and besought them for mercy on
+account of their families and social position.
+
+A man who had been seated behind a desk had seized a roll of currency
+as large as the ankle of a Paradise Roof Gardens chorus girl and
+jumped out of the window. Half a dozen attendants huddled at one end
+of the room, breathless from fear.
+
+Upon the tables remained the damning and incontrovertible evidences
+of the guilt of the habituees of that sinister room--dish after dish
+heaped high with ice cream, and surrounded by stacks of empty ones,
+scraped to the last spoonful.
+
+"Ladies," said the captain to his weeping circle of prisoners, "I'll
+not hold any of yez. Some of yez I recognize as having fine houses and
+good standing in the community, with hard-working husbands and childer
+at home. But I'll read ye a bit of a lecture before ye go. In the
+next room there's a 20-to-1 shot just dropped in under the wire three
+lengths ahead of the field. Is this the way ye waste your husbands'
+money instead of helping earn it? Home wid yez! The lid's on the
+ice-cream freezer in this precinct."
+
+Claude Turpin's wife was among the patrons of the raided room. He led
+her to their apartment in stern silence. There she wept so
+remorsefully and besought his forgiveness so pleadingly that he forgot
+his just anger, and soon he gathered his penitent golden-haired Vivien
+in his arms and forgave her.
+
+"Darling," she murmured, half sobbingly, as the moonlight drifted
+through the open window, glorifying her sweet, upturned face, "I know
+I done wrong. I will never touch ice cream again. I forgot you were
+not a millionaire. I used to go there every day. But to-day I felt
+some strange, sad presentiment of evil, and I was not myself. I ate
+only eleven saucers."
+
+"Say no more," said Claude, gently as he fondly caressed her waving
+curls.
+
+"And you are sure that you fully forgive me?" asked Vivien, gazing at
+him entreatingly with dewy eyes of heavenly blue.
+
+"Almost sure, little one," answered Claude, stooping and lightly
+touching her snowy forehead with his lips. "I'll let you know
+later on. I've got a month's salary down on Vanilla to win the
+three-year-old steeplechase to-morrow; and if the ice-cream hunch
+is to the good you are It again--see?"
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+THE WHIRLIGIG OF LIFE
+
+
+Justice-of-the-Peace Benaja Widdup sat in the door of his office
+smoking his elder-stem pipe. Half-way to the zenith the Cumberland
+range rose blue-gray in the afternoon haze. A speckled hen swaggered
+down the main street of the "settlement," cackling foolishly.
+
+Up the road came a sound of creaking axles, and then a slow cloud of
+dust, and then a bull-cart bearing Ransie Bilbro and his wife. The
+cart stopped at the Justice's door, and the two climbed down. Ransie
+was a narrow six feet of sallow brown skin and yellow hair. The
+imperturbability of the mountains hung upon him like a suit of armour.
+The woman was calicoed, angled, snuff-brushed, and weary with unknown
+desires. Through it all gleamed a faint protest of cheated youth
+unconscious of its loss.
+
+The Justice of the Peace slipped his feet into his shoes, for the sake
+of dignity, and moved to let them enter.
+
+"We-all," said the woman, in a voice like the wind blowing through pine
+boughs, "wants a divo'ce." She looked at Ransie to see if he noted any
+flaw or ambiguity or evasion or partiality or self-partisanship in her
+statement of their business.
+
+"A divo'ce," repeated Ransie, with a solemn nod. "We-all can't git
+along together nohow. It's lonesome enough fur to live in the
+mount'ins when a man and a woman keers fur one another. But when
+she's a-spittin' like a wildcat or a-sullenin' like a hoot-owl in the
+cabin, a man ain't got no call to live with her."
+
+"When he's a no-'count varmint," said the woman, "without any especial
+warmth, a-traipsin' along of scalawags and moonshiners and a-layin' on
+his back pizen 'ith co'n whiskey, and a-pesterin' folks with a pack o'
+hungry, triflin' houn's to feed!"
+
+"When she keeps a-throwin' skillet lids," came Ransie's antiphony,
+"and slings b'ilin' water on the best coon-dog in the Cumberlands, and
+sets herself agin' cookin' a man's victuals, and keeps him awake o'
+nights accusin' him of a sight of doin's!"
+
+"When he's al'ays a-fightin' the revenues, and gits a hard name in the
+mount'ins fur a mean man, who's gwine to be able fur to sleep o'
+nights?"
+
+The Justice of the Peace stirred deliberately to his duties. He
+placed his one chair and a wooden stool for his petitioners. He
+opened his book of statutes on the table and scanned the index.
+Presently he wiped his spectacles and shifted his inkstand.
+
+"The law and the statutes," said he, "air silent on the subjeck of
+divo'ce as fur as the jurisdiction of this co't air concerned. But,
+accordin' to equity and the Constitution and the golden rule, it's a
+bad barg'in that can't run both ways. If a justice of the peace can
+marry a couple, it's plain that he is bound to be able to divo'ce 'em.
+This here office will issue a decree of divo'ce and abide by the
+decision of the Supreme Co't to hold it good."
+
+Ransie Bilbro drew a small tobacco-bag from his trousers pocket. Out
+of this he shook upon the table a five-dollar note. "Sold a b'arskin
+and two foxes fur that," he remarked. "It's all the money we got."
+
+"The regular price of a divo'ce in this co't," said the Justice, "air
+five dollars." He stuffed the bill into the pocket of his homespun
+vest with a deceptive air of indifference. With much bodily toil
+and mental travail he wrote the decree upon half a sheet of foolscap,
+and then copied it upon the other. Ransie Bilbro and his wife
+listened to his reading of the document that was to give them freedom:
+
+"Know all men by these presents that Ransie Bilbro and his wife,
+Ariela Bilbro, this day personally appeared before me and promises
+that hereinafter they will neither love, honour, nor obey each other,
+neither for better nor worse, being of sound mind and body, and accept
+summons for divorce according to the peace and dignity of the State.
+Herein fail not, so help you God. Benaja Widdup, justice of the peace
+in and for the county of Piedmont, State of Tennessee."
+
+The Justice was about to hand one of the documents to Ransie. The
+voice of Ariela delayed the transfer. Both men looked at her. Their
+dull masculinity was confronted by something sudden and unexpected in
+the woman.
+
+"Judge, don't you give him that air paper yit. 'Tain't all settled,
+nohow. I got to have my rights first. I got to have my ali-money.
+'Tain't no kind of a way to do fur a man to divo'ce his wife 'thout
+her havin' a cent fur to do with. I'm a-layin' off to be a-goin' up
+to brother Ed's up on Hogback Mount'in. I'm bound fur to hev a pa'r
+of shoes and some snuff and things besides. Ef Rance kin affo'd a
+divo'ce, let him pay me ali-money."
+
+Ransie Bilbro was stricken to dumb perplexity. There had been no
+previous hint of alimony. Women were always bringing up startling and
+unlooked-for issues.
+
+Justice Benaja Widdup felt that the point demanded judicial decision.
+The authorities were also silent on the subject of alimony. But the
+woman's feet were bare. The trail to Hogback Mountain was steep and
+flinty.
+
+"Ariela Bilbro," he asked, in official tones, "how much did you 'low
+would be good and sufficient ali-money in the case befo' the co't."
+
+"I 'lowed," she answered, "fur the shoes and all, to say five dollars.
+That ain't much fur ali-money, but I reckon that'll git me to up
+brother Ed's."
+
+"The amount," said the Justice, "air not onreasonable. Ransie Bilbro,
+you air ordered by the co't to pay the plaintiff the sum of five
+dollars befo' the decree of divo'ce air issued."
+
+"I hain't no mo' money," breathed Ransie, heavily. "I done paid you
+all I had."
+
+"Otherwise," said the Justice, looking severely over his spectacles,
+"you air in contempt of co't."
+
+"I reckon if you gimme till to-morrow," pleaded the husband, "I mout
+be able to rake or scrape it up somewhars. I never looked for to be
+a-payin' no ali-money."
+
+"The case air adjourned," said Benaja Widdup, "till to-morrow, when
+you-all will present yo'selves and obey the order of the co't.
+Followin' of which the decrees of divo'ce will be delivered." He sat
+down in the door and began to loosen a shoestring.
+
+"We mout as well go down to Uncle Ziah's," decided Ransie, "and spend
+the night." He climbed into the cart on one side, and Ariela climbed
+in on the other. Obeying the flap of his rope, the little red bull
+slowly came around on a tack, and the cart crawled away in the nimbus
+arising from its wheels.
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup smoked his elder-stem pipe. Late
+in the afternoon he got his weekly paper, and read it until the
+twilight dimmed its lines. Then he lit the tallow candle on his
+table, and read until the moon rose, marking the time for supper. He
+lived in the double log cabin on the slope near the girdled poplar.
+Going home to supper he crossed a little branch darkened by a laurel
+thicket. The dark figure of a man stepped from the laurels and
+pointed a rifle at his breast. His hat was pulled down low, and
+something covered most of his face.
+
+"I want yo' money," said the figure, "'thout any talk. I'm gettin'
+nervous, and my finger's a-wabblin' on this here trigger."
+
+"I've only got f-f-five dollars," said the Justice, producing it
+from his vest pocket.
+
+"Roll it up," came the order, "and stick it in the end of this here
+gun-bar'l."
+
+The bill was crisp and new. Even fingers that were clumsy and
+trembling found little difficulty in making a spill of it and
+inserting it (this with less ease) into the muzzle of the rifle.
+
+"Now I reckon you kin be goin' along," said the robber.
+
+The Justice lingered not on his way.
+
+
+The next day came the little red bull, drawing the cart to the
+office door. Justice Benaja Widdup had his shoes on, for he was
+expecting the visit. In his presence Ransie Bilbro handed to his
+wife a five-dollar bill. The official's eye sharply viewed it.
+It seemed to curl up as though it had been rolled and inserted into
+the end of a gun-barrel. But the Justice refrained from comment.
+It is true that other bills might be inclined to curl. He handed
+each one a decree of divorce. Each stood awkwardly silent, slowly
+folding the guarantee of freedom. The woman cast a shy glance
+full of constraint at Ransie.
+
+"I reckon you'll be goin' back up to the cabin," she said, "along
+'ith the bull-cart. There's bread in the tin box settin' on the
+shelf. I put the bacon in the b'ilin'-pot to keep the hounds from
+gittin' it. Don't forget to wind the clock to-night."
+
+"You air a-goin' to your brother Ed's?" asked Ransie, with fine
+unconcern.
+
+"I was 'lowin' to get along up thar afore night. I ain't sayin' as
+they'll pester theyselves any to make me welcome, but I hain't nowhar
+else fur to go. It's a right smart ways, and I reckon I better be
+goin'. I'll be a-sayin' good-bye, Ranse--that is, if you keer fur to
+say so."
+
+"I don't know as anybody's a hound dog," said Ransie, in a martyr's
+voice, "fur to not want to say good-bye--'less you air so anxious to
+git away that you don't want me to say it."
+
+Ariela was silent. She folded the five-dollar bill and her decree
+carefully, and placed them in the bosom of her dress. Benaja Widdup
+watched the money disappear with mournful eyes behind his spectacles.
+
+And then with his next words he achieved rank (as his thoughts ran)
+with either the great crowd of the world's sympathizers or the little
+crowd of its great financiers.
+
+"Be kind o' lonesome in the old cabin to-night, Ranse," he said.
+
+Ransie Bilbro stared out at the Cumberlands, clear blue now in the
+sunlight. He did not look at Ariela.
+
+"I 'low it might be lonesome," he said; "but when folks gits mad and
+wants a divo'ce, you can't make folks stay."
+
+"There's others wanted a divo'ce," said Ariela, speaking to the wooden
+stool. "Besides, nobody don't want nobody to stay."
+
+"Nobody never said they didn't."
+
+"Nobody never said they did. I reckon I better start on now to
+brother Ed's."
+
+"Nobody can't wind that old clock."
+
+"Want me to go back along 'ith you in the cart and wind it fur you,
+Ranse?"
+
+The mountaineer's countenance was proof against emotion. But he
+reached out a big hand and enclosed Ariela's thin brown one. Her soul
+peeped out once through her impassive face, hallowing it.
+
+"Them hounds shan't pester you no more," said Ransie. "I reckon I
+been mean and low down. You wind that clock, Ariela."
+
+"My heart hit's in that cabin, Ranse," she whispered, "along 'ith you.
+I ai'nt a-goin' to git mad no more. Le's be startin', Ranse, so's we
+kin git home by sundown."
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup interposed as they started for the
+door, forgetting his presence.
+
+"In the name of the State of Tennessee," he said, "I forbid you-all to
+be a-defyin' of its laws and statutes. This co't is mo' than willin'
+and full of joy to see the clouds of discord and misunderstandin'
+rollin' away from two lovin' hearts, but it air the duty of the co't
+to p'eserve the morals and integrity of the State. The co't reminds
+you that you air no longer man and wife, but air divo'ced by regular
+decree, and as such air not entitled to the benefits and 'purtenances
+of the mattermonal estate."
+
+Ariela caught Ransie's arm. Did those words mean that she must lose
+him now when they had just learned the lesson of life?
+
+"But the co't air prepared," went on the Justice, "fur to remove the
+disabilities set up by the decree of divo'ce. The co't air on hand to
+perform the solemn ceremony of marri'ge, thus fixin' things up and
+enablin' the parties in the case to resume the honour'ble and
+elevatin' state of mattermony which they desires. The fee fur
+performin' said ceremony will be, in this case, to wit, five dollars."
+
+Ariela caught the gleam of promise in his words. Swiftly her hand went
+to her bosom. Freely as an alighting dove the bill fluttered to the
+Justice's table. Her sallow cheek coloured as she stood hand in hand
+with Ransie and listened to the reuniting words.
+
+Ransie helped her into the cart, and climbed in beside her. The
+little red bull turned once more, and they set out, hand-clasped, for
+the mountains.
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup sat in his door and took off his
+shoes. Once again he fingered the bill tucked down in his vest
+pocket. Once again he smoked his elder-stem pipe. Once again the
+speckled hen swaggered down the main street of the "settlement,"
+cackling foolishly.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+A SACRIFICE HIT
+
+
+The editor of the _Hearthstone Magazine_ has his own ideas about the
+selection of manuscript for his publication. His theory is no secret;
+in fact, he will expound it to you willingly sitting at his mahogany
+desk, smiling benignantly and tapping his knee gently with his
+gold-rimmed eye-glasses.
+
+"The _Hearthstone_," he will say, "does not employ a staff of
+readers. We obtain opinions of the manuscripts submitted to us
+directly from types of the various classes of our readers."
+
+That is the editor's theory; and this is the way he carries it out:
+
+When a batch of MSS. is received the editor stuffs every one of his
+pockets full of them and distributes them as he goes about during the
+day. The office employees, the hall porter, the janitor, the elevator
+man, messenger boys, the waiters at the cafe where the editor has
+luncheon, the man at the news-stand where he buys his evening paper,
+the grocer and milkman, the guard on the 5.30 uptown elevated train,
+the ticket-chopper at Sixty ----th street, the cook and maid at his
+home--these are the readers who pass upon MSS. sent in to the
+_Hearthstone Magazine_. If his pockets are not entirely emptied by
+the time he reaches the bosom of his family the remaining ones are
+handed over to his wife to read after the baby goes to sleep. A few
+days later the editor gathers in the MSS. during his regular rounds
+and considers the verdict of his assorted readers.
+
+This system of making up a magazine has been very successful; and the
+circulation, paced by the advertising rates, is making a wonderful
+record of speed.
+
+The _Hearthstone_ Company also publishes books, and its imprint is to
+be found on several successful works--all recommended, says the
+editor, by the _Hearthstone's_ army of volunteer readers. Now and
+then (according to talkative members of the editorial staff) the
+_Hearthstone_ has allowed manuscripts to slip through its fingers on
+the advice of its heterogeneous readers, that afterward proved to be
+famous sellers when brought out by other houses.
+
+For instance (the gossips say), "The Rise and Fall of Silas Latham"
+was unfavourably passed upon by the elevator-man; the office-boy
+unanimously rejected "The Boss"; "In the Bishop's Carriage" was
+contemptuously looked upon by the street-car conductor; "The
+Deliverance" was turned down by a clerk in the subscription department
+whose wife's mother had just begun a two-months' visit at his home;
+"The Queen's Quair" came back from the janitor with the comment: "So
+is the book."
+
+But nevertheless the _Hearthstone_ adheres to its theory and system,
+and it will never lack volunteer readers; for each one of the widely
+scattered staff, from the young lady stenographer in the editorial
+office to the man who shovels in coal (whose adverse decision lost to
+the _Hearthstone_ Company the manuscript of "The Under World"), has
+expectations of becoming editor of the magazine some day.
+
+This method of the _Hearthstone_ was well known to Allen Slayton when
+he wrote his novelette entitled "Love Is All." Slayton had hung about
+the editorial offices of all the magazines so persistently that he was
+acquainted with the inner workings of every one in Gotham.
+
+He knew not only that the editor of the Hearthstone handed his MSS.
+around among different types of people for reading, but that the
+stories of sentimental love-interest went to Miss Puffkin, the
+editor's stenographer. Another of the editor's peculiar customs was to
+conceal invariably the name of the writer from his readers of MSS. so
+that a glittering name might not influence the sincerity of their
+reports.
+
+Slayton made "Love Is All" the effort of his life. He gave it six
+months of the best work of his heart and brain. It was a pure
+love-story, fine, elevated, romantic, passionate--a prose poem that
+set the divine blessing of love (I am transposing from the manuscript)
+high above all earthly gifts and honours, and listed it in the
+catalogue of heaven's choicest rewards. Slayton's literary ambition
+was intense. He would have sacrificed all other worldly possessions
+to have gained fame in his chosen art. He would almost have cut off
+his right hand, or have offered himself to the knife of the
+appendicitis fancier to have realized his dream of seeing one of his
+efforts published in the _Hearthstone_.
+
+Slayton finished "Love Is All," and took it to the _Hearthstone_ in
+person. The office of the magazine was in a large, conglomerate
+building, presided under by a janitor.
+
+As the writer stepped inside the door on his way to the elevator a
+potato masher flew through the hall, wrecking Slayton's hat, and
+smashing the glass of the door. Closely following in the wake of the
+utensil flew the janitor, a bulky, unwholesome man, suspenderless and
+sordid, panic-stricken and breathless. A frowsy, fat woman with
+flying hair followed the missile. The janitor's foot slipped on the
+tiled floor, he fell in a heap with an exclamation of despair. The
+woman pounced upon him and seized his hair. The man bellowed lustily.
+
+Her vengeance wreaked, the virago rose and stalked triumphant as
+Minerva, back to some cryptic domestic retreat at the rear. The
+janitor got to his feet, blown and humiliated.
+
+"This is married life," he said to Slayton, with a certain bruised
+humour. "That's the girl I used to lay awake of nights thinking
+about. Sorry about your hat, mister. Say, don't snitch to the tenants
+about this, will yer? I don't want to lose me job."
+
+Slayton took the elevator at the end of the hall and went up to the
+offices of the _Hearthstone_. He left the MS. of "Love Is All" with
+the editor, who agreed to give him an answer as to its availability
+at the end of a week.
+
+Slayton formulated his great winning scheme on his way down. It
+struck him with one brilliant flash, and he could not refrain from
+admiring his own genius in conceiving the idea. That very night he
+set about carrying it into execution.
+
+Miss Puffkin, the _Hearthstone_ stenographer, boarded in the same house
+with the author. She was an oldish, thin, exclusive, languishing,
+sentimental maid; and Slayton had been introduced to her some time
+before.
+
+The writer's daring and self-sacrificing project was this: He knew
+that the editor of the _Hearthstone_ relied strongly upon Miss
+Puffkin's judgment in the manuscript of romantic and sentimental
+fiction. Her taste represented the immense average of mediocre women
+who devour novels and stories of that type. The central idea and
+keynote of "Love Is All" was love at first sight--the enrapturing,
+irresistible, soul-thrilling feeling that compels a man or a woman
+to recognize his or her spirit-mate as soon as heart speaks to heart.
+Suppose he should impress this divine truth upon Miss Puffkin
+personally!--would she not surely indorse her new and rapturous
+sensations by recommending highly to the editor of the _Hearthstone_
+the novelette "Love Is All"?
+
+Slayton thought so. And that night he took Miss Puffkin to the
+theatre. The next night he made vehement love to her in the dim
+parlour of the boarding-house. He quoted freely from "Love Is All";
+and he wound up with Miss Puffkin's head on his shoulder, and visions
+of literary fame dancing in his head.
+
+But Slayton did not stop at love-making. This, he said to himself,
+was the turning point of his life; and, like a true sportsman, he
+"went the limit." On Thursday night he and Miss Puffkin walked over
+to the Big Church in the Middle of the Block and were married.
+
+Brave Slayton! Chateaubriand died in a garret, Byron courted a widow,
+Keats starved to death, Poe mixed his drinks, De Quincey hit the pipe,
+Ade lived in Chicago, James kept on doing it, Dickens wore white
+socks, De Maupassant wore a strait-jacket, Tom Watson became a
+Populist, Jeremiah wept, all these authors did these things for the
+sake of literature, but thou didst cap them all; thou marriedst a wife
+for to carve for thyself a niche in the temple of fame!
+
+On Friday morning Mrs. Slayton said she would go over to the
+_Hearthstone_ office, hand in one or two manuscripts that the editor
+had given to her to read, and resign her position as stenographer.
+
+"Was there anything--er--that--er--you particularly fancied
+in the stories you are going to turn in?" asked Slayton with a
+thumping heart.
+
+"There was one--a novelette, that I liked so much," said his wife. "I
+haven't read anything in years that I thought was half as nice and
+true to life."
+
+That afternoon Slayton hurried down to the _Hearthstone_ office. He
+felt that his reward was close at hand. With a novelette in the
+_Hearthstone_, literary reputation would soon be his.
+
+The office boy met him at the railing in the outer office. It was not
+for unsuccessful authors to hold personal colloquy with the editor
+except at rare intervals.
+
+Slayton, hugging himself internally, was nursing in his heart the
+exquisite hope of being able to crush the office boy with his
+forthcoming success.
+
+He inquired concerning his novelette. The office boy went into the
+sacred precincts and brought forth a large envelope, thick with more
+than the bulk of a thousand checks.
+
+"The boss told me to tell you he's sorry," said the boy, "but your
+manuscript ain't available for the magazine."
+
+Slayton stood, dazed. "Can you tell me," he stammered, "whether or
+no Miss Puff--that is my--I mean Miss Puffkin--handed in a novelette
+this morning that she had been asked to read?"
+
+"Sure she did," answered the office boy wisely. "I heard the old man
+say that Miss Puffkin said it was a daisy. The name of it was,
+'Married for the Mazuma, or a Working Girl's Triumph.'"
+
+"Say, you!" said the office boy confidentially, "your name's Slayton,
+ain't it? I guess I mixed cases on you without meanin' to do it. The
+boss give me some manuscript to hand around the other day and I got
+the ones for Miss Puffkin and the janitor mixed. I guess it's all
+right, though."
+
+And then Slayton looked closer and saw on the cover of his manuscript,
+under the title "Love Is All," the janitor's comment scribbled with a
+piece of charcoal:
+
+"The ---- you say!"
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+THE ROADS WE TAKE
+
+
+Twenty miles west of Tucson, the "Sunset Express" stopped at a tank to
+take on water. Besides the aqueous addition the engine of that famous
+flyer acquired some other things that were not good for it.
+
+While the fireman was lowering the feeding hose, Bob Tidball, "Shark"
+Dodson and a quarter-bred Creek Indian called John Big Dog climbed on
+the engine and showed the engineer three round orifices in pieces of
+ordnance that they carried. These orifices so impressed the engineer
+with their possibilities that he raised both hands in a gesture such
+as accompanies the ejaculation "Do tell!"
+
+At the crisp command of Shark Dodson, who was leader of the attacking
+force the engineer descended to the ground and uncoupled the engine
+and tender. Then John Big Dog, perched upon the coal, sportively held
+two guns upon the engine driver and the fireman, and suggested that
+they run the engine fifty yards away and there await further orders.
+
+Shark Dodson and Bob Tidball, scorning to put such low-grade ore as
+the passengers through the mill, struck out for the rich pocket of the
+express car. They found the messenger serene in the belief that the
+"Sunset Express" was taking on nothing more stimulating and dangerous
+than aqua pura. While Bob was knocking this idea out of his head with
+the butt-end of his six-shooter Shark Dodson was already dosing the
+express-car safe with dynamite.
+
+The safe exploded to the tune of $30,000, all gold and currency. The
+passengers thrust their heads casually out of the windows to look for
+the thunder-cloud. The conductor jerked at the bell-rope, which
+sagged down loose and unresisting, at his tug. Shark Dodson and Bob
+Tidball, with their booty in a stout canvas bag, tumbled out of the
+express car and ran awkwardly in their high-heeled boots to the
+engine.
+
+The engineer, sullenly angry but wise, ran the engine, according to
+orders, rapidly away from the inert train. But before this was
+accomplished the express messenger, recovered from Bob Tidball's
+persuader to neutrality, jumped out of his car with a Winchester rifle
+and took a trick in the game. Mr. John Big Dog, sitting on the coal
+tender, unwittingly made a wrong lead by giving an imitation of a
+target, and the messenger trumped him. With a ball exactly between
+his shoulder blades the Creek chevalier of industry rolled off to
+the ground, thus increasing the share of his comrades in the loot by
+one-sixth each.
+
+Two miles from the tank the engineer was ordered to stop.
+
+The robbers waved a defiant adieu and plunged down the steep slope
+into the thick woods that lined the track. Five minutes of crashing
+through a thicket of chaparral brought them to open woods, where three
+horses were tied to low-hanging branches. One was waiting for John
+Big Dog, who would never ride by night or day again. This animal the
+robbers divested of saddle and bridle and set free. They mounted the
+other two with the bag across one pommel, and rode fast and with
+discretion through the forest and up a primeval, lonely gorge. Here
+the animal that bore Bob Tidball slipped on a mossy boulder and broke
+a foreleg. They shot him through the head at once and sat down to
+hold a council of flight. Made secure for the present by the tortuous
+trail they had travelled, the question of time was no longer so big.
+Many miles and hours lay between them and the spryest posse that could
+follow. Shark Dodson's horse, with trailing rope and dropped bridle,
+panted and cropped thankfully of the grass along the stream in the
+gorge. Bob Tidball opened the sack, drew out double handfuls of the
+neat packages of currency and the one sack of gold and chuckled with
+the glee of a child.
+
+"Say, you old double-decked pirate," he called joyfully to Dodson,
+"you said we could do it--you got a head for financing that knocks
+the horns off of anything in Arizona."
+
+"What are we going to do about a hoss for you, Bob? We ain't got long
+to wait here. They'll be on our trail before daylight in the
+mornin'."
+
+"Oh, I guess that cayuse of yourn'll carry double for a while,"
+answered the sanguine Bob. "We'll annex the first animal we come
+across. By jingoes, we made a haul, didn't we? Accordin' to the
+marks on this money there's $30,000--$15,000 apiece!"
+
+"It's short of what I expected," said Shark Dodson, kicking softly at
+the packages with the toe of his boot. And then he looked pensively at
+the wet sides of his tired horse.
+
+"Old Bolivar's mighty nigh played out," he said, slowly. "I wish that
+sorrel of yours hadn't got hurt."
+
+"So do I," said Bob, heartily, "but it can't be helped. Bolivar's got
+plenty of bottom--he'll get us both far enough to get fresh mounts.
+Dang it, Shark, I can't help thinkin' how funny it is that an
+Easterner like you can come out here and give us Western fellows cards
+and spades in the desperado business. What part of the East was you
+from, anyway?"
+
+"New York State," said Shark Dodson, sitting down on a boulder and
+chewing a twig. "I was born on a farm in Ulster County. I ran away
+from home when I was seventeen. It was an accident my coming West. I
+was walkin' along the road with my clothes in a bundle, makin' for New
+York City. I had an idea of goin' there and makin' lots of money. I
+always felt like I could do it. I came to a place one evenin' where
+the road forked and I didn't know which fork to take. I studied about
+it for half an hour, and then I took the left-hand. That night I run
+into the camp of a Wild West show that was travellin' among the little
+towns, and I went West with it. I've often wondered if I wouldn't
+have turned out different if I'd took the other road."
+
+"Oh, I reckon you'd have ended up about the same," said Bob Tidball,
+cheerfully philosophical. "It ain't the roads we take; it's what's
+inside of us that makes us turn out the way we do."
+
+Shark Dodson got up and leaned against a tree.
+
+"I'd a good deal rather that sorrel of yourn hadn't hurt himself,
+Bob," he said again, almost pathetically.
+
+"Same here," agreed Bob; "he was sure a first-rate kind of a crowbait.
+But Bolivar, he'll pull us through all right. Reckon we'd better be
+movin' on, hadn't we, Shark? I'll bag this boodle ag'in and we'll hit
+the trail for higher timber."
+
+Bob Tidball replaced the spoil in the bag and tied the mouth of it
+tightly with a cord. When he looked up the most prominent object that
+he saw was the muzzle of Shark Dodson's .45 held upon him without a
+waver.
+
+"Stop your funnin'," said Bob, with a grin. "We got to be hittin' the
+breeze."
+
+"Set still," said Shark. "You ain't goin' to hit no breeze, Bob. I
+hate to tell you, but there ain't any chance for but one of us.
+Bolivar, he's plenty tired, and he can't carry double."
+
+"We been pards, me and you, Shark Dodson, for three year," Bob said
+quietly. "We've risked our lives together time and again. I've
+always give you a square deal, and I thought you was a man. I've
+heard some queer stories about you shootin' one or two men in a
+peculiar way, but I never believed 'em. Now if you're just havin' a
+little fun with me, Shark, put your gun up, and we'll get on Bolivar
+and vamose. If you mean to shoot--shoot, you blackhearted son of a
+tarantula!"
+
+Shark Dodson's face bore a deeply sorrowful look. "You don't know how
+bad I feel," he sighed, "about that sorrel of yourn breakin' his leg,
+Bob."
+
+The expression on Dodson's face changed in an instant to one of cold
+ferocity mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed
+itself for a moment like an evil face in the window of a reputable
+house.
+
+Truly Bob Tidball was never to "hit the breeze" again. The deadly .45
+of the false friend cracked and filled the gorge with a roar that the
+walls hurled back with indignant echoes. And Bolivar, unconscious
+accomplice, swiftly bore away the last of the holders-up of the
+"Sunset Express," not put to the stress of "carrying double."
+
+But as "Shark" Dodson galloped away the woods seemed to fade from his
+view; the revolver in his right hand turned to the curved arm of a
+mahogany chair; his saddle was strangely upholstered, and he opened
+his eyes and saw his feet, not in stirrups, but resting quietly on the
+edge of a quartered-oak desk.
+
+
+I am telling you that Dodson, of the firm of Dodson & Decker, Wall
+Street brokers, opened his eyes. Peabody, the confidential clerk, was
+standing by his chair, hesitating to speak. There was a confused hum
+of wheels below, and the sedative buzz of an electric fan.
+
+"Ahem! Peabody," said Dodson, blinking. "I must have fallen asleep.
+I had a most remarkable dream. What is it, Peabody?"
+
+"Mr. Williams, sir, of Tracy & Williams, is outside. He has come to
+settle his deal in X. Y. Z. The market caught him short, sir, if you
+remember."
+
+"Yes, I remember. What is X. Y. Z. quoted at to-day, Peabody?"
+
+"One eighty-five, sir."
+
+"Then that's his price."
+
+"Excuse me," said Peabody, rather nervously "for speaking of it, but
+I've been talking to Williams. He's an old friend of yours, Mr.
+Dodson, and you practically have a corner in X. Y. Z. I thought you
+might--that is, I thought you might not remember that he sold you
+the stock at 98. If he settles at the market price it will take every
+cent he has in the world and his home too to deliver the shares."
+
+The expression on Dodson's face changed in an instant to one of cold
+ferocity mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed
+itself for a moment like an evil face in the window of a reputable
+house.
+
+"He will settle at one eighty-five," said Dodson. "Bolivar cannot
+carry double."
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+A BLACKJACK BARGAINER
+
+
+The most disreputable thing in Yancey Goree's law office was Goree
+himself, sprawled in his creaky old arm-chair. The rickety little
+office, built of red brick, was set flush with the street--the main
+street of the town of Bethel.
+
+Bethel rested upon the foot-hills of the Blue Ridge. Above it the
+mountains were piled to the sky. Far below it the turbid Catawba
+gleamed yellow along its disconsolate valley.
+
+The June day was at its sultriest hour. Bethel dozed in the tepid
+shade. Trade was not. It was so still that Goree, reclining in his
+chair, distinctly heard the clicking of the chips in the grand-jury
+room, where the "court-house gang" was playing poker. From the open
+back door of the office a well-worn path meandered across the grassy
+lot to the court-house. The treading out of that path had cost Goree
+all he ever had--first inheritance of a few thousand dollars, next
+the old family home, and, latterly the last shreds of his self-respect
+and manhood. The "gang" had cleaned him out. The broken gambler had
+turned drunkard and parasite; he had lived to see this day come when
+the men who had stripped him denied him a seat at the game. His word
+was no longer to be taken. The daily bouts at cards had arranged
+itself accordingly, and to him was assigned the ignoble part of the
+onlooker. The sheriff, the county clerk, a sportive deputy, a gay
+attorney, and a chalk-faced man hailing "from the valley," sat at
+table, and the sheared one was thus tacitly advised to go and grow
+more wool.
+
+Soon wearying of his ostracism, Goree had departed for his office,
+muttering to himself as he unsteadily traversed the unlucky pathway.
+After a drink of corn whiskey from a demijohn under the table, he had
+flung himself into the chair, staring, in a sort of maudlin apathy,
+out at the mountains immersed in the summer haze. The little white
+patch he saw away up on the side of Blackjack was Laurel, the village
+near which he had been born and bred. There, also, was the birthplace
+of the feud between the Gorees and the Coltranes. Now no direct heir
+of the Gorees survived except this plucked and singed bird of
+misfortune. To the Coltranes, also, but one male supporter was left
+--Colonel Abner Coltrane, a man of substance and standing, a member
+of the State Legislature, and a contemporary with Goree's father. The
+feud had been a typical one of the region; it had left a red record of
+hate, wrong and slaughter.
+
+But Yancey Goree was not thinking of feuds. His befuddled brain was
+hopelessly attacking the problem of the future maintenance of himself
+and his favourite follies. Of late, old friends of the family had
+seen to it that he had whereof to eat and a place to sleep--but whiskey
+they would not buy for him, and he must have whiskey. His law business
+was extinct; no case had been intrusted to him in two years. He had
+been a borrower and a sponge, and it seemed that if he fell no lower
+it would be from lack of opportunity. One more chance--he was saying
+to himself--if he had one more stake at the game, he thought he could
+win; but he had nothing left to sell, and his credit was more than
+exhausted.
+
+He could not help smiling, even in his misery, as he thought of the
+man to whom, six months before, he had sold the old Goree homestead.
+There had come from "back yan'" in the mountains two of the strangest
+creatures, a man named Pike Garvey and his wife. "Back yan'," with a
+wave of the hand toward the hills, was understood among the
+mountaineers to designate the remotest fastnesses, the unplumbed
+gorges, the haunts of lawbreakers, the wolf's den, and the boudoir of
+the bear. In the cabin far up on Blackjack's shoulder, in the wildest
+part of these retreats, this odd couple had lived for twenty years.
+They had neither dog nor children to mitigate the heavy silence of the
+hills. Pike Garvey was little known in the settlements, but all who
+had dealt with him pronounced him "crazy as a loon." He acknowledged
+no occupation save that of a squirrel hunter, but he "moonshined"
+occasionally by way of diversion. Once the "revenues" had dragged him
+from his lair, fighting silently and desperately like a terrier, and
+he had been sent to state's prison for two years. Released, he popped
+back into his hole like an angry weasel.
+
+Fortune, passing over many anxious wooers, made a freakish flight into
+Blackjack's bosky pockets to smile upon Pike and his faithful partner.
+
+One day a party of spectacled, knickerbockered, and altogether absurd
+prospectors invaded the vicinity of the Garvey's cabin. Pike lifted
+his squirrel rifle off the hooks and took a shot at them at long range
+on the chance of their being revenues. Happily he missed, and the
+unconscious agents of good luck drew nearer, disclosing their
+innocence of anything resembling law or justice. Later on, they
+offered the Garveys an enormous quantity of ready, green, crisp money
+for their thirty-acre patch of cleared land, mentioning, as an excuse
+for such a mad action, some irrelevant and inadequate nonsense about a
+bed of mica underlying the said property.
+
+When the Garveys became possessed of so many dollars that they
+faltered in computing them, the deficiencies of life on Blackjack
+began to grow prominent. Pike began to talk of new shoes, a hogshead
+of tobacco to set in the corner, a new lock to his rifle; and, leading
+Martella to a certain spot on the mountain-side, he pointed out to her
+how a small cannon--doubtless a thing not beyond the scope of their
+fortune in price--might be planted so as to command and defend the
+sole accessible trail to the cabin, to the confusion of revenues and
+meddling strangers forever.
+
+But Adam reckoned without his Eve. These things represented to him
+the applied power of wealth, but there slumbered in his dingy cabin an
+ambition that soared far above his primitive wants. Somewhere in Mrs.
+Garvey's bosom still survived a spot of femininity unstarved by twenty
+years of Blackjack. For so long a time the sounds in her ears had
+been the scaly-barks dropping in the woods at noon, and the wolves
+singing among the rocks at night, and it was enough to have purged her
+of vanities. She had grown fat and sad and yellow and dull. But when
+the means came, she felt a rekindled desire to assume the perquisites
+of her sex--to sit at tea tables; to buy futile things; to whitewash
+the hideous veracity of life with a little form and ceremony. So she
+coldly vetoed Pike's proposed system of fortifications, and
+announced that they would descend upon the world, and gyrate socially.
+
+And thus, at length, it was decided, and the thing done. The village
+of Laurel was their compromise between Mrs. Garvey's preference for
+one of the large valley towns and Pike's hankering for primeval
+solitudes. Laurel yielded a halting round of feeble social
+distractions comportable with Martella's ambitions, and was not
+entirely without recommendation to Pike, its contiguity to the
+mountains presenting advantages for sudden retreat in case fashionable
+society should make it advisable.
+
+Their descent upon Laurel had been coincident with Yancey Goree's
+feverish desire to convert property into cash, and they bought the old
+Goree homestead, paying four thousand dollars ready money into the
+spendthrift's shaking hands.
+
+Thus it happened that while the disreputable last of the Gorees
+sprawled in his disreputable office, at the end of his row, spurned by
+the cronies whom he had gorged, strangers dwelt in the halls of his
+fathers.
+
+A cloud of dust was rolling, slowly up the parched street, with
+something travelling in the midst of it. A little breeze wafted the
+cloud to one side, and a new, brightly painted carryall, drawn by a
+slothful gray horse, became visible. The vehicle deflected from the
+middle of the street as it neared Goree's office, and stopped in the
+gutter directly in front of his door.
+
+On the front seat sat a gaunt, tall man, dressed in black broadcloth,
+his rigid hands incarcerated in yellow kid gloves. On the back seat
+was a lady who triumphed over the June heat. Her stout form was
+armoured in a skin-tight silk dress of the description known as
+"changeable," being a gorgeous combination of shifting hues. She sat
+erect, waving a much-ornamented fan, with her eyes fixed stonily far
+down the street. However Martella Garvey's heart might be rejoicing
+at the pleasures of her new life, Blackjack had done his work with her
+exterior. He had carved her countenance to the image of emptiness and
+inanity; had imbued her with the stolidity of his crags, and the
+reserve of his hushed interiors. She always seemed to hear, whatever
+her surroundings were, the scaly-barks falling and pattering down the
+mountain-side. She could always hear the awful silence of Blackjack
+sounding through the stillest of nights.
+
+Goree watched this solemn equipage, as it drove to his door, with only
+faint interest; but when the lank driver wrapped the reins about his
+whip, awkwardly descended, and stepped into the office, he rose
+unsteadily to receive him, recognizing Pike Garvey, the new, the
+transformed, the recently civilized.
+
+The mountaineer took the chair Goree offered him. They who cast doubts
+upon Garvey's soundness of mind had a strong witness in the man's
+countenance. His face was too long, a dull saffron in hue, and
+immobile as a statue's. Pale-blue, unwinking round eyes without
+lashes added to the singularity of his gruesome visage. Goree was at a
+loss to account for the visit.
+
+"Everything all right at Laurel, Mr. Garvey?" he inquired.
+
+"Everything all right, sir, and mighty pleased is Missis Garvey and me
+with the property. Missis Garvey likes yo' old place, and she likes
+the neighbourhood. Society is what she 'lows she wants, and she is
+gettin' of it. The Rogerses, the Hapgoods, the Pratts and the Troys
+hev been to see Missis Garvey, and she hev et meals to most of thar
+houses. The best folks hev axed her to differ'nt kinds of doin's. I
+cyan't say, Mr. Goree, that sech things suits me--fur me, give me
+them thar." Garvey's huge, yellow-gloved hand flourished in the
+direction of the mountains. "That's whar I b'long, 'mongst the wild
+honey bees and the b'ars. But that ain't what I come fur to say, Mr.
+Goree. Thar's somethin' you got what me and Missis Garvey wants to
+buy."
+
+"Buy!" echoed Goree. "From me?" Then he laughed harshly. "I reckon
+you are mistaken about that. I reckon you are mistaken about that. I
+sold out to you, as you yourself expressed it, 'lock, stock and
+barrel.' There isn't even a ramrod left to sell."
+
+"You've got it; and we 'uns want it. 'Take the money,' says Missis
+Garvey, 'and buy it fa'r and squar'.'"
+
+Goree shook his head. "The cupboard's bare," he said.
+
+"We've riz," pursued the mountaineer, undeflected from his object, "a
+heap. We was pore as possums, and now we could hev folks to dinner
+every day. We been recognized, Missis Garvey says, by the best
+society. But there's somethin' we need we ain't got. She says it
+ought to been put in the 'ventory ov the sale, but it tain't thar.
+'Take the money, then,' says she, 'and buy it fa'r and squar'."'
+
+"Out with it," said Goree, his racked nerves growing impatient.
+
+Garvey threw his slouch hat upon the table, and leaned forward, fixing
+his unblinking eyes upon Goree's.
+
+"There's a old feud," he said distinctly and slowly, "'tween you 'uns
+and the Coltranes."
+
+Goree frowned ominously. To speak of his feud to a feudist is a
+serious breach of the mountain etiquette. The man from "back yan'"
+knew it as well as the lawyer did.
+
+"Na offense," he went on "but purely in the way of business. Missis
+Garvey hev studied all about feuds. Most of the quality folks in the
+mountains hev 'em. The Settles and the Goforths, the Rankins and the
+Boyds, the Silers and the Galloways, hev all been cyarin' on feuds
+f'om twenty to a hundred year. The last man to drap was when yo'
+uncle, Jedge Paisley Goree, 'journed co't and shot Len Coltrane f'om
+the bench. Missis Garvey and me, we come f'om the po' white trash.
+Nobody wouldn't pick a feud with we 'uns, no mo'n with a fam'ly of
+tree-toads. Quality people everywhar, says Missis Garvey, has feuds.
+We 'uns ain't quality, but we're buyin' into it as fur as we can.
+'Take the money, then,' says Missis Garvey, 'and buy Mr. Goree's feud,
+fa'r and squar'.'"
+
+The squirrel hunter straightened a leg half across the room, drew a
+roll of bills from his pocket, and threw them on the table.
+
+"Thar's two hundred dollars, Mr. Goree; what you would call a fa'r
+price for a feud that's been 'lowed to run down like yourn hev.
+Thar's only you left to cyar' on yo' side of it, and you'd make mighty
+po' killin'. I'll take it off yo' hands, and it'll set me and Missis
+Garvey up among the quality. Thar's the money."
+
+The little roll of currency on the table slowly untwisted itself,
+writhing and jumping as its folds relaxed. In the silence that
+followed Garvey's last speech the rattling of the poker chips in the
+court-house could be plainly heard. Goree knew that the sheriff had
+just won a pot, for the subdued whoop with which he always greeted
+a victory floated across the square upon the crinkly heat waves.
+Beads of moisture stood on Goree's brow. Stooping, he drew the
+wicker-covered demijohn from under the table, and filled a tumbler
+from it.
+
+"A little corn liquor, Mr. Garvey? Of course you are joking about--
+what you spoke of? Opens quite a new market, doesn't it? Feuds.
+Prime, two-fifty to three. Feuds, slightly damaged--two hundred, I
+believe you said, Mr. Garvey?"
+
+Goree laughed self-consciously.
+
+The mountaineer took the glass Goree handed him, and drank the whisky
+without a tremor of the lids of his staring eyes. The lawyer
+applauded the feat by a look of envious admiration. He poured his own
+drink, and took it like a drunkard, by gulps, and with shudders at the
+smell and taste.
+
+"Two hundred," repeated Garvey. "Thar's the money."
+
+A sudden passion flared up in Goree's brain. He struck the table with
+his fist. One of the bills flipped over and touched his hand. He
+flinched as if something had stung him.
+
+"Do you come to me," he shouted, "seriously with such a ridiculous,
+insulting, darned-fool proposition?"
+
+"It's fa'r and squar'," said the squirrel hunter, but he reached out
+his hand as if to take back the money; and then Goree knew that his
+own flurry of rage had not been from pride or resentment, but from
+anger at himself, knowing that he would set foot in the deeper depths
+that were being opened to him. He turned in an instant from an
+outraged gentleman to an anxious chafferer recommending his goods.
+
+"Don't be in a hurry, Garvey," he said, his face crimson and his
+speech thick. "I accept your p-p-proposition, though it's dirt cheap
+at two hundred. A t-trade's all right when both p-purchaser and
+b-buyer are s-satisfied. Shall I w-wrap it up for you, Mr. Garvey?"
+
+Garvey rose, and shook out his broadcloth. "Missis Garvey will be
+pleased. You air out of it, and it stands Coltrane and Garvey. Just
+a scrap ov writin', Mr. Goree, you bein' a lawyer, to show we traded."
+
+Goree seized a sheet of paper and a pen. The money was clutched in
+his moist hand. Everything else suddenly seemed to grow trivial and
+light.
+
+"Bill of sale, by all means. 'Right, title, and interest in and to'
+. . . 'forever warrant and--' No, Garvey, we'll have to leave out that
+'defend,'" said Goree with a loud laugh. "You'll have to defend this
+title yourself."
+
+The mountaineer received the amazing screed that the lawyer handed
+him, folded it with immense labour, and laced it carefully in his
+pocket.
+
+Goree was standing near the window. "Step here," he said, raising his
+finger, "and I'll show you your recently purchased enemy. There he
+goes, down the other side of the street."
+
+The mountaineer crooked his long frame to look through the window in
+the direction indicated by the other. Colonel Abner Coltrane, an
+erect, portly gentleman of about fifty, wearing the inevitable long,
+double-breasted frock coat of the Southern lawmaker, and an old high
+silk hat, was passing on the opposite sidewalk. As Garvey looked,
+Goree glanced at his face. If there be such a thing as a yellow wolf,
+here was its counterpart. Garvey snarled as his unhuman eyes followed
+the moving figure, disclosing long, amber-coloured fangs.
+
+"Is that him? Why, that's the man who sent me to the pen'tentiary
+once!"
+
+"He used to be district attorney," said Goree carelessly. "And, by
+the way, he's a first-class shot."
+
+"I kin hit a squirrel's eye at a hundred yard," said Garvey. "So that
+thar's Coltrane! I made a better trade than I was thinkin'. I'll
+take keer ov this feud, Mr. Goree, better'n you ever did!"
+
+He moved toward the door, but lingered there, betraying a slight
+perplexity.
+
+"Anything else to-day?" inquired Goree with frothy sarcasm. "Any
+family traditions, ancestral ghosts, or skeletons in the closet?
+Prices as low as the lowest."
+
+"Thar was another thing," replied the unmoved squirrel hunter, "that
+Missis Garvey was thinkin' of. 'Tain't so much in my line as t'other,
+but she wanted partic'lar that I should inquire, and ef you was
+willin', 'pay fur it,' she says, 'fa'r and squar'.' Thar's a buryin'
+groun', as you know, Mr. Goree, in the yard of yo' old place, under
+the cedars. Them that lies thar is yo' folks what was killed by the
+Coltranes. The monyments has the names on 'em. Missis Garvey says a
+fam'ly buryin' groun' is a sho' sign of quality. She says ef we git
+the feud, thar's somethin' else ought to go with it. The names on
+them monyments is 'Goree,' but they can be changed to ourn by--"
+
+"Go! Go!" screamed Goree, his face turning purple. He stretched out
+both hands toward the mountaineer, his fingers hooked and shaking.
+"Go, you ghoul! Even a Ch-Chinaman protects the g-graves of his
+ancestors--go!"
+
+The squirrel hunter slouched out of the door to his carryall. While
+he was climbing over the wheel Goree was collecting, with feverish
+celerity, the money that had fallen from his hand to the floor. As
+the vehicle slowly turned about, the sheep, with a coat of newly
+grown wool, was hurrying, in indecent haste, along the path to the
+court-house.
+
+At three o'clock in the morning they brought him back to his office,
+shorn and unconscious. The sheriff, the sportive deputy, the county
+clerk, and the gay attorney carried him, the chalk-faced man "from the
+valley" acting as escort.
+
+"On the table," said one of them, and they deposited him there among
+the litter of his unprofitable books and papers.
+
+"Yance thinks a lot of a pair of deuces when he's liquored up," sighed
+the sheriff reflectively.
+
+"Too much," said the gay attorney. "A man has no business to play
+poker who drinks as much as he does. I wonder how much he dropped
+to-night."
+
+"Close to two hundred. What I wonder is whar he got it. Yance ain't
+had a cent fur over a month, I know."
+
+"Struck a client, maybe. Well, let's get home before daylight. He'll
+be all right when he wakes up, except for a sort of beehive about the
+cranium."
+
+The gang slipped away through the early morning twilight. The next
+eye to gaze upon the miserable Goree was the orb of day. He peered
+through the uncurtained window, first deluging the sleeper in a flood
+of faint gold, but soon pouring upon the mottled red of his flesh a
+searching, white, summer heat. Goree stirred, half unconsciously,
+among the table's debris, and turned his face from the window. His
+movement dislodged a heavy law book, which crashed upon the floor.
+Opening his eyes, he saw, bending over him, a man in a black frock
+coat. Looking higher, he discovered a well-worn silk hat, and beneath
+it the kindly, smooth face of Colonel Abner Coltrane.
+
+A little uncertain of the outcome, the colonel waited for the other to
+make some sign of recognition. Not in twenty years had male members
+of these two families faced each other in peace. Goree's eyelids
+puckered as he strained his blurred sight toward this visitor, and
+then he smiled serenely.
+
+"Have you brought Stella and Lucy over to play?" he said calmly.
+
+"Do you know me, Yancey?" asked Coltrane.
+
+"Of course I do. You brought me a whip with a whistle in the end."
+
+So he had--twenty-four years ago; when Yancey's father was his best
+friend.
+
+Goree's eyes wandered about the room. The colonel understood. "Lie
+still, and I'll bring you some," said he. There was a pump in the yard
+at the rear, and Goree closed his eyes, listening with rapture to the
+click of its handle, and the bubbling of the falling stream. Coltrane
+brought a pitcher of the cool water, and held it for him to drink.
+Presently Goree sat up--a most forlorn object, his summer suit of flax
+soiled and crumpled, his discreditable head tousled and unsteady. He
+tried to wave one of his hands toward the colonel.
+
+"Ex-excuse--everything, will you?" he said. "I must have drunk too
+much whiskey last night, and gone to bed on the table." His brows
+knitted into a puzzled frown.
+
+"Out with the boys awhile?" asked Coltrane kindly.
+
+"No, I went nowhere. I haven't had a dollar to spend in the last two
+months. Struck the demijohn too often, I reckon, as usual."
+
+Colonel Coltrane touched him on the shoulder.
+
+"A little while ago, Yancey," he began, "you asked me if I had brought
+Stella and Lucy over to play. You weren't quite awake then, and must
+have been dreaming you were a boy again. You are awake now, and I
+want you to listen to me. I have come from Stella and Lucy to their
+old playmate, and to my old friend's son. They know that I am going
+to bring you home with me, and you will find them as ready with a
+welcome as they were in the old days. I want you to come to my house
+and stay until you are yourself again, and as much longer as you will.
+We heard of your being down in the world, and in the midst of
+temptation, and we agreed that you should come over and play at our
+house once more. Will you come, my boy? Will you drop our old family
+trouble and come with me?"
+
+"Trouble!" said Goree, opening his eyes wide. "There was never any
+trouble between us that I know of. I'm sure we've always been the
+best friends. But, good Lord, Colonel, how could I go to your home as
+I am--a drunken wretch, a miserable, degraded spendthrift and
+gambler--"
+
+He lurched from the table into his armchair, and began to weep maudlin
+tears, mingled with genuine drops of remorse and shame. Coltrane
+talked to him persistently and reasonably, reminding him of the
+simple mountain pleasures of which he had once been so fond, and
+insisting upon the genuineness of the invitation.
+
+Finally he landed Goree by telling him he was counting upon his help
+in the engineering and transportation of a large amount of felled
+timber from a high mountain-side to a waterway. He knew that Goree
+had once invented a device for this purpose--a series of slides and
+chutes upon which he had justly prided himself. In an instant the
+poor fellow, delighted at the idea of his being of use to any one, had
+paper spread upon the table, and was drawing rapid but pitifully shaky
+lines in demonstration of what he could and would do.
+
+The man was sickened of the husks; his prodigal heart was turning
+again toward the mountains. His mind was yet strangely clogged, and
+his thoughts and memories were returning to his brain one by one, like
+carrier pigeons over a stormy sea. But Coltrane was satisfied with
+the progress he had made.
+
+Bethel received the surprise of its existence that afternoon when a
+Coltrane and a Goree rode amicably together through the town. Side by
+side they rode, out from the dusty streets and gaping townspeople,
+down across the creek bridge, and up toward the mountain. The
+prodigal had brushed and washed and combed himself to a more decent
+figure, but he was unsteady in the saddle, and he seemed to be deep in
+the contemplation of some vexing problem. Coltrane left him in his
+mood, relying upon the influence of changed surroundings to restore
+his equilibrium.
+
+Once Goree was seized with a shaking fit, and almost came to a
+collapse. He had to dismount and rest at the side of the road. The
+colonel, foreseeing such a condition, had provided a small flask of
+whisky for the journey but when it was offered to him Goree refused it
+almost with violence, declaring he would never touch it again. By and
+by he was recovered, and went quietly enough for a mile or two. Then
+he pulled up his horse suddenly, and said:
+
+"I lost two hundred dollars last night, playing poker. Now, where did
+I get that money?"
+
+"Take it easy, Yancey. The mountain air will soon clear it up. We'll
+go fishing, first thing, at the Pinnacle Falls. The trout are jumping
+there like bullfrogs. We'll take Stella and Lucy along, and have a
+picnic on Eagle Rock. Have you forgotten how a hickory-cured-ham
+sandwich tastes, Yancey, to a hungry fisherman?"
+
+Evidently the colonel did not believe the story of his lost wealth; so
+Goree retired again into brooding silence.
+
+By late Afternoon they had travelled ten of the twelve miles between
+Bethel and Laurel. Half a mile this side of Laurel lay the old Goree
+place; a mile or two beyond the village lived the Coltranes. The road
+was now steep and laborious, but the compensations were many. The
+tilted aisles of the forest were opulent with leaf and bird and bloom.
+The tonic air put to shame the pharmacopaeia. The glades were dark
+with mossy shade, and bright with shy rivulets winking from the ferns
+and laurels. On the lower side they viewed, framed in the near
+foliage, exquisite sketches of the far valley swooning in its opal
+haze.
+
+Coltrane was pleased to see that his companion was yielding to the
+spell of the hills and woods. For now they had but to skirt the base
+of Painter's Cliff; to cross Elder Branch and mount the hill beyond,
+and Goree would have to face the squandered home of his fathers. Every
+rock he passed, every tree, every foot of the rocky way, was familiar
+to him. Though he had forgotten the woods, they thrilled him like the
+music of "Home, Sweet Home."
+
+They rounded the cliff, descended into Elder Branch, and paused there
+to let the horses drink and splash in the swift water. On the right
+was a rail fence that cornered there, and followed the road and
+stream. Inclosed by it was the old apple orchard of the home place;
+the house was yet concealed by the brow of the steep hill. Inside and
+along the fence, pokeberries, elders, sassafras, and sumac grew high
+and dense. At a rustle of their branches, both Goree and Coltrane
+glanced up, and saw a long, yellow, wolfish face above the fence,
+staring at them with pale, unwinking eyes. The head quickly
+disappeared; there was a violent swaying of the bushes, and an
+ungainly figure ran up through the apple orchard in the direction of
+the house, zig-zagging among the trees.
+
+"That's Garvey," said Coltrane; "the man you sold out to. There's no
+doubt but he's considerably cracked. I had to send him up for
+moonshining once, several years ago, in spite of the fact that I
+believed him irresponsible. Why, what's the matter, Yancey?"
+
+Goree was wiping his forehead, and his face had lost its colour. "Do
+I look queer, too?" he asked, trying to smile. "I'm just remembering
+a few more things." Some of the alcohol had evaporated from his brain.
+"I recollect now where I got that two hundred dollars."
+
+"Don't think of it," said Coltrane cheerfully. "Later on we'll figure
+it all out together."
+
+They rode out of the branch, and when they reached the foot of the
+hill Goree stopped again.
+
+"Did you ever suspect I was a very vain kind of fellow, Colonel?" he
+asked. "Sort of foolish proud about appearances?"
+
+The colonel's eyes refused to wander to the soiled, sagging suit of
+flax and the faded slouch hat.
+
+"It seems to me," he replied, mystified, but humouring him, "I
+remember a young buck about twenty, with the tightest coat, the
+sleekest hair, and the prancingest saddle horse in the Blue Ridge."
+
+"Right you are," said Goree eagerly. "And it's in me yet, though it
+don't show. Oh, I'm as vain as a turkey gobbler, and as proud as
+Lucifer. I'm going to ask you to indulge this weakness of mine in a
+little matter."
+
+"Speak out, Yancey. We'll create you Duke of Laurel and Baron of Blue
+Ridge, if you choose; and you shall have a feather out of Stella's
+peacock's tail to wear in your hat."
+
+"I'm in earnest. In a few minutes we'll pass the house up there on
+the hill where I was born, and where my people have lived for nearly a
+century. Strangers live there now--and look at me! I am about to
+show myself to them ragged and poverty-stricken, a wastrel and a
+beggar. Colonel Coltrane, I'm ashamed to do it. I want you to let me
+wear your coat and hat until we are out of sight beyond. I know you
+think it a foolish pride, but I want to make as good a showing as I
+can when I pass the old place."
+
+"Now, what does this mean?" said Coltrane to himself, as he
+compared his companion's sane looks and quiet demeanour with his
+strange request. But he was already unbuttoning the coat, assenting
+readily, as if the fancy were in no wise to be considered strange.
+
+The coat and hat fitted Goree well. He buttoned the former about him
+with a look of satisfaction and dignity. He and Coltrane were nearly
+the same size--rather tall, portly, and erect. Twenty-five years
+were between them, but in appearance they might have been brothers.
+Goree looked older than his age; his face was puffy and lined; the
+colonel had the smooth, fresh complexion of a temperate liver. He put
+on Goree's disreputable old flax coat and faded slouch hat.
+
+"Now," said Goree, taking up the reins, "I'm all right. I want you to
+ride about ten feet in the rear as we go by, Colonel, so that they can
+get a good look at me. They'll see I'm no back number yet, by any
+means. I guess I'll show up pretty well to them once more, anyhow.
+Let's ride on."
+
+He set out up the hill at a smart trot, the colonel following, as he
+had been requested.
+
+Goree sat straight in the saddle, with head erect, but his eyes were
+turned to the right, sharply scanning every shrub and fence and
+hiding-place in the old homestead yard. Once he muttered to himself,
+"Will the crazy fool try it, or did I dream half of it?"
+
+It was when he came opposite the little family burying ground that he
+saw what he had been looking for--a puff of white smoke, coming from
+the thick cedars in one corner. He toppled so slowly to the left that
+Coltrane had time to urge his horse to that side, and catch him with
+one arm.
+
+The squirrel hunter had not overpraised his aim. He had sent the
+bullet where he intended, and where Goree had expected that it would
+pass--through the breast of Colonel Abner Coltrane's black frock
+coat.
+
+Goree leaned heavily against Coltrane, but he did not fall. The
+horses kept pace, side by side, and the Colonel's arm kept him steady.
+The little white houses of Laurel shone through the trees, half a mile
+away. Goree reached out one hand and groped until it rested upon
+Coltrane's fingers, which held his bridle.
+
+"Good friend," he said, and that was all.
+
+Thus did Yancey Goree, as he rode past his old home, make, considering
+all things, the best showing that was in his power.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+THE SONG AND THE SERGEANT
+
+
+Half a dozen people supping at a table in one of the upper-Broadway
+all-night restaurants were making too much noise. Three times the
+manager walked past them with a politely warning glance; but their
+argument had waxed too warm to be quelled by a manager's gaze. It was
+midnight, and the restaurant was filled with patrons from the theatres
+of that district. Some among the dispersed audiences must have
+recognized among the quarrelsome sextet the faces of the players
+belonging to the Carroll Comedy Company.
+
+Four of the six made up the company. Another was the author of the
+comedietta, "A Gay Coquette," which the quartette of players had been
+presenting with fair success at several vaudeville houses in the city.
+The sixth at the table was a person inconsequent in the realm of art,
+but one at whose bidding many lobsters had perished.
+
+Loudly the six maintained their clamorous debate. No one of the Party
+was silent except when answers were stormed from him by the excited
+ones. That was the comedian of "A Gay Coquette." He was a young man
+with a face even too melancholy for his profession.
+
+The oral warfare of four immoderate tongues was directed at Miss
+Clarice Carroll, the twinkling star of the small aggregation.
+Excepting the downcast comedian, all members of the party united in
+casting upon her with vehemence the blame of some momentous
+misfortune. Fifty times they told her: "It is your fault, Clarice--it
+is you alone who spoilt the scene. It is only of late that you have
+acted this way. At this rate the sketch will have to be taken off."
+
+Miss Carroll was a match for any four. Gallic ancestry gave her a
+vivacity that could easily mount to fury. Her large eyes flashed a
+scorching denial at her accusers. Her slender, eloquent arms
+constantly menaced the tableware. Her high, clear soprano voice rose
+to what would have been a scream had it not possessed so pure a
+musical quality. She hurled back at the attacking four their
+denunciations in tones sweet, but of too great carrying power for a
+Broadway restaurant.
+
+Finally they exhausted her patience both as a woman and an artist.
+She sprang up like a panther, managed to smash half a dozen plates and
+glasses with one royal sweep of her arm, and defied her critics. They
+rose and wrangled more loudly. The comedian sighed and looked a
+trifle sadder and disinterested. The manager came tripping and
+suggested peace. He was told to go to the popular synonym for war so
+promptly that the affair might have happened at The Hague.
+
+Thus was the manager angered. He made a sign with his hand and a
+waiter slipped out of the door. In twenty minutes the party of six
+was in a police station facing a grizzled and philosophical desk
+sergeant.
+
+"Disorderly conduct in a restaurant," said the policeman who had
+brought the party in.
+
+The author of "A Gay Coquette" stepped to the front. He wore
+nose-glasses and evening clothes, even if his shoes had been tans
+before they met the patent-leather-polish bottle.
+
+"Mr. Sergeant," said he, out of his throat, like Actor Irving, "I
+would like to protest against this arrest. The company of actors who
+are performing in a little play that I have written, in company with a
+friend and myself were having a little supper. We became deeply
+interested in the discussion as to which one of the cast is
+responsible for a scene in the sketch that lately has fallen so flat
+that the piece is about to become a failure. We may have been rather
+noisy and intolerant of interruption by the restaurant people; but the
+matter was of considerable importance to all of us. You see that we
+are sober and are not the kind of people who desire to raise
+disturbances. I hope that the case will not be pressed and that we may
+be allowed to go."
+
+"Who makes the charge?" asked the sergeant.
+
+"Me," said a white-aproned voice in the rear. "De restaurant sent me
+to. De gang was raisin' a rough-house and breakin' dishes."
+
+"The dishes were paid for," said the playwright. "They were not broken
+purposely. In her anger, because we remonstrated with her for
+spoiling the scene, Miss--"
+
+"It's not true, sergeant," cried the clear voice of Miss Clarice
+Carroll. In a long coat of tan silk and a red-plumed hat, she
+bounded before the desk.
+
+"It's not my fault," she cried indignantly. "How dare they say such
+a thing! I've played the title role ever since it was staged, and if
+you want to know who made it a success, ask the public--that's all."
+
+"What Miss Carroll says is true in part," said the author. "For five
+months the comedietta was a drawing-card in the best houses. But
+during the last two weeks it has lost favour. There is one scene in
+it in which Miss Carroll made a big hit. Now she hardly gets a hand
+out of it. She spoils it by acting it entirely different from her old
+way."
+
+"It is not my fault," reiterated the actress.
+
+"There are only two of you on in the scene," argued the playwright
+hotly, "you and Delmars, here--"
+
+"Then it's his fault," declared Miss Carroll, with a lightning glance
+of scorn from her dark eyes. The comedian caught it, and gazed with
+increased melancholy at the panels of the sergeant's desk.
+
+The night was a dull one in that particular police station.
+
+The sergeant's long-blunted curiosity awoke a little.
+
+"I've heard you," he said to the author. And then he addressed the
+thin-faced and ascetic-looking lady of the company who played "Aunt
+Turnip-top" in the little comedy.
+
+"Who do you think spoils the scene you are fussing about?" he asked.
+
+"I'm no knocker," said that lady, "and everybody knows it. So, when I
+say that Clarice falls down every time in that scene I'm judging her
+art and not herself. She was great in it once. She does it something
+fierce now. It'll dope the show if she keeps it up."
+
+The sergeant looked at the comedian.
+
+"You and the lady have this scene together, I understand. I suppose
+there's no use asking you which one of you queers it?"
+
+The comedian avoided the direct rays from the two fixed stars of Miss
+Carroll's eyes.
+
+"I don't know," he said, looking down at his patent-leather toes.
+
+"Are you one of the actors?" asked the sergeant of a dwarfish youth
+with a middle-aged face.
+
+"Why, say!" replied the last Thespian witness, "you don't notice any
+tin spear in my hands, do you? You haven't heard me shout: 'See, the
+Emperor comes!' since I've been in here, have you? I guess I'm on the
+stage long enough for 'em not to start a panic by mistaking me for a
+thin curl of smoke rising above the footlights."
+
+"In your opinion, if you've got one," said the sergeant, "is the frost
+that gathers on the scene in question the work of the lady or the
+gentleman who takes part in it?"
+
+The middle-aged youth looked pained.
+
+"I regret to say," he answered, "that Miss Carroll seems to have
+lost her grip on that scene. She's all right in the rest of the
+play, but--but I tell you, sergeant, she can do it--she has done
+it equal to any of 'em--and she can do it again."
+
+Miss Carroll ran forward, glowing and palpitating.
+
+"Thank you, Jimmy, for the first good word I've had in many a day,"
+she cried. And then she turned her eager face toward the desk.
+
+"I'll show you, sergeant, whether I am to blame. I'll show them
+whether I can do that scene. Come, Mr. Delmars; let us begin. You
+will let us, won't you, sergeant?"
+
+"How long will it take?" asked the sergeant, dubiously.
+
+"Eight minutes," said the playwright. "The entire play consumes but
+thirty."
+
+"You may go ahead," said the sergeant. "Most of you seem to side
+against the little lady. Maybe she had a right to crack up a saucer
+or two in that restaurant. We'll see how she does the turn before we
+take that up."
+
+The matron of the police station had been standing near, listening to
+the singular argument. She came nigher and stood near the sergeant's
+chair. Two or three of the reserves strolled in, big and yawning.
+
+"Before beginning the scene," said the playwright, "and assuming that
+you have not seen a production of 'A Gay Coquette,' I will make a
+brief but necessary explanation. It is a musical-farce-comedy--
+burlesque-comedietta. As the title implies, Miss Carroll's role is
+that of a gay, rollicking, mischievous, heartless coquette. She
+sustains that character throughout the entire comedy part of the
+production. And I have designed the extravaganza features so that she
+may preserve and present the same coquettish idea.
+
+"Now, the scene in which we take exception to Miss Carroll's acting is
+called the 'gorilla dance.' She is costumed to represent a wood nymph,
+and there is a great song-and-dance scene with a gorilla--played by
+Mr. Delmars, the comedian. A tropical-forest stage is set.
+
+"That used to get four and five recalls. The main thing was the
+acting and the dance--it was the funniest thing in New York for five
+months. Delmars's song, 'I'll Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home,' while he
+and Miss Carroll were cutting hide-and-seek capers among the tropical
+plants, was a winner."
+
+"What's the trouble with the scene now?" asked the sergeant.
+
+"Miss Carroll spoils it right in the middle of it," said the
+playwright wrathfully.
+
+With a wide gesture of her ever-moving arms the actress waved back the
+little group of spectators, leaving a space in front of the desk for
+the scene of her vindication or fall. Then she whipped off her long
+tan cloak and tossed it across the arm of the policeman who still
+stood officially among them.
+
+Miss Carroll had gone to supper well cloaked, but in the costume of
+the tropic wood nymph. A skirt of fern leaves touched her knee; she
+was like a humming-bird--green and golden and purple.
+
+And then she danced a fluttering, fantastic dance, so agile and light
+and mazy in her steps that the other three members of the Carroll
+Comedy Company broke into applause at the art of it.
+
+And at the proper time Delmars leaped out at her side, mimicking
+the uncouth, hideous bounds of the gorilla so funnily that the
+grizzled sergeant himself gave a short laugh like the closing of a
+padlock. They danced together the gorilla dance, and won a hand from
+all.
+
+Then began the most fantastic part of the scene--the wooing of the
+nymph by the gorilla. It was a kind of dance itself--eccentric and
+prankish, with the nymph in coquettish and seductive retreat, followed
+by the gorilla as he sang "I'll Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home."
+
+The song was a lyric of merit. The words were non-sense, as befitted
+the play, but the music was worthy of something better. Delmars
+struck into it in a rich tenor that owned a quality that shamed the
+flippant words.
+
+During one verse of the song the wood nymph performed the grotesque
+evolutions designed for the scene. At the middle of the second verse
+she stood still, with a strange look on her face, seeming to gaze
+dreamily into the depths of the scenic forest. The gorilla's last
+leap had brought him to her feet, and there he knelt, holding her
+hand, until he had finished the haunting-lyric that was set in the
+absurd comedy like a diamond in a piece of putty.
+
+When Delmars ceased Miss Carroll started, and covered a sudden flow of
+tears with both hands.
+
+"There!" cried the playwright, gesticulating with violence; "there
+you have it, sergeant. For two weeks she has spoiled that scene in
+just that manner at every performance. I have begged her to consider
+that it is not Ophelia or Juliet that she is playing. Do you wonder
+now at our impatience? Tears for the gorilla song! The play is lost!"
+
+Out of her bewitchment, whatever it was, the wood nymph flared
+suddenly, and pointed a desperate finger at Delmars.
+
+"It is you--you who have done this," she cried wildly. "You never
+sang that song that way until lately. It is your doing."
+
+"I give it up," said the sergeant.
+
+And then the gray-haired matron of the police station came forward
+from behind the sergeant's chair.
+
+"Must an old woman teach you all?" she said. She went up to Miss
+Carroll and took her hand.
+
+"The man's wearing his heart out for you, my dear. Couldn't you tell
+it the first note you heard him sing? All of his monkey flip-flops
+wouldn't have kept it from me. Must you be deaf as well as blind?
+That's why you couldn't act your part, child. Do you love him or must
+he be a gorilla for the rest of his days?"
+
+Miss Carroll whirled around and caught Delmars with a lightning glance
+of her eye. He came toward her, melancholy.
+
+"Did you hear, Mr. Delmars?" she asked, with a catching breath.
+
+"I did," said the comedian. "It is true. I didn't think there was
+any use. I tried to let you know with the song."
+
+"Silly!" said the matron; "why didn't you speak?"
+
+"No, no," cried the wood nymph, "his way was the best. I didn't know,
+but--it was just what I wanted, Bobby."
+
+She sprang like a green grasshopper; and the comedian opened his arms,
+and--smiled.
+
+"Get out of this," roared the desk sergeant to the waiting waiter from
+the restaurant. "There's nothing doing here for you."
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+ONE DOLLAR'S WORTH
+
+
+The judge of the United States court of the district lying along the
+Rio Grande border found the following letter one morning in his mail:
+
+
+ JUDGE:
+ When you sent me up for four years you made a talk.
+ Among other hard things, you called me a rattlesnake.
+ Maybe I am one--anyhow, you hear me rattling now.
+ One year after I got to the pen, my daughter died of--
+ well, they said it was poverty and the disgrace together.
+ You've got a daughter, Judge, and I'm going to make
+ you know how it feels to lose one. And I'm going to
+ bite that district attorney that spoke against me. I'm
+ free now, and I guess I've turned to rattlesnake all right.
+ I feel like one. I don't say much, but this is my rattle.
+ Look out when I strike.
+ Yours respectfully,
+ RATTLESNAKE.
+
+
+Judge Derwent threw the letter carelessly aside. It was nothing new
+to receive such epistles from desperate men whom he had been called
+upon to judge. He felt no alarm. Later on he showed the letter to
+Littlefield, the young district attorney, for Littlefield's name was
+included in the threat, and the judge was punctilious in matters
+between himself and his fellow men.
+
+Littlefield honoured the rattle of the writer, as far as it concerned
+himself, with a smile of contempt; but he frowned a little over the
+reference to the Judge's daughter, for he and Nancy Derwent were to be
+married in the fall.
+
+Littlefield went to the clerk of the court and looked over the records
+with him. They decided that the letter might have been sent by Mexico
+Sam, a half-breed border desperado who had been imprisoned for
+manslaughter four years before. Then official duties crowded the
+matter from his mind, and the rattle of the revengeful serpent was
+forgotten.
+
+Court was in session at Brownsville. Most of the cases to be tried
+were charges of smuggling, counterfeiting, post-office robberies, and
+violations of Federal laws along the border. One case was that of a
+young Mexican, Rafael Ortiz, who had been rounded up by a clever
+deputy marshal in the act of passing a counterfeit silver dollar. He
+had been suspected of many such deviations from rectitude, but this
+was the first time that anything provable had been fixed upon him.
+Ortiz languished cozily in jail, smoking brown cigarettes and waiting
+for trial. Kilpatrick, the deputy, brought the counterfeit dollar and
+handed it to the district attorney in his office in the court-house.
+The deputy and a reputable druggist were prepared to swear that Ortiz
+paid for a bottle of medicine with it. The coin was a poor
+counterfeit, soft, dull-looking, and made principally of lead. It was
+the day before the morning on which the docket would reach the case of
+Ortiz, and the district attorney was preparing himself for trial.
+
+"Not much need of having in high-priced experts to prove the coin's
+queer, is there, Kil?" smiled Littlefield, as he thumped the dollar
+down upon the table, where it fell with no more ring than would have
+come from a lump of putty.
+
+"I guess the Greaser's as good as behind the bars," said the deputy,
+easing up his holsters. "You've got him dead. If it had been just
+one time, these Mexicans can't tell good money from bad; but this
+little yaller rascal belongs to a gang of counterfeiters, I know.
+This is the first time I've been able to catch him doing the trick.
+He's got a girl down there in them Mexican jacals on the river bank.
+I seen her one day when I was watching him. She's as pretty as a red
+heifer in a flower bed."
+
+Littlefield shoved the counterfeit dollar into his pocket, and slipped
+his memoranda of the case into an envelope. Just then a bright,
+winsome face, as frank and jolly as a boy's, appeared in the doorway,
+and in walked Nancy Derwent.
+
+"Oh, Bob, didn't court adjourn at twelve to-day until to-morrow?" she
+asked of Littlefield.
+
+"It did," said the district attorney, "and I'm very glad of it. I've
+got a lot of rulings to look up, and--"
+
+"Now, that's just like you. I wonder you and father don't turn
+to law books or rulings or something! I want you to take me out
+plover-shooting this afternoon. Long Prairie is just alive with them.
+Don't say no, please! I want to try my new twelve-bore hammerless.
+I've sent to the livery stable to engage Fly and Bess for the
+buckboard; they stand fire so nicely. I was sure you would go."
+
+They were to be married in the fall. The glamour was at its
+height. The plovers won the day--or, rather, the afternoon--over
+the calf-bound authorities. Littlefield began to put his papers
+away.
+
+There was a knock at the door. Kilpatrick answered it. A beautiful,
+dark-eyed girl with a skin tinged with the faintest lemon colour
+walked into the room. A black shawl was thrown over her head and
+wound once around her neck.
+
+She began to talk in Spanish, a voluble, mournful stream of melancholy
+music. Littlefield did not understand Spanish. The deputy did, and
+he translated her talk by portions, at intervals holding up his hand
+to check the flow of her words.
+
+"She came to see you, Mr. Littlefield. Her name's Joya Trevinas. She
+wants to see you about--well, she's mixed up with that Rafael Ortiz.
+She's his--she's his girl. She says he's innocent. She says she
+made the money and got him to pass it. Don't you believe her, Mr.
+Littlefield. That's the way with these Mexican girls; they'll lie,
+steal, or kill for a fellow when they get stuck on him. Never trust a
+woman that's in love!"
+
+"Mr. Kilpatrick!"
+
+Nancy Derwent's indignant exclamation caused the deputy to flounder
+for a moment in attempting to explain that he had misquoted his own
+sentiments, and then he went on with the translation:
+
+"She says she's willing to take his place in the jail if you'll let
+him out. She says she was down sick with the fever, and the doctor
+said she'd die if she didn't have medicine. That's why he passed the
+lead dollar on the drug store. She says it saved her life. This
+Rafael seems to be her honey, all right; there's a lot of stuff in her
+talk about love and such things that you don't want to hear."
+
+It was an old story to the district attorney.
+
+"Tell her," said he, "that I can do nothing. The case comes up in the
+morning, and he will have to make his fight before the court."
+
+Nancy Derwent was not so hardened. She was looking with sympathetic
+interest at Joya Trevinas and at Littlefield alternately. The deputy
+repeated the district attorney's words to the girl. She spoke a
+sentence or two in a low voice, pulled her shawl closely about her
+face, and left the room.
+
+"What did she say then?" asked the district attorney.
+
+"Nothing special," said the deputy. "She said: 'If the life of the
+one'--let's see how it went--'_Si la vida de ella a quien tu amas_
+--if the life of the girl you love is ever in danger, remember Rafael
+Ortiz.'"
+
+Kilpatrick strolled out through the corridor in the direction of the
+marshal's office.
+
+"Can't you do anything for them, Bob?" asked Nancy. "It's such a
+little thing--just one counterfeit dollar--to ruin the happiness
+of two lives! She was in danger of death, and he did it to save her.
+Doesn't the law know the feeling of pity?"
+
+"It hasn't a place in jurisprudence, Nan," said Littlefield,
+"especially _in re_ the district attorney's duty. I'll promise you
+that the prosecution will not be vindictive; but the man is as good as
+convicted when the case is called. Witnesses will swear to his passing
+the bad dollar which I have in my pocket at this moment as 'Exhibit
+A.' There are no Mexicans on the jury, and it will vote Mr. Greaser
+guilty without leaving the box."
+
+
+The plover-shooting was fine that afternoon, and in the excitement of
+the sport the case of Rafael and the grief of Joya Trevinas was
+forgotten. The district attorney and Nancy Derwent drove out from
+the town three miles along a smooth, grassy road, and then struck
+across a rolling prairie toward a heavy line of timber on Piedra
+Creek. Beyond this creek lay Long Prairie, the favourite haunt of the
+plover. As they were nearing the creek they heard the galloping of a
+horse to their right, and saw a man with black hair and a swarthy face
+riding toward the woods at a tangent, as if he had come up behind
+them.
+
+"I've seen that fellow somewhere," said Littlefield, who had a memory
+for faces, "but I can't exactly place him. Some ranchman, I suppose,
+taking a short cut home."
+
+They spent an hour on Long Prairie, shooting from the buckboard.
+Nancy Derwent, an active, outdoor Western girl, was pleased with her
+twelve-bore. She had bagged within two brace of her companion's
+score.
+
+They started homeward at a gentle trot. When within a hundred yards
+of Piedra Creek a man rode out of the timber directly toward them.
+
+"It looks like the man we saw coming over," remarked Miss Derwent.
+
+As the distance between them lessened, the district attorney suddenly
+pulled up his team sharply, with his eyes fixed upon the advancing
+horseman. That individual had drawn a Winchester from its scabbard
+on his saddle and thrown it over his arm.
+
+"Now I know you, Mexico Sam!" muttered Littlefield to himself. "It
+was you who shook your rattles in that gentle epistle."
+
+Mexico Sam did not leave things long in doubt. He had a nice eye in
+all matters relating to firearms, so when he was within good rifle
+range, but outside of danger from No. 8 shot, he threw up his
+Winchester and opened fire upon the occupants of the buckboard.
+
+The first shot cracked the back of the seat within the two-inch space
+between the shoulders of Littlefield and Miss Derwent. The next went
+through the dashboard and Littlefield's trouser leg.
+
+The district attorney hustled Nancy out of the buck-board to the
+ground. She was a little pale, but asked no questions. She had the
+frontier instinct that accepts conditions in an emergency without
+superfluous argument. They kept their guns in hand, and Littlefield
+hastily gathered some handfuls of cartridges from the pasteboard box
+on the seat and crowded them into his pockets.
+
+"Keep behind the horses, Nan," he commanded. "That fellow is a ruffian
+I sent to prison once. He's trying to get even. He knows our shot
+won't hurt him at that distance."
+
+"All right, Bob," said Nancy steadily. "I'm not afraid. But you come
+close, too. Whoa, Bess; stand still, now!"
+
+She stroked Bess's mane. Littlefield stood with his gun ready,
+praying that the desperado would come within range.
+
+But Mexico Sam was playing his vendetta along safe lines. He was
+a bird of different feather from the plover. His accurate eye drew
+an imaginary line of circumference around the area of danger from
+bird-shot, and upon this line lie rode. His horse wheeled to the
+right, and as his victims rounded to the safe side of their equine
+breast-work he sent a ball through the district attorney's hat. Once
+he miscalculated in making a detour, and over-stepped his margin.
+Littlefield's gun flashed, and Mexico Sam ducked his head to the
+harmless patter of the shot. A few of them stung his horse, which
+pranced promptly back to the safety line.
+
+The desperado fired again. A little cry came from Nancy Derwent.
+Littlefield whirled, with blazing eyes, and saw the blood trickling
+down her cheek.
+
+"I'm not hurt, Bob--only a splinter struck me. I think he hit one
+of the wheel-spokes."
+
+"Lord!" groaned Littlefield. "If I only had a charge of buckshot!"
+
+The ruffian got his horse still, and took careful aim. Fly gave a
+snort and fell in the harness, struck in the neck. Bess, now
+disabused of the idea that plover were being fired at, broke her
+traces and galloped wildly away. Mexican Sam sent a ball neatly
+through the fulness of Nancy Derwent's shooting jacket.
+
+"Lie down--lie down!" snapped Littlefield. "Close to the horse--flat
+on the ground--so." He almost threw her upon the grass against the
+back of the recumbent Fly. Oddly enough, at that moment the words
+of the Mexican girl returned to his mind:
+
+"If the life of the girl you love is ever in danger, remember Rafael
+Ortiz."
+
+Littlefield uttered an exclamation.
+
+"Open fire on him, Nan, across the horse's back. Fire as fast as you
+can! You can't hurt him, but keep him dodging shot for one minute
+while I try to work a little scheme."
+
+Nancy gave a quick glance at Littlefield, and saw him take out his
+pocket-knife and open it. Then she turned her face to obey orders,
+keeping up a rapid fire at the enemy.
+
+Mexico Sam waited patiently until this innocuous fusillade ceased.
+He had plenty of time, and he did not care to risk the chance of a
+bird-shot in his eye when it could be avoided by a little caution.
+He pulled his heavy Stetson low down over his face until the shots
+ceased. Then he drew a little nearer, and fired with careful aim at
+what he could see of his victims above the fallen horse.
+
+Neither of them moved. He urged his horse a few steps nearer. He
+saw the district attorney rise to one knee and deliberately level
+his shotgun. He pulled his hat down and awaited the harmless rattle
+of the tiny pellets.
+
+The shotgun blazed with a heavy report. Mexico Sam sighed, turned
+limp all over, and slowly fell from his horse--a dead rattlesnake.
+
+
+At ten o'clock the next morning court opened, and the case of the
+United States versus Rafael Ortiz was called. The district attorney,
+with his arm in a sling, rose and addressed the court.
+
+"May it please your honour," he said, "I desire to enter a _nolle
+pros._ in this case. Even though the defendant should be guilty,
+there is not sufficient evidence in the hands of the government to
+secure a conviction. The piece of counterfeit coin upon the
+identity of which the case was built is not now available as
+evidence. I ask, therefore, that the case be stricken off."
+
+At the noon recess Kilpatrick strolled into the district attorney's
+office.
+
+"I've just been down to take a squint at old Mexico Sam," said the
+deputy. "They've got him laid out. Old Mexico was a tough outfit, I
+reckon. The boys was wonderin' down there what you shot him with.
+Some said it must have been nails. I never see a gun carry anything
+to make holes like he had."
+
+"I shot him," said the district attorney, "with Exhibit A of your
+counterfeiting case. Lucky thing for me--and somebody else--that
+it was as bad money as it was! It sliced up into slugs very nicely.
+Say, Kil, can't you go down to the jacals and find where that Mexican
+girl lives? Miss Derwent wants to know."
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+A NEWSPAPER STORY
+
+
+At 8 A. M. it lay on Giuseppi's news-stand, still damp from the
+presses. Giuseppi, with the cunning of his ilk, philandered on the
+opposite corner, leaving his patrons to help themselves, no doubt on
+a theory related to the hypothesis of the watched pot.
+
+This particular newspaper was, according to its custom and design, an
+educator, a guide, a monitor, a champion and a household counsellor
+and _vade mecum_.
+
+From its many excellencies might be selected three editorials. One
+was in simple and chaste but illuminating language directed to
+parents and teachers, deprecating corporal punishment for children.
+
+Another was an accusive and significant warning addressed to a
+notorious labour leader who was on the point of instigating his
+clients to a troublesome strike.
+
+The third was an eloquent demand that the police force be sustained
+and aided in everything that tended to increase its efficiency as
+public guardians and servants.
+
+Besides these more important chidings and requisitions upon the store
+of good citizenship was a wise prescription or form of procedure laid
+out by the editor of the heart-to-heart column in the specific case
+of a young man who had complained of the obduracy of his lady love,
+teaching him how he might win her.
+
+Again, there was, on the beauty page, a complete answer to a young
+lady inquirer who desired admonition toward the securing of bright
+eyes, rosy cheeks and a beautiful countenance.
+
+One other item requiring special cognizance was a brief "personal,"
+running thus:
+
+
+ DEAR JACK:--Forgive me. You were right. Meet me corner Madison and
+ ----th at 8.30 this morning. We leave at noon. PENITENT.
+
+
+At 8 o'clock a young man with a haggard look and the feverish gleam of
+unrest in his eye dropped a penny and picked up the top paper as he
+passed Giuseppi's stand. A sleepless night had left him a late riser.
+There was an office to be reached by nine, and a shave and a hasty cup
+of coffee to be crowded into the interval.
+
+He visited his barber shop and then hurried on his way. He pocketed
+his paper, meditating a belated perusal of it at the luncheon hour.
+At the next corner it fell from his pocket, carrying with it his pair
+of new gloves. Three blocks he walked, missed the gloves and turned
+back fuming.
+
+Just on the half-hour he reached the corner where lay the gloves and
+the paper. But he strangely ignored that which he had come to seek.
+He was holding two little hands as tightly as ever he could and
+looking into two penitent brown eyes, while joy rioted in his heart.
+
+"Dear Jack," she said, "I knew you would be here on time."
+
+"I wonder what she means by that," he was saying to himself; "but it's
+all right, it's all right."
+
+A big wind puffed out of the west, picked up the paper from the
+sidewalk, opened it out and sent it flying and whirling down a side
+street. Up that street was driving a skittish bay to a spider-wheel
+buggy, the young man who had written to the heart-to-heart editor for
+a recipe that he might win her for whom he sighed.
+
+The wind, with a prankish flurry, flapped the flying newspaper against
+the face of the skittish bay. There was a lengthened streak of bay
+mingled with the red of running gear that stretched itself out for
+four blocks. Then a water-hydrant played its part in the cosmogony,
+the buggy became matchwood as foreordained, and the driver rested very
+quietly where he had been flung on the asphalt in front of a certain
+brownstone mansion.
+
+They came out and had him inside very promptly. And there was one who
+made herself a pillow for his head, and cared for no curious eyes,
+bending over and saying, "Oh, it was you; it was you all the time,
+Bobby! Couldn't you see it? And if you die, why, so must I, and--"
+
+But in all this wind we must hurry to keep in touch with our paper.
+
+Policeman O'Brine arrested it as a character dangerous to traffic.
+Straightening its dishevelled leaves with his big, slow fingers, he
+stood a few feet from the family entrance of the Shandon Bells Cafe.
+One headline he spelled out ponderously: "The Papers to the Front in a
+Move to Help the Police."
+
+But, whisht! The voice of Danny, the head bartender, through the
+crack of the door: "Here's a nip for ye, Mike, ould man."
+
+Behind the widespread, amicable columns of the press Policeman O'Brine
+receives swiftly his nip of the real stuff. He moves away, stalwart,
+refreshed, fortified, to his duties. Might not the editor man view
+with pride the early, the spiritual, the literal fruit that had
+blessed his labours.
+
+Policeman O'Brine folded the paper and poked it playfully under the
+arm of a small boy that was passing. That boy was named Johnny, and he
+took the paper home with him. His sister was named Gladys, and she
+had written to the beauty editor of the paper asking for the
+practicable touchstone of beauty. That was weeks ago, and she had
+ceased to look for an answer. Gladys was a pale girl, with dull eyes
+and a discontented expression. She was dressing to go up to the
+avenue to get some braid. Beneath her skirt she pinned two leaves of
+the paper Johnny had brought. When she walked the rustling sound was
+an exact imitation of the real thing.
+
+On the street she met the Brown girl from the flat below and stopped
+to talk. The Brown girl turned green. Only silk at $5 a yard could
+make the sound that she heard when Gladys moved. The Brown girl,
+consumed by jealousy, said something spiteful and went her way, with
+pinched lips.
+
+Gladys proceeded toward the avenue. Her eyes now sparkled like
+jagerfonteins. A rosy bloom visited her cheeks; a triumphant, subtle,
+vivifying, smile transfigured her face. She was beautiful. Could the
+beauty editor have seen her then! There was something in her answer
+in the paper, I believe, about cultivating kind feelings toward others
+in order to make plain features attractive.
+
+The labour leader against whom the paper's solemn and weighty
+editorial injunction was laid was the father of Gladys and Johnny. He
+picked up the remains of the journal from which Gladys had ravished a
+cosmetic of silken sounds. The editorial did not come under his eye,
+but instead it was greeted by one of those ingenious and specious
+puzzle problems that enthrall alike the simpleton and the sage.
+
+The labour leader tore off half of the page, provided himself with
+table, pencil and paper and glued himself to his puzzle.
+
+Three hours later, after waiting vainly for him at the appointed
+place, other more conservative leaders declared and ruled in favour of
+arbitration, and the strike with its attendant dangers was averted.
+Subsequent editions of the paper referred, in coloured inks, to the
+clarion tone of its successful denunciation of the labour leader's
+intended designs.
+
+The remaining leaves of the active journal also went loyally to the
+proving of its potency.
+
+When Johnny returned from school he sought a secluded spot and removed
+the missing columns from the inside of his clothing, where they had
+been artfully distributed so as to successfully defend such areas as
+are generally attacked during scholastic castigations. Johnny
+attended a private school and had had trouble with his teacher. As
+has been said, there was an excellent editorial against corporal
+punishment in that morning's issue, and no doubt it had its effect.
+
+After this can any one doubt the power of the press?
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+TOMMY'S BURGLAR
+
+
+At ten o'clock P. M. Felicia, the maid, left by the basement door with
+the policeman to get a raspberry phosphate around the corner. She
+detested the policeman and objected earnestly to the arrangement.
+She pointed out, not unreasonably, that she might have been allowed to
+fall asleep over one of St. George Rathbone's novels on the third
+floor, but she was overruled. Raspberries and cops were not created
+for nothing.
+
+The burglar got into the house without much difficulty; because we
+must have action and not too much description in a 2,000-word story.
+
+In the dining room he opened the slide of his dark lantern. With a
+brace and centrebit he began to bore into the lock of the silver-closet.
+
+Suddenly a click was heard. The room was flooded with electric light.
+The dark velvet portieres parted to admit a fair-haired boy of eight
+in pink pajamas, bearing a bottle of olive oil in his hand.
+
+"Are you a burglar?" he asked, in a sweet, childish voice.
+
+"Listen to that," exclaimed the man, in a hoarse voice. "Am I a
+burglar? Wot do you suppose I have a three-days' growth of bristly
+beard on my face for, and a cap with flaps? Give me the oil, quick,
+and let me grease the bit, so I won't wake up your mamma, who is lying
+down with a headache, and left you in charge of Felicia who has been
+faithless to her trust."
+
+"Oh, dear," said Tommy, with a sigh. "I thought you would be more
+up-to-date. This oil is for the salad when I bring lunch from the
+pantry for you. And mamma and papa have gone to the Metropolitan to
+hear De Reszke. But that isn't my fault. It only shows how long the
+story has been knocking around among the editors. If the author had
+been wise he'd have changed it to Caruso in the proofs."
+
+"Be quiet," hissed the burglar, under his breath. "If you raise an
+alarm I'll wring your neck like a rabbit's."
+
+"Like a chicken's," corrected Tommy. "You had that wrong. You don't
+wring rabbits' necks."
+
+"Aren't you afraid of me?" asked the burglar.
+
+"You know I'm not," answered Tommy. "Don't you suppose I know fact
+from fiction. If this wasn't a story I'd yell like an Indian when I
+saw you; and you'd probably tumble downstairs and get pinched on the
+sidewalk."
+
+"I see," said the burglar, "that you're on to your job. Go on with
+the performance."
+
+Tommy seated himself in an armchair and drew his toes up under him.
+
+"Why do you go around robbing strangers, Mr. Burglar? Have you no
+friends?"
+
+"I see what you're driving at," said the burglar, with a dark frown.
+"It's the same old story. Your innocence and childish insouciance is
+going to lead me back into an honest life. Every time I crack a crib
+where there's a kid around, it happens."
+
+"Would you mind gazing with wolfish eyes at the plate of cold beef
+that the butler has left on the dining table?" said Tommy. "I'm
+afraid it's growing late."
+
+The burglar accommodated.
+
+"Poor man," said Tommy. "You must be hungry. If you will please stand
+in a listless attitude I will get you something to eat."
+
+The boy brought a roast chicken, a jar of marmalade and a bottle of
+wine from the pantry. The burglar seized a knife and fork sullenly.
+
+"It's only been an hour," he grumbled, "since I had a lobster and a
+pint of musty ale up on Broadway. I wish these story writers would
+let a fellow have a pepsin tablet, anyhow, between feeds."
+
+"My papa writes books," remarked Tommy.
+
+The burglar jumped to his feet quickly.
+
+"You said he had gone to the opera," he hissed, hoarsely and with
+immediate suspicion.
+
+"I ought to have explained," said Tommy. "He didn't buy the tickets."
+The burglar sat again and toyed with the wishbone.
+
+"Why do you burgle houses?" asked the boy, wonderingly.
+
+"Because," replied the burglar, with a sudden flow of tears. "God
+bless my little brown-haired boy Bessie at home."
+
+"Ah," said Tommy, wrinkling his nose, "you got that answer in the
+wrong place. You want to tell your hard-luck story before you pull
+out the child stop."
+
+"Oh, yes," said the burglar, "I forgot. Well, once I lived in
+Milwaukee, and--"
+
+"Take the silver," said Tommy, rising from his chair.
+
+"Hold on," said the burglar. "But I moved away. I could find no
+other employment. For a while I managed to support my wife and
+child by passing confederate money; but, alas! I was forced to give
+that up because it did not belong to the union. I became desperate
+and a burglar."
+
+"Have you ever fallen into the hands of the police?" asked Tommy.
+
+"I said 'burglar,' not 'beggar,'" answered the cracksman.
+
+"After you finish your lunch," said Tommy, "and experience the usual
+change of heart, how shall we wind up the story?"
+
+"Suppose," said the burglar, thoughtfully, "that Tony Pastor turns out
+earlier than usual to-night, and your father gets in from 'Parsifal'
+at 10.30. I am thoroughly repentant because you have made me think of
+my own little boy Bessie, and--"
+
+"Say," said Tommy, "haven't you got that wrong?"
+
+"Not on your coloured crayon drawings by B. Cory Kilvert," said the
+burglar. "It's always a Bessie that I have at home, artlessly
+prattling to the pale-cheeked burglar's bride. As I was saying, your
+father opens the front door just as I am departing with admonitions
+and sandwiches that you have wrapped up for me. Upon recognizing me
+as an old Harvard classmate he starts back in--"
+
+"Not in surprise?" interrupted Tommy, with wide, open eyes.
+
+"He starts back in the doorway," continued the burglar. And then he
+rose to his feet and began to shout "Rah, rah, rah! rah, rah, rah!
+rah, rah, rah!"
+
+"Well," said Tommy, wonderingly, "that's the first time I ever knew a
+burglar to give a college yell when he was burglarizing a house, even
+in a story."
+
+"That's one on you," said the burglar, with a laugh. "I was practising
+the dramatization. If this is put on the stage that college touch is
+about the only thing that will make it go."
+
+Tommy looked his admiration.
+
+"You're on, all right," he said.
+
+"And there's another mistake you've made," said the burglar. "You
+should have gone some time ago and brought me the $9 gold piece your
+mother gave you on your birthday to take to Bessie."
+
+"But she didn't give it to me to take to Bessie," said Tommy, pouting.
+
+"Come, come!" said the burglar, sternly. "It's not nice of you to
+take advantage because the story contains an ambiguous sentence. You
+know what I mean. It's mighty little I get out of these fictional
+jobs, anyhow. I lose all the loot, and I have to reform every time;
+and all the swag I'm allowed is the blamed little fol-de-rols and
+luck-pieces that you kids hand over. Why, in one story, all I got was
+a kiss from a little girl who came in on me when I was opening a safe.
+And it tasted of molasses candy, too. I've a good notion to tie this
+table cover over your head and keep on into the silver-closet."
+
+"Oh, no, you haven't," said Tommy, wrapping his arms around his knees.
+"Because if you did no editor would buy the story. You know you've
+got to preserve the unities."
+
+"So've you," said the burglar, rather glumly. "Instead of sitting here
+talking impudence and taking the bread out of a poor man's mouth, what
+you'd like to be doing is hiding under the bed and screeching at the
+top of your voice."
+
+"You're right, old man," said Tommy, heartily. "I wonder what they
+make us do it for? I think the S. P. C. C. ought to interfere. I'm
+sure it's neither agreeable nor usual for a kid of my age to butt in
+when a full-grown burglar is at work and offer him a red sled and a
+pair of skates not to awaken his sick mother. And look how they make
+the burglars act! You'd think editors would know--but what's the
+use?"
+
+The burglar wiped his hands on the tablecloth and arose with a yawn.
+
+"Well, let's get through with it," he said. "God bless you, my little
+boy! you have saved a man from committing a crime this night. Bessie
+shall pray for you as soon as I get home and give her her orders. I
+shall never burglarize another house--at least not until the June
+magazines are out. It'll be your little sister's turn then to run in
+on me while I am abstracting the U. S. 4 per cent. from the tea urn
+and buy me off with her coral necklace and a falsetto kiss."
+
+"You haven't got all the kicks coming to you," sighed Tommy, crawling
+out of his chair. "Think of the sleep I'm losing. But it's tough on
+both of us, old man. I wish you could get out of the story and really
+rob somebody. Maybe you'll have the chance if they dramatize us."
+
+"Never!" said the burglar, gloomily. "Between the box office and my
+better impulses that your leading juveniles are supposed to awaken
+and the magazines that pay on publication, I guess I'll always be
+broke."
+
+"I'm sorry," said Tommy, sympathetically. "But I can't help myself
+any more than you can. It's one of the canons of household fiction
+that no burglar shall be successful. The burglar must be foiled by
+a kid like me, or by a young lady heroine, or at the last moment by
+his old pal, Red Mike, who recognizes the house as one in which he
+used to be the coachman. You have got the worst end of it in any kind
+of a story."
+
+"Well, I suppose I must be clearing out now," said the burglar, taking
+up his lantern and bracebit.
+
+"You have to take the rest of this chicken and the bottle of wine with
+you for Bessie and her mother," said Tommy, calmly.
+
+"But confound it," exclaimed the burglar, in an annoyed tone, "they
+don't want it. I've got five cases of Chateau de Beychsvelle at home
+that was bottled in 1853. That claret of yours is corked. And you
+couldn't get either of them to look at a chicken unless it was stewed
+in champagne. You know, after I get out of the story I don't have so
+many limitations. I make a turn now and then."
+
+"Yes, but you must take them," said Tommy, loading his arms with the
+bundles.
+
+"Bless you, young master!" recited the burglar, obedient. "Second-Story
+Saul will never forget you. And now hurry and let me out, kid. Our
+2,000 words must be nearly up."
+
+Tommy led the way through the hall toward the front door. Suddenly
+the burglar stopped and called to him softly: "Ain't there a cop out
+there in front somewhere sparking the girl?"
+
+"Yes," said Tommy, "but what--"
+
+"I'm afraid he'll catch me," said the burglar. "You mustn't forget
+that this is fiction."
+
+"Great head!" said Tommy, turning. "Come out by the back door."
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+A CHAPARRAL CHRISTMAS GIFT
+
+
+The original cause of the trouble was about twenty years in growing.
+
+At the end of that time it was worth it.
+
+Had you lived anywhere within fifty miles of Sundown Ranch you would
+have heard of it. It possessed a quantity of jet-black hair, a pair
+of extremely frank, deep-brown eyes and a laugh that rippled across
+the prairie like the sound of a hidden brook. The name of it was
+Rosita McMullen; and she was the daughter of old man McMullen of the
+Sundown Sheep Ranch.
+
+There came riding on red roan steeds--or, to be more explicit, on a
+paint and a flea-bitten sorrel--two wooers. One was Madison Lane,
+and the other was the Frio Kid. But at that time they did not call him
+the Frio Kid, for he had not earned the honours of special
+nomenclature. His name was simply Johnny McRoy.
+
+It must not be supposed that these two were the sum of the agreeable
+Rosita's admirers. The bronchos of a dozen others champed their bits
+at the long hitching rack of the Sundown Ranch. Many were the
+sheeps'-eyes that were cast in those savannas that did not belong to
+the flocks of Dan McMullen. But of all the cavaliers, Madison Lane
+and Johnny McRoy galloped far ahead, wherefore they are to be
+chronicled.
+
+Madison Lane, a young cattleman from the Nueces country, won the race.
+He and Rosita were married one Christmas day. Armed, hilarious,
+vociferous, magnanimous, the cowmen and the sheepmen, laying aside
+their hereditary hatred, joined forces to celebrate the occasion.
+
+Sundown Ranch was sonorous with the cracking of jokes and sixshooters,
+the shine of buckles and bright eyes, the outspoken congratulations of
+the herders of kine.
+
+But while the wedding feast was at its liveliest there descended upon
+it Johnny McRoy, bitten by jealousy, like one possessed.
+
+"I'll give you a Christmas present," he yelled, shrilly, at the door,
+with his .45 in his hand. Even then he had some reputation as an
+offhand shot.
+
+His first bullet cut a neat underbit in Madison Lane's right ear. The
+barrel of his gun moved an inch. The next shot would have been the
+bride's had not Carson, a sheepman, possessed a mind with triggers
+somewhat well oiled and in repair. The guns of the wedding party had
+been hung, in their belts, upon nails in the wall when they sat at
+table, as a concession to good taste. But Carson, with great
+promptness, hurled his plate of roast venison and frijoles at McRoy,
+spoiling his aim. The second bullet, then, only shattered the white
+petals of a Spanish dagger flower suspended two feet above Rosita's
+head.
+
+The guests spurned their chairs and jumped for their weapons. It was
+considered an improper act to shoot the bride and groom at a wedding.
+In about six seconds there were twenty or so bullets due to be
+whizzing in the direction of Mr. McRoy.
+
+"I'll shoot better next time," yelled Johnny; "and there'll be a next
+time." He backed rapidly out the door.
+
+Carson, the sheepman, spurred on to attempt further exploits by the
+success of his plate-throwing, was first to reach the door. McRoy's
+bullet from the darkness laid him low.
+
+The cattlemen then swept out upon him, calling for vengeance, for,
+while the slaughter of a sheepman has not always lacked condonement,
+it was a decided misdemeanour in this instance. Carson was
+innocent; he was no accomplice at the matrimonial proceedings; nor had
+any one heard him quote the line "Christmas comes but once a year" to
+the guests.
+
+But the sortie failed in its vengeance. McRoy was on his horse and
+away, shouting back curses and threats as he galloped into the
+concealing chaparral.
+
+That night was the birthnight of the Frio Kid. He became the "bad
+man" of that portion of the State. The rejection of his suit by Miss
+McMullen turned him to a dangerous man. When officers went after him
+for the shooting of Carson, he killed two of them, and entered upon
+the life of an outlaw. He became a marvellous shot with either hand.
+He would turn up in towns and settlements, raise a quarrel at the
+slightest opportunity, pick off his man and laugh at the officers
+of the law. He was so cool, so deadly, so rapid, so inhumanly
+blood-thirsty that none but faint attempts were ever made to capture
+him. When he was at last shot and killed by a little one-armed Mexican
+who was nearly dead himself from fright, the Frio Kid had the deaths
+of eighteen men on his head. About half of these were killed in fair
+duels depending upon the quickness of the draw. The other half were
+men whom he assassinated from absolute wantonness and cruelty.
+
+Many tales are told along the border of his impudent courage and
+daring. But he was not one of the breed of desperadoes who have
+seasons of generosity and even of softness. They say he never had
+mercy on the object of his anger. Yet at this and every Christmastide
+it is well to give each one credit, if it can be done, for whatever
+speck of good he may have possessed. If the Frio Kid ever did a
+kindly act or felt a throb of generosity in his heart it was once at
+such a time and season, and this is the way it happened.
+
+
+One who has been crossed in love should never breathe the odour from
+the blossoms of the ratama tree. It stirs the memory to a dangerous
+degree.
+
+One December in the Frio country there was a ratama tree in full
+bloom, for the winter had been as warm as springtime. That way rode
+the Frio Kid and his satellite and co-murderer, Mexican Frank. The kid
+reined in his mustang, and sat in his saddle, thoughtful and grim,
+with dangerously narrowing eyes. The rich, sweet scent touched him
+somewhere beneath his ice and iron.
+
+"I don't know what I've been thinking about, Mex," he remarked in his
+usual mild drawl, "to have forgot all about a Christmas present I got
+to give. I'm going to ride over to-morrow night and shoot Madison
+Lane in his own house. He got my girl--Rosita would have had me if
+he hadn't cut into the game. I wonder why I happened to overlook it
+up to now?"
+
+"Ah, shucks, Kid," said Mexican, "don't talk foolishness. You know
+you can't get within a mile of Mad Lane's house to-morrow night. I
+see old man Allen day before yesterday, and he says Mad is going to
+have Christmas doings at his house. You remember how you shot up the
+festivities when Mad was married, and about the threats you made?
+Don't you suppose Mad Lane'll kind of keep his eye open for a certain
+Mr. Kid? You plumb make me tired, Kid, with such remarks."
+
+"I'm going," repeated the Frio Kid, without heat, "to go to Madison
+Lane's Christmas doings, and kill him. I ought to have done it a long
+time ago. Why, Mex, just two weeks ago I dreamed me and Rosita was
+married instead of her and him; and we was living in a house, and I
+could see her smiling at me, and--oh! h----l, Mex, he got her; and
+I'll get him--yes, sir, on Christmas Eve he got her, and then's when
+I'll get him."
+
+"There's other ways of committing suicide," advised Mexican. "Why
+don't you go and surrender to the sheriff?"
+
+"I'll get him," said the Kid.
+
+Christmas Eve fell as balmy as April. Perhaps there was a hint of
+far-away frostiness in the air, but it tingles like seltzer, perfumed
+faintly with late prairie blossoms and the mesquite grass.
+
+When night came the five or six rooms of the ranch-house were
+brightly lit. In one room was a Christmas tree, for the Lanes had a
+boy of three, and a dozen or more guests were expected from the nearer
+ranches.
+
+At nightfall Madison Lane called aside Jim Belcher and three other
+cowboys employed on his ranch.
+
+"Now, boys," said Lane, "keep your eyes open. Walk around the house
+and watch the road well. All of you know the 'Frio Kid,' as they call
+him now, and if you see him, open fire on him without asking any
+questions. I'm not afraid of his coming around, but Rosita is. She's
+been afraid he'd come in on us every Christmas since we were married."
+
+The guests had arrived in buckboards and on horseback, and were making
+themselves comfortable inside.
+
+The evening went along pleasantly. The guests enjoyed and praised
+Rosita's excellent supper, and afterward the men scattered in groups
+about the rooms or on the broad "gallery," smoking and chatting.
+
+The Christmas tree, of course, delighted the youngsters, and above all
+were they pleased when Santa Claus himself in magnificent white beard
+and furs appeared and began to distribute the toys.
+
+"It's my papa," announced Billy Sampson, aged six. "I've seen him wear
+'em before."
+
+Berkly, a sheepman, an old friend of Lane, stopped Rosita as she was
+passing by him on the gallery, where he was sitting smoking.
+
+"Well, Mrs. Lane," said he, "I suppose by this Christmas you've
+gotten over being afraid of that fellow McRoy, haven't you? Madison
+and I have talked about it, you know."
+
+"Very nearly," said Rosita, smiling, "but I am still nervous
+sometimes. I shall never forget that awful time when he came so near
+to killing us."
+
+"He's the most cold-hearted villain in the world," said Berkly. "The
+citizens all along the border ought to turn out and hunt him down like
+a wolf."
+
+"He has committed awful crimes," said Rosita, "but--I--don't--know.
+I think there is a spot of good somewhere in everybody. He was not
+always bad--that I know."
+
+Rosita turned into the hallway between the rooms. Santa Claus, in
+muffling whiskers and furs, was just coming through.
+
+"I heard what you said through the window, Mrs. Lane," he said. "I
+was just going down in my pocket for a Christmas present for your
+husband. But I've left one for you, instead. It's in the room to
+your right."
+
+"Oh, thank you, kind Santa Claus," said Rosita, brightly.
+
+Rosita went into the room, while Santa Claus stepped into the cooler
+air of the yard.
+
+She found no one in the room but Madison.
+
+"Where is my present that Santa said he left for me in here?" she
+asked.
+
+"Haven't seen anything in the way of a present," said her husband,
+laughing, "unless he could have meant me."
+
+
+The next day Gabriel Radd, the foreman of the X O Ranch, dropped into
+the post-office at Loma Alta.
+
+"Well, the Frio Kid's got his dose of lead at last," he remarked to
+the postmaster.
+
+"That so? How'd it happen?"
+
+"One of old Sanchez's Mexican sheep herders did it!--think of it!
+the Frio Kid killed by a sheep herder! The Greaser saw him riding
+along past his camp about twelve o'clock last night, and was so
+skeered that he up with a Winchester and let him have it. Funniest
+part of it was that the Kid was dressed all up with white Angora-skin
+whiskers and a regular Santy Claus rig-out from head to foot. Think
+of the Frio Kid playing Santy!"
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+A LITTLE LOCAL COLOUR
+
+
+I mentioned to Rivington that I was in search of characteristic New
+York scenes and incidents--something typical, I told him, without
+necessarily having to spell the first syllable with an "i."
+
+"Oh, for your writing business," said Rivington; "you couldn't have
+applied to a better shop. What I don't know about little old New York
+wouldn't make a sonnet to a sunbonnet. I'll put you right in the
+middle of so much local colour that you won't know whether you are a
+magazine cover or in the erysipelas ward. When do you want to begin?"
+
+Rivington is a young-man-about-town and a New Yorker by birth,
+preference and incommutability.
+
+I told him that I would be glad to accept his escort and guardianship
+so that I might take notes of Manhattan's grand, gloomy and peculiar
+idiosyncrasies, and that the time of so doing would be at his own
+convenience.
+
+"We'll begin this very evening," said Rivington, himself interested,
+like a good fellow. "Dine with me at seven, and then I'll steer you
+up against metropolitan phases so thick you'll have to have a
+kinetoscope to record 'em."
+
+So I dined with Rivington pleasantly at his club, in Forty-eleventh
+street, and then we set forth in pursuit of the elusive tincture of
+affairs.
+
+As we came out of the club there stood two men on the sidewalk near
+the steps in earnest conversation.
+
+"And by what process of ratiocination," said one of them, "do you
+arrive at the conclusion that the division of society into producing
+and non-possessing classes predicates failure when compared with
+competitive systems that are monopolizing in tendency and result
+inimically to industrial evolution?"
+
+"Oh, come off your perch!" said the other man, who wore glasses.
+"Your premises won't come out in the wash. You wind-jammers who apply
+bandy-legged theories to concrete categorical syllogisms send logical
+conclusions skallybootin' into the infinitesimal ragbag. You can't
+pull my leg with an old sophism with whiskers on it. You quote Marx
+and Hyndman and Kautsky--what are they?--shines! Tolstoi?--his
+garret is full of rats. I put it to you over the home-plate that the
+idea of a cooperative commonwealth and an abolishment of competitive
+systems simply takes the rag off the bush and gives me hyperesthesia
+of the roopteetoop! The skookum house for yours!"
+
+I stopped a few yards away and took out my little notebook.
+
+"Oh, come ahead," said Rivington, somewhat nervously; "you don't
+want to listen to that."
+
+"Why, man," I whispered, "this is just what I do want to hear. These
+slang types are among your city's most distinguishing features. Is
+this the Bowery variety? I really must hear more of it."
+
+"If I follow you," said the man who had spoken first, "you do not
+believe it possible to reorganize society on the basis of common
+interest?"
+
+"Shinny on your own side!" said the man with glasses. "You never
+heard any such music from my foghorn. What I said was that I did not
+believe it practicable just now. The guys with wads are not in the
+frame of mind to slack up on the mazuma, and the man with the portable
+tin banqueting canister isn't exactly ready to join the Bible class.
+You can bet your variegated socks that the situation is all
+spifflicated up from the Battery to breakfast! What the country needs
+is for some bully old bloke like Cobden or some wise guy like old Ben
+Franklin to sashay up to the front and biff the nigger's head with
+the baseball. Do you catch my smoke? What?"
+
+Rivington pulled me by the arm impatiently.
+
+"Please come on," he said. "Let's go see something. This isn't what
+you want."
+
+"Indeed, it is," I said resisting. "This tough talk is the very stuff
+that counts. There is a picturesqueness about the speech of the lower
+order of people that is quite unique. Did you say that this is the
+Bowery variety of slang?"
+
+"Oh, well," said Rivington, giving it up, "I'll tell you straight.
+That's one of our college professors talking. He ran down for a day or
+two at the club. It's a sort of fad with him lately to use slang in
+his conversation. He thinks it improves language. The man he is
+talking to is one of New York's famous social economists. Now will
+you come on. You can't use that, you know."
+
+"No," I agreed; "I can't use that. Would you call that typical of New
+York?"
+
+"Of course not," said Rivington, with a sigh of relief. "I'm glad you
+see the difference. But if you want to hear the real old tough Bowery
+slang I'll take you down where you'll get your fill of it."
+
+"I would like it," I said; "that is, if it's the real thing. I've
+often read it in books, but I never heard it. Do you think it will be
+dangerous to go unprotected among those characters?"
+
+"Oh, no," said Rivington; "not at this time of night. To tell the
+truth, I haven't been along the Bowery in a long time, but I know it
+as well as I do Broadway. We'll look up some of the typical Bowery
+boys and get them to talk. It'll be worth your while. They talk a
+peculiar dialect that you won't hear anywhere else on earth."
+
+Rivington and I went east in a Forty-second street car and then south
+on the Third avenue line.
+
+At Houston street we got off and walked.
+
+"We are now on the famous Bowery," said Rivington; "the Bowery
+celebrated in song and story."
+
+We passed block after block of "gents'" furnishing stores--the
+windows full of shirts with prices attached and cuffs inside. In
+other windows were neckties and no shirts. People walked up and down
+the sidewalks.
+
+"In some ways," said I, "this reminds me of Kokomono, Ind., during
+the peach-crating season."
+
+Rivington was nettled.
+
+"Step into one of these saloons or vaudeville shows," said he, "with a
+large roll of money, and see how quickly the Bowery will sustain its
+reputation."
+
+"You make impossible conditions," said I, coldly.
+
+By and by Rivington stopped and said we were in the heart of the
+Bowery. There was a policeman on the corner whom Rivington knew.
+
+"Hallo, Donahue!" said my guide. "How goes it? My friend and I are
+down this way looking up a bit of local colour. He's anxious to meet
+one of the Bowery types. Can't you put us on to something genuine in
+that line--something that's got the colour, you know?"
+
+Policeman Donahue turned himself about ponderously, his florid face
+full of good-nature. He pointed with his club down the street.
+
+"Sure!" he said huskily. "Here comes a lad now that was born on the
+Bowery and knows every inch of it. If he's ever been above Bleecker
+street he's kept it to himself."
+
+A man about twenty-eight or twenty-nine, with a smooth face, was
+sauntering toward us with his hands in his coat pockets. Policeman
+Donahue stopped him with a courteous wave of his club.
+
+"Evening, Kerry," he said. "Here's a couple of gents, friends of
+mine, that want to hear you spiel something about the Bowery. Can you
+reel 'em off a few yards?"
+
+"Certainly, Donahue," said the young man, pleasantly. "Good
+evening, gentlemen," he said to us, with a pleasant smile. Donahue
+walked off on his beat.
+
+"This is the goods," whispered Rivington, nudging me with his elbow.
+"Look at his jaw!"
+
+"Say, cull," said Rivington, pushing back his hat, "wot's doin'?
+Me and my friend's taking a look down de old line--see? De copper
+tipped us off dat you was wise to de bowery. Is dat right?"
+
+I could not help admiring Rivington's power of adapting himself to
+his surroundings.
+
+"Donahue was right," said the young man, frankly; "I was brought up
+on the Bowery. I have been news-boy, teamster, pugilist, member of
+an organized band of 'toughs,' bartender, and a 'sport' in various
+meanings of the word. The experience certainly warrants the
+supposition that I have at least a passing acquaintance with a few
+phases of Bowery life. I will be pleased to place whatever knowledge
+and experience I have at the service of my friend Donahue's friends."
+
+Rivington seemed ill at ease.
+
+"I say," he said--somewhat entreatingly, "I thought--you're not
+stringing us, are you? It isn't just the kind of talk we expected.
+You haven't even said 'Hully gee!' once. Do you really belong on the
+Bowery?"
+
+"I am afraid," said the Bowery boy, smilingly, "that at some time you
+have been enticed into one of the dives of literature and had the
+counterfeit coin of the Bowery passed upon you. The 'argot' to which
+you doubtless refer was the invention of certain of your literary
+'discoverers' who invaded the unknown wilds below Third avenue and
+put strange sounds into the mouths of the inhabitants. Safe in their
+homes far to the north and west, the credulous readers who were
+beguiled by this new 'dialect' perused and believed. Like Marco Polo
+and Mungo Park--pioneers indeed, but ambitious souls who could not
+draw the line of demarcation between discovery and invention--the
+literary bones of these explorers are dotting the trackless wastes of
+the subway. While it is true that after the publication of the
+mythical language attributed to the dwellers along the Bowery certain
+of its pat phrases and apt metaphors were adopted and, to a limited
+extent, used in this locality, it was because our people are prompt in
+assimilating whatever is to their commercial advantage. To the
+tourists who visited our newly discovered clime, and who expected a
+realization of their literary guide books, they supplied the demands
+of the market.
+
+"But perhaps I am wandering from the question. In what way can I
+assist you, gentlemen? I beg you will believe that the hospitality of
+the street is extended to all. There are, I regret to say, many
+catchpenny places of entertainment, but I cannot conceive that they
+would entice you."
+
+I felt Rivington lean somewhat heavily against me. "Say!" he
+remarked, with uncertain utterance; "come and have a drink with us."
+
+"Thank you, but I never drink. I find that alcohol, even in the
+smallest quantities, alters the perspective. And I must preserve my
+perspective, for I am studying the Bowery. I have lived in it nearly
+thirty years, and I am just beginning to understand its heartbeats.
+It is like a great river fed by a hundred alien streams. Each influx
+brings strange seeds on its flood, strange silt and weeds, and now and
+then a flower of rare promise. To construe this river requires a man
+who can build dykes against the overflow, who is a naturalist, a
+geologist, a humanitarian, a diver and a strong swimmer. I love my
+Bowery. It was my cradle and is my inspiration. I have published one
+book. The critics have been kind. I put my heart in it. I am writing
+another, into which I hope to put both heart and brain. Consider me
+your guide, gentlemen. Is there anything I can take you to see, any
+place to which I can conduct you?"
+
+I was afraid to look at Rivington except with one eye.
+
+"Thanks," said Rivington. "We were looking up . . . that is . . . my
+friend . . . confound it; it's against all precedent, you know . . .
+awfully obliged . . . just the same."
+
+"In case," said our friend, "you would like to meet some of our Bowery
+young men I would be pleased to have you visit the quarters of our
+East Side Kappa Delta Phi Society, only two blocks east of here."
+
+"Awfully sorry," said Rivington, "but my friend's got me on the jump
+to-night. He's a terror when he's out after local colour. Now,
+there's nothing I would like better than to drop in at the Kappa Delta
+Phi, but--some other time!"
+
+We said our farewells and boarded a home-bound car. We had a rabbit on
+upper Broadway, and then I parted with Rivington on a street corner.
+
+"Well, anyhow," said he, braced and recovered, "it couldn't have
+happened anywhere but in little old New York."
+
+Which to say the least, was typical of Rivington.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+GEORGIA'S RULING
+
+
+If you should chance to visit the General Land Office, step into the
+draughtsmen's room and ask to be shown the map of Salado County. A
+leisurely German--possibly old Kampfer himself--will bring it to
+you. It will be four feet square, on heavy drawing-cloth. The
+lettering and the figures will be beautifully clear and distinct. The
+title will be in splendid, undecipherable German text, ornamented with
+classic Teutonic designs--very likely Ceres or Pomona leaning
+against the initial letters with cornucopias venting grapes and
+wieners. You must tell him that this is not the map you wish to see;
+that he will kindly bring you its official predecessor. He will then
+say, "Ach, so!" and bring out a map half the size of the first, dim,
+old, tattered, and faded.
+
+By looking carefully near its northwest corner you will presently come
+upon the worn contours of Chiquito River, and, maybe, if your eyes are
+good, discern the silent witness to this story.
+
+
+The Commissioner of the Land Office was of the old style; his
+antique courtesy was too formal for his day. He dressed in fine
+black, and there was a suggestion of Roman drapery in his long
+coat-skirts. His collars were "undetached" (blame haberdashery
+for the word); his tie was a narrow, funereal strip, tied in the
+same knot as were his shoe-strings. His gray hair was a trifle
+too long behind, but he kept it smooth and orderly. His face was
+clean-shaven, like the old statesmen's. Most people thought it a
+stern face, but when its official expression was off, a few had
+seen altogether a different countenance. Especially tender and
+gentle it had appeared to those who were about him during the last
+illness of his only child.
+
+The Commissioner had been a widower for years, and his life, outside
+his official duties, had been so devoted to little Georgia that people
+spoke of it as a touching and admirable thing. He was a reserved man,
+and dignified almost to austerity, but the child had come below it all
+and rested upon his very heart, so that she scarcely missed the
+mother's love that had been taken away. There was a wonderful
+companionship between them, for she had many of his own ways, being
+thoughtful and serious beyond her years.
+
+One day, while she was lying with the fever burning brightly in her
+checks, she said suddenly:
+
+"Papa, I wish I could do something good for a whole lot of children!"
+
+"What would you like to do, dear?" asked the Commissioner. "Give
+them a party?"
+
+"Oh, I don't mean those kind. I mean poor children who haven't homes,
+and aren't loved and cared for as I am. I tell you what, papa!"
+
+"What, my own child?"
+
+"If I shouldn't get well, I'll leave them you--not _give_ you, but
+just lend you, for you must come to mamma and me when you die too. If
+you can find time, wouldn't you do something to help them, if I ask
+you, papa?"
+
+"Hush, hush dear, dear child," said the Commissioner, holding her hot
+little hand against his cheek; "you'll get well real soon, and you and
+I will see what we can do for them together."
+
+But in whatsoever paths of benevolence, thus vaguely premeditated, the
+Commissioner might tread, he was not to have the company of his
+beloved. That night the little frail body grew suddenly too tired to
+struggle further, and Georgia's exit was made from the great stage
+when she had scarcely begun to speak her little piece before the
+footlights. But there must be a stage manager who understands. She
+had given the cue to the one who was to speak after her.
+
+A week after she was laid away, the Commissioner reappeared at the
+office, a little more courteous, a little paler and sterner, with the
+black frock-coat hanging a little more loosely from his tall figure.
+
+His desk was piled with work that had accumulated during the four
+heartbreaking weeks of his absence. His chief clerk had done what he
+could, but there were questions of law, of fine judicial decisions
+to be made concerning the issue of patents, the marketing and
+leasing of school lands, the classification into grazing,
+agricultural, watered, and timbered, of new tracts to be opened to
+settlers.
+
+The Commissioner went to work silently and obstinately, putting
+back his grief as far as possible, forcing his mind to attack the
+complicated and important business of his office. On the second day
+after his return he called the porter, pointed to a leather-covered
+chair that stood near his own, and ordered it removed to a lumber-room
+at the top of the building. In that chair Georgia would always sit
+when she came to the office for him of afternoons.
+
+As time passed, the Commissioner seemed to grow more silent, solitary,
+and reserved. A new phase of mind developed in him. He could not
+endure the presence of a child. Often when a clattering youngster
+belonging to one of the clerks would come chattering into the big
+business-room adjoining his little apartment, the Commissioner would
+steal softly and close the door. He would always cross the street to
+avoid meeting the school-children when they came dancing along in
+happy groups upon the sidewalk, and his firm mouth would close into a
+mere line.
+
+It was nearly three months after the rains had washed the last dead
+flower-petals from the mound above little Georgia when the "land-shark"
+firm of Hamlin and Avery filed papers upon what they considered the
+"fattest" vacancy of the year.
+
+It should not be supposed that all who were termed "land-sharks"
+deserved the name. Many of them were reputable men of good business
+character. Some of them could walk into the most august councils of
+the State and say: "Gentlemen, we would like to have this, and that,
+and matters go thus." But, next to a three years' drought and the
+boll-worm, the Actual Settler hated the Land-shark. The land-shark
+haunted the Land Office, where all the land records were kept, and
+hunted "vacancies"--that is, tracts of unappropriated public
+domain, generally invisible upon the official maps, but actually
+existing "upon the ground." The law entitled any one possessing
+certain State scrip to file by virtue of same upon any land not
+previously legally appropriated. Most of the scrip was now in the
+hands of the land-sharks. Thus, at the cost of a few hundred dollars,
+they often secured lands worth as many thousands. Naturally, the
+search for "vacancies" was lively.
+
+But often--very often--the land they thus secured, though legally
+"unappropriated," would be occupied by happy and contented settlers,
+who had laboured for years to build up their homes, only to discover
+that their titles were worthless, and to receive peremptory notice to
+quit. Thus came about the bitter and not unjustifiable hatred felt by
+the toiling settlers toward the shrewd and seldom merciful speculators
+who so often turned them forth destitute and homeless from their
+fruitless labours. The history of the state teems with their
+antagonism. Mr. Land-shark seldom showed his face on "locations" from
+which he should have to eject the unfortunate victims of a monstrously
+tangled land system, but let his emissaries do the work. There was
+lead in every cabin, moulded into balls for him; many of his brothers
+had enriched the grass with their blood. The fault of it all lay far
+back.
+
+When the state was young, she felt the need of attracting newcomers,
+and of rewarding those pioneers already within her borders. Year
+after year she issued land scrip--Headrights, Bounties, Veteran
+Donations, Confederates; and to railroads, irrigation companies,
+colonies, and tillers of the soil galore. All required of the grantee
+was that he or it should have the scrip properly surveyed upon the
+public domain by the county or district surveyor, and the land thus
+appropriated became the property of him or it, or his or its heirs and
+assigns, forever.
+
+In those days--and here is where the trouble began--the state's
+domain was practically inexhaustible, and the old surveyors, with
+princely--yea, even Western American--liberality, gave good
+measure and over-flowing. Often the jovial man of metes and bounds
+would dispense altogether with the tripod and chain. Mounted on a pony
+that could cover something near a "vara" at a step, with a pocket
+compass to direct his course, he would trot out a survey by counting
+the beat of his pony's hoofs, mark his corners, and write out his
+field notes with the complacency produced by an act of duty well
+performed. Sometimes--and who could blame the surveyor?--when
+the pony was "feeling his oats," he might step a little higher and
+farther, and in that case the beneficiary of the scrip might get a
+thousand or two more acres in his survey than the scrip called for.
+But look at the boundless leagues the state had to spare! However, no
+one ever had to complain of the pony under-stepping. Nearly every
+old survey in the state contained an excess of land.
+
+In later years, when the state became more populous, and land values
+increased, this careless work entailed incalculable trouble, endless
+litigation, a period of riotous land-grabbing, and no little
+bloodshed. The land-sharks voraciously attacked these excesses in
+the old surveys, and filed upon such portions with new scrip as
+unappropriated public domain. Wherever the identifications of the
+old tracts were vague, and the corners were not to be clearly
+established, the Land Office would recognize the newer locations as
+valid, and issue title to the locators. Here was the greatest
+hardship to be found. These old surveys, taken from the pick of the
+land, were already nearly all occupied by unsuspecting and peaceful
+settlers, and thus their titles were demolished, and the choice was
+placed before them either to buy their land over at a double price or
+to vacate it, with their families and personal belongings,
+immediately. Land locators sprang up by hundreds. The country was
+held up and searched for "vacancies" at the point of a compass.
+Hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of splendid acres were wrested
+from their innocent purchasers and holders. There began a vast hegira
+of evicted settlers in tattered wagons; going nowhere, cursing
+injustice, stunned, purposeless, homeless, hopeless. Their children
+began to look up to them for bread, and cry.
+
+
+It was in consequence of these conditions that Hamilton and Avery
+had filed upon a strip of land about a mile wide and three miles long,
+comprising about two thousand acres, it being the excess over
+complement of the Elias Denny three-league survey on Chiquito River,
+in one of the middle-western counties. This two-thousand-acre body
+of land was asserted by them to be vacant land, and improperly
+considered a part of the Denny survey. They based this assertion and
+their claim upon the land upon the demonstrated facts that the
+beginning corner of the Denny survey was plainly identified; that its
+field notes called to run west 5,760 varas, and then called for
+Chiquito River; thence it ran south, with the meanders--and so on--
+and that the Chiquito River was, on the ground, fully a mile farther
+west from the point reached by course and distance. To sum up: there
+were two thousand acres of vacant land between the Denny survey proper
+and Chiquito River.
+
+One sweltering day in July the Commissioner called for the papers in
+connection with this new location. They were brought, and heaped, a
+foot deep, upon his desk--field notes, statements, sketches,
+affidavits, connecting lines--documents of every description that
+shrewdness and money could call to the aid of Hamlin and Avery.
+
+The firm was pressing the Commissioner to issue a patent upon their
+location. They possesed inside information concerning a new
+railroad that would probably pass somewhere near this land.
+
+The General Land Office was very still while the Commissioner was
+delving into the heart of the mass of evidence. The pigeons could
+be heard on the roof of the old, castle-like building, cooing and
+fretting. The clerks were droning everywhere, scarcely pretending
+to earn their salaries. Each little sound echoed hollow and loud
+from the bare, stone-flagged floors, the plastered walls, and the
+iron-joisted ceiling. The impalpable, perpetual limestone dust that
+never settled, whitened a long streamer of sunlight that pierced the
+tattered window-awning.
+
+It seemed that Hamlin and Avery had builded well. The Denny survey was
+carelessly made, even for a careless period. Its beginning corner
+was identical with that of a well-defined old Spanish grant, but its
+other calls were sinfully vague. The field notes contained no other
+object that survived--no tree, no natural object save Chiquito
+River, and it was a mile wrong there. According to precedent, the
+Office would be justified in giving it its complement by course and
+distance, and considering the remainder vacant instead of a mere
+excess.
+
+The Actual Settler was besieging the office with wild protests _in re_.
+Having the nose of a pointer and the eye of a hawk for the land-shark,
+he had observed his myrmidons running the lines upon his ground.
+Making inquiries, he learned that the spoiler had attacked his home,
+and he left the plough in the furrow and took his pen in hand.
+
+One of the protests the Commissioner read twice. It was from a woman,
+a widow, the granddaughter of Elias Denny himself. She told how her
+grandfather had sold most of the survey years before at a trivial
+price--land that was now a principality in extent and value. Her
+mother had also sold a part, and she herself had succeeded to this
+western portion, along Chiquito River. Much of it she had been forced
+to part with in order to live, and now she owned only about three
+hundred acres, on which she had her home. Her letter wound up rather
+pathetically:
+
+"I've got eight children, the oldest fifteen years. I work all day
+and half the night to till what little land I can and keep us in
+clothes and books. I teach my children too. My neighbours is all
+poor and has big families. The drought kills the crops every two or
+three years and then we has hard times to get enough to eat. There is
+ten families on this land what the land-sharks is trying to rob us of,
+and all of them got titles from me. I sold to them cheap, and they
+aint paid out yet, but part of them is, and if their land should be
+took from them I would die. My grandfather was an honest man, and he
+helped to build up this state, and he taught his children to be
+honest, and how could I make it up to them who bought from me? Mr.
+Commissioner, if you let them land-sharks take the roof from over my
+children and the little from them as they has to live on, whoever
+again calls this state great or its government just will have a lie in
+their mouths."
+
+The Commissioner laid this letter aside with a sigh. Many, many such
+letters he had received. He had never been hurt by them, nor had he
+ever felt that they appealed to him personally. He was but the
+state's servant, and must follow its laws. And yet, somehow, this
+reflection did not always eliminate a certain responsible feeling that
+hung upon him. Of all the state's officers he was supremest in his
+department, not even excepting the Governor. Broad, general land laws
+he followed, it was true, but he had a wide latitude in particular
+ramifications. Rather than law, what he followed was Rulings:
+Office Rulings and precedents. In the complicated and new questions
+that were being engendered by the state's development the
+Commissioner's ruling was rarely appealed from. Even the courts
+sustained it when its equity was apparent.
+
+The Commissioner stepped to the door and spoke to a clerk in the other
+room--spoke as he always did, as if he were addressing a prince of
+the blood:
+
+"Mr. Weldon, will you be kind enough to ask Mr. Ashe, the state
+school-land appraiser, to please come to my office as soon as
+convenient?"
+
+Ashe came quickly from the big table where he was arranging his
+reports.
+
+"Mr. Ashe," said the Commissioner, "you worked along the Chiquito
+River, in Salado County, during your last trip, I believe. Do you
+remember anything of the Elias Denny three-league survey?"
+
+"Yes, sir, I do," the blunt, breezy, surveyor answered. "I crossed it
+on my way to Block H, on the north side of it. The road runs with the
+Chiquito River, along the valley. The Denny survey fronts three miles
+on the Chiquito."
+
+"It is claimed," continued the commissioner, "that it fails to reach
+the river by as much as a mile."
+
+The appraiser shrugged his shoulder. He was by birth and instinct an
+Actual Settler, and the natural foe of the land-shark.
+
+"It has always been considered to extend to the river," he said,
+dryly.
+
+"But that is not the point I desired to discuss," said the
+Commissioner. "What kind of country is this valley portion of (let us
+say, then) the Denny tract?"
+
+The spirit of the Actual Settler beamed in Ashe's face.
+
+"Beautiful," he said, with enthusiasm. "Valley as level as this
+floor, with just a little swell on, like the sea, and rich as cream.
+Just enough brakes to shelter the cattle in winter. Black loamy soil
+for six feet, and then clay. Holds water. A dozen nice little houses
+on it, with windmills and gardens. People pretty poor, I guess--too
+far from market--but comfortable. Never saw so many kids in my
+life."
+
+"They raise flocks?" inquired the Commissioner.
+
+"Ho, ho! I mean two-legged kids," laughed the surveyor; "two-legged,
+and bare-legged, and tow-headed."
+
+"Children! oh, children!" mused the Commissioner, as though a new
+view had opened to him; "they raise children!
+
+"It's a lonesome country, Commissioner," said the surveyor. "Can you
+blame 'em?"
+
+"I suppose," continued the Commissioner, slowly, as one carefully
+pursues deductions from a new, stupendous theory, "not all of them are
+tow-headed. It would not be unreasonable, Mr. Ashe, I conjecture, to
+believe that a portion of them have brown, or even black, hair."
+
+"Brown and black, sure," said Ashe; "also red."
+
+"No doubt," said the Commissioner. "Well, I thank you for your
+courtesy in informing me, Mr. Ashe. I will not detain you any longer
+from your duties."
+
+Later, in the afternoon, came Hamlin and Avery, big, handsome, genial,
+sauntering men, clothed in white duck and low-cut shoes. They
+permeated the whole office with an aura of debonair prosperity. They
+passed among the clerks and left a wake of abbreviated given names and
+fat brown cigars.
+
+These were the aristocracy of the land-sharks, who went in for big
+things. Full of serene confidence in themselves, there was no
+corporation, no syndicate, no railroad company or attorney general
+too big for them to tackle. The peculiar smoke of their rare, fat
+brown cigars was to be perceived in the sanctum of every department of
+state, in every committee-room of the Legislature, in every bank
+parlour and every private caucus-room in the state Capital. Always
+pleasant, never in a hurry, in seeming to possess unlimited leisure,
+people wondered when they gave their attention to the many audacious
+enterprises in which they were known to be engaged.
+
+By and by the two dropped carelessly into the Commissioner's room
+and reclined lazily in the big, leather-upholstered arm-chairs. They
+drawled a good-natured complaint of the weather, and Hamlin told the
+Commissioner an excellent story he had amassed that morning from
+the Secretary of State.
+
+But the Commissioner knew why they were there. He had half promised
+to render a decision that day upon their location.
+
+The chief clerk now brought in a batch of duplicate certificates for
+the Commissioner to sign. As he traced his sprawling signature,
+"Hollis Summerfield, Comr. Genl. Land Office," on each one, the chief
+clerk stood, deftly removing them and applying the blotter.
+
+"I notice," said the chief clerk, "you've been going through that
+Salado County location. Kampfer is making a new map of Salado, and
+I believe is platting in that section of the county now."
+
+"I will see it," said the Commissioner. A few moments later he went to
+the draughtsmen's room.
+
+As he entered he saw five or six of the draughtsmen grouped about
+Kampfer's desk, gargling away at each other in pectoral German, and
+gazing at something thereupon. At the Commissioner's approach they
+scattered to their several places. Kampfer, a wizened little German,
+with long, frizzled ringlets and a watery eye, began to stammer
+forth some sort of an apology, the Commissioner thought, for the
+congregation of his fellows about his desk.
+
+"Never mind," said the Commissioner, "I wish to see the map you are
+making"; and, passing around the old German, seated himself upon the
+high draughtsman's stool. Kampfer continued to break English in
+trying to explain.
+
+"Herr Gommissioner, I assure you blenty sat I haf not it bremeditated
+--sat it wass--sat it itself make. Look you! from se field notes
+wass it blatted--blease to observe se calls: South, 10 degrees west
+1,050 varas; south, 10 degrees east 300 varas; south, 100; south, 9
+west, 200; south, 40 degrees west 400--and so on. Herr Gommissioner,
+nefer would I have--"
+
+The Commissioner raised one white hand, silently, Kampfer dropped his
+pipe and fled.
+
+With a hand at each side of his face, and his elbows resting upon the
+desk, the Commissioner sat staring at the map which was spread and
+fastened there--staring at the sweet and living profile of little
+Georgia drawn thereupon--at her face, pensive, delicate, and
+infantile, outlined in a perfect likeness.
+
+When his mind at length came to inquire into the reason of it, he
+saw that it must have been, as Kampfer had said, unpremeditated. The
+old draughtsman had been platting in the Elias Denny survey, and
+Georgia's likeness, striking though it was, was formed by nothing more
+than the meanders of Chiquito River. Indeed, Kampfer's blotter,
+whereon his preliminary work was done, showed the laborious tracings
+of the calls and the countless pricks of the compasses. Then, over
+his faint pencilling, Kampfer had drawn in India ink with a full, firm
+pen the similitude of Chiquito River, and forth had blossomed
+mysteriously the dainty, pathetic profile of the child.
+
+The Commissioner sat for half an hour with his face in his hands,
+gazing downward, and none dared approach him. Then he arose and
+walked out. In the business office he paused long enough to ask that
+the Denny file be brought to his desk.
+
+He found Hamlin and Avery still reclining in their chairs, apparently
+oblivious of business. They were lazily discussing summer opera, it
+being, their habit--perhaps their pride also--to appear supernaturally
+indifferent whenever they stood with large interests imperilled. And
+they stood to win more on this stake than most people knew. They
+possessed inside information to the effect that a new railroad would,
+within a year, split this very Chiquito River valley and send land
+values ballooning all along its route. A dollar under thirty thousand
+profit on this location, if it should hold good, would be a loss to
+their expectations. So, while they chatted lightly and waited for the
+Commissioner to open the subject, there was a quick, sidelong sparkle
+in their eyes, evincing a desire to read their title clear to those
+fair acres on the Chiquito.
+
+A clerk brought in the file. The Commissioner seated himself and
+wrote upon it in red ink. Then he rose to his feet and stood for a
+while looking straight out of the window. The Land Office capped the
+summit of a bold hill. The eyes of the Commissioner passed over the
+roofs of many houses set in a packing of deep green, the whole
+checkered by strips of blinding white streets. The horizon, where his
+gaze was focussed, swelled to a fair wooded eminence flecked with
+faint dots of shining white. There was the cemetery, where lay many
+who were forgotten, and a few who had not lived in vain. And one
+lay there, occupying very small space, whose childish heart had been
+large enough to desire, while near its last beats, good to others.
+The Commissioner's lips moved slightly as he whispered to himself: "It
+was her last will and testament, and I have neglected it so long!"
+
+The big brown cigars of Hamlin and Avery were fireless, but they still
+gripped them between their teeth and waited, while they marvelled at
+the absent expression upon the Commissioner's face.
+
+By and by he spoke suddenly and promptly.
+
+"Gentlemen, I have just indorsed the Elias Denny survey for patenting.
+This office will not regard your location upon a part of it as legal."
+He paused a moment, and then, extending his hand as those dear old-time
+ones used to do in debate, he enunciated the spirit of that Ruling that
+subsequently drove the land-sharks to the wall, and placed the seal of
+peace and security over the doors of ten thousand homes.
+
+"And, furthermore," he continued, with a clear, soft light upon his
+face, "it may interest you to know that from this time on this office
+will consider that when a survey of land made by virtue of a
+certificate granted by this state to the men who wrested it from the
+wilderness and the savage--made in good faith, settled in good faith,
+and left in good faith to their children or innocent purchasers--when
+such a survey, although overrunning its complement, shall call for
+any natural object visible to the eye of man, to that object it shall
+hold, and be good and valid. And the children of this state shall
+lie down to sleep at night, and rumours of disturbers of title shall
+not disquiet them. For," concluded the Commissioner, "of such is the
+Kingdom of Heaven."
+
+In the silence that followed, a laugh floated up from the patent-room
+below. The man who carried down the Denny file was exhibiting it
+among the clerks.
+
+"Look here," he said, delightedly, "the old man has forgotten his
+name. He's written 'Patent to original grantee,' and signed it
+'Georgia Summerfield, Comr."'
+
+The speech of the Commissioner rebounded lightly from the impregnable
+Hamlin and Avery. They smiled, rose gracefully, spoke of the baseball
+team, and argued feelingly that quite a perceptible breeze had arisen
+from the east. They lit fresh fat brown cigars, and drifted
+courteously away. But later they made another tiger-spring for their
+quarry in the courts. But the courts, according to reports in the
+papers, "coolly roasted them" (a remarkable performance, suggestive of
+liquid-air didoes), and sustained the Commissioner's Ruling.
+
+And this Ruling itself grew to be a Precedent, and the Actual Settler
+framed it, and taught his children to spell from it, and there was
+sound sleep o' nights from the pines to the sage-brush, and from the
+chaparral to the great brown river of the north.
+
+But I think, and I am sure the Commissioner never thought otherwise,
+that whether Kampfer was a snuffy old instrument of destiny, or
+whether the meanders of the Chiquito accidentally platted themselves
+into that memorable sweet profile or not, there was brought about
+"something good for a whole lot of children," and the result ought
+to be called "Georgia's Ruling."
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+BLIND MAN'S HOLIDAY
+
+
+Alas for the man and for the artist with the shifting point of
+perspective! Life shall be a confusion of ways to the one; the
+landscape shall rise up and confound the other. Take the case of
+Lorison. At one time he appeared to himself to be the feeblest of
+fools; at another he conceived that he followed ideals so fine that
+the world was not yet ready to accept them. During one mood he cursed
+his folly; possessed by the other, he bore himself with a serene
+grandeur akin to greatness: in neither did he attain the perspective.
+
+Generations before, the name had been "Larsen." His race had
+bequeathed him its fine-strung, melancholy temperament, its saving
+balance of thrift and industry.
+
+From his point of perspective he saw himself an outcast from society,
+forever to be a shady skulker along the ragged edge of respectability;
+a denizen _des trois-quartz de monde_, that pathetic spheroid lying
+between the _haut_ and the _demi_, whose inhabitants envy each of their
+neighbours, and are scorned by both. He was self-condemned to this
+opinion, as he was self-exiled, through it, to this quaint Southern
+city a thousand miles from his former home. Here he had dwelt for
+longer than a year, knowing but few, keeping in a subjective world
+of shadows which was invaded at times by the perplexing bulks of
+jarring realities. Then he fell in love with a girl whom he met in a
+cheap restaurant, and his story begins.
+
+
+The Rue Chartres, in New Orleans, is a street of ghosts. It lies in
+the quarter where the Frenchman, in his prime, set up his translated
+pride and glory; where, also, the arrogant don had swaggered, and
+dreamed of gold and grants and ladies' gloves. Every flagstone has
+its grooves worn by footsteps going royally to the wooing and the
+fighting. Every house has a princely heartbreak; each doorway its
+untold tale of gallant promise and slow decay.
+
+By night the Rue Chartres is now but a murky fissure, from which the
+groping wayfarer sees, flung against the sky, the tangled filigree of
+Moorish iron balconies. The old houses of monsieur stand yet,
+indomitable against the century, but their essence is gone. The
+street is one of ghosts to whosoever can see them.
+
+A faint heartbeat of the street's ancient glory still survives in a
+corner occupied by the Cafe Carabine d'Or. Once men gathered there to
+plot against kings, and to warn presidents. They do so yet, but they
+are not the same kind of men. A brass button will scatter these;
+those would have set their faces against an army. Above the door
+hangs the sign board, upon which has been depicted a vast animal of
+unfamiliar species. In the act of firing upon this monster is
+represented an unobtrusive human levelling an obtrusive gun, once the
+colour of bright gold. Now the legend above the picture is faded
+beyond conjecture; the gun's relation to the title is a matter of
+faith; the menaced animal, wearied of the long aim of the hunter, has
+resolved itself into a shapeless blot.
+
+The place is known as "Antonio's," as the name, white upon the red-lit
+transparency, and gilt upon the windows, attests. There is a promise
+in "Antonio"; a justifiable expectancy of savoury things in oil and
+pepper and wine, and perhaps an angel's whisper of garlic. But the
+rest of the name is "O'Riley." Antonio O'Riley!
+
+The Carabine d'Or is an ignominious ghost of the Rue Chartres. The
+cafe where Bienville and Conti dined, where a prince has broken bread,
+is become a "family ristaurant."
+
+Its customers are working men and women, almost to a unit.
+Occasionally you will see chorus girls from the cheaper theatres,
+and men who follow avocations subject to quick vicissitudes; but at
+Antonio's--name rich in Bohemian promise, but tame in fulfillment--
+manners debonair and gay are toned down to the "family" standard.
+Should you light a cigarette, mine host will touch you on the "arrum"
+and remind you that the proprieties are menaced. "Antonio" entices
+and beguiles from fiery legend without, but "O'Riley" teaches decorum
+within.
+
+It was at this restaurant that Lorison first saw the girl. A flashy
+fellow with a predatory eye had followed her in, and had advanced to
+take the other chair at the little table where she stopped, but
+Lorison slipped into the seat before him. Their acquaintance began,
+and grew, and now for two months they had sat at the same table each
+evening, not meeting by appointment, but as if by a series of
+fortuitous and happy accidents. After dining, they would take a walk
+together in one of the little city parks, or among the panoramic
+markets where exhibits a continuous vaudeville of sights and sounds.
+Always at eight o'clock their steps led them to a certain street
+corner, where she prettily but firmly bade him good night and left
+him. "I do not live far from here," she frequently said, "and you
+must let me go the rest of the way alone."
+
+But now Lorison had discovered that he wanted to go the rest of the
+way with her, or happiness would depart, leaving, him on a very lonely
+corner of life. And at the same time that he made the discovery, the
+secret of his banishment from the society of the good laid its finger
+in his face and told him it must not be.
+
+Man is too thoroughly an egoist not to be also an egotist; if he love,
+the object shall know it. During a lifetime he may conceal it through
+stress of expediency and honour, but it shall bubble from his dying
+lips, though it disrupt a neighbourhood. It is known, however, that
+most men do not wait so long to disclose their passion. In the case
+of Lorison, his particular ethics positively forbade him to declare
+his sentiments, but he must needs dally with the subject, and woo by
+innuendo at least.
+
+On this night, after the usual meal at the Carabine d'Or, he strolled
+with his companion down the dim old street toward the river.
+
+The Rue Chartres perishes in the old Place d'Armes. The ancient
+Cabildo, where Spanish justice fell like hail, faces it, and the
+Cathedral, another provincial ghost, overlooks it. Its centre is a
+little, iron-railed park of flowers and immaculate gravelled walks,
+where citizens take the air of evenings. Pedestalled high above it,
+the general sits his cavorting steed, with his face turned stonily
+down the river toward English Turn, whence come no more Britons to
+bombard his cotton bales.
+
+Often the two sat in this square, but to-night Lorison guided her past
+the stone-stepped gate, and still riverward. As they walked, he smiled
+to himself to think that all he knew of her--except that be loved
+her--was her name, Norah Greenway, and that she lived with her
+brother. They had talked about everything except themselves. Perhaps
+her reticence had been caused by his.
+
+They came, at length, upon the levee, and sat upon a great, prostrate
+beam. The air was pungent with the dust of commerce. The great river
+slipped yellowly past. Across it Algiers lay, a longitudinous black
+bulk against a vibrant electric haze sprinkled with exact stars.
+
+The girl was young and of the piquant order. A certain bright
+melancholy pervaded her; she possessed an untarnished, pale prettiness
+doomed to please. Her voice, when she spoke, dwarfed her theme. It
+was the voice capable of investing little subjects with a large
+interest. She sat at ease, bestowing her skirts with the little
+womanly touch, serene as if the begrimed pier were a summer garden.
+Lorison poked the rotting boards with his cane.
+
+He began by telling her that he was in love with some one to whom he
+durst not speak of it. "And why not?" she asked, accepting swiftly
+his fatuous presentation of a third person of straw. "My place in the
+world," he answered, "is none to ask a woman to share. I am an
+outcast from honest people; I am wrongly accused of one crime, and am,
+I believe, guilty of another."
+
+Thence he plunged into the story of his abdication from society. The
+story, pruned of his moral philosophy, deserves no more than the
+slightest touch. It is no new tale, that of the gambler's declension.
+During one night's sitting he lost, and then had imperilled a certain
+amount of his employer's money, which, by accident, he carried with
+him. He continued to lose, to the last wager, and then began to gain,
+leaving the game winner to a somewhat formidable sum. The same night
+his employer's safe was robbed. A search was had; the winnings of
+Lorison were found in his room, their total forming an accusative
+nearness to the sum purloined. He was taken, tried and, through
+incomplete evidence, released, smutched with the sinister _devoirs_
+of a disagreeing jury.
+
+"It is not in the unjust accusation," he said to the girl, "that my
+burden lies, but in the knowledge that from the moment I staked the
+first dollar of the firm's money I was a criminal--no matter whether
+I lost or won. You see why it is impossible for me to speak of love
+to her."
+
+"It is a sad thing," said Norah, after a little pause, "to think what
+very good people there are in the world."
+
+"Good?" said Lorison.
+
+"I was thinking of this superior person whom you say you love. She
+must be a very poor sort of creature."
+
+"I do not understand."
+
+"Nearly," she continued, "as poor a sort of creature as yourself."
+
+"You do not understand," said Lorison, removing his hat and sweeping
+back his fine, light hair. "Suppose she loved me in return, and
+were willing to marry me. Think, if you can, what would follow. Never
+a day would pass but she would be reminded of her sacrifice. I would
+read a condescension in her smile, a pity even in her affection, that
+would madden me. No. The thing would stand between us forever. Only
+equals should mate. I could never ask her to come down upon my lower
+plane."
+
+An arc light faintly shone upon Lorison's face. An illumination from
+within also pervaded it. The girl saw the rapt, ascetic look; it was
+the face either of Sir Galahad or Sir Fool.
+
+"Quite starlike," she said, "is this unapproachable angel. Really too
+high to be grasped."
+
+"By me, yes."
+
+She faced him suddenly. "My dear friend, would you prefer your star
+fallen?" Lorison made a wide gesture.
+
+"You push me to the bald fact," he declared; "you are not in sympathy
+with my argument. But I will answer you so. If I could reach my
+particular star, to drag it down, I would not do it; but if it were
+fallen, I would pick it up, and thank Heaven for the privilege."
+
+They were silent for some minutes. Norah shivered, and thrust her
+hands deep into the pockets of her jacket. Lorison uttered a
+remorseful exclamation.
+
+"I'm not cold," she said. "I was just thinking. I ought to tell you
+something. You have selected a strange confidante. But you cannot
+expect a chance acquaintance, picked up in a doubtful restaurant, to
+be an angel."
+
+"Norah!" cried Lorison.
+
+"Let me go on. You have told me about yourself. We have been such
+good friends. I must tell you now what I never wanted you to know.
+I am--worse than you are. I was on the stage . . . I sang in the
+chorus . . . I was pretty bad, I guess . . . I stole diamonds from
+the prima donna . . . they arrested me . . . I gave most of them up,
+and they let me go . . . I drank wine every night . . . a great
+deal . . . I was very wicked, but--"
+
+Lorison knelt quickly by her side and took her hands.
+
+"Dear Norah!" he said, exultantly. "It is you, it is you I love!
+You never guessed it, did you? 'Tis you I meant all the time. Now I
+can speak. Let me make you forget the past. We have both suffered;
+let us shut out the world, and live for each other. Norah, do you
+hear me say I love you?"
+
+"In spite of--"
+
+"Rather say because of it. You have come out of your past noble and
+good. Your heart is an angel's. Give it to me."
+
+"A little while ago you feared the future too much to even speak."
+
+"But for you; not for myself. Can you love me?"
+
+She cast herself, wildly sobbing, upon his breast.
+
+"Better than life--than truth itself--than everything."
+
+"And my own past," said Lorison, with a note of solicitude--"can you
+forgive and--"
+
+"I answered you that," she whispered, "when I told you I loved you."
+She leaned away, and looked thoughtfully at him. "If I had not told
+you about myself, would you have--would you--"
+
+"No," he interrupted; "I would never have let you know I loved you. I
+would never have asked you this--Norah, will you be my wife?"
+
+She wept again.
+
+"Oh, believe me; I am good now--I am no longer wicked! I will be
+the best wife in the world. Don't think I am--bad any more. If you
+do I shall die, I shall die!"
+
+While he was consoling, her, she brightened up, eager and impetuous.
+"Will you marry me to-night?" she said. "Will you prove it that way.
+I have a reason for wishing it to be to-night. Will you?"
+
+Of one of two things was this exceeding frankness the outcome: either
+of importunate brazenness or of utter innocence. The lover's
+perspective contained only the one.
+
+"The sooner," said Lorison, "the happier I shall be."
+
+"What is there to do?" she asked. "What do you have to get? Come!
+You should know."
+
+Her energy stirred the dreamer to action.
+
+"A city directory first," he cried, gayly, "to find where the man
+lives who gives licenses to happiness. We will go together and rout
+him out. Cabs, cars, policemen, telephones and ministers shall aid
+us."
+
+"Father Rogan shall marry us," said the girl, with ardour. "I will
+take you to him."
+
+
+An hour later the two stood at the open doorway of an immense, gloomy
+brick building in a narrow and lonely street. The license was tight
+in Norah's hand.
+
+"Wait here a moment," she said, "till I find Father Rogan."
+
+She plunged into the black hallway, and the lover was left standing,
+as it were, on one leg, outside. His impatience was not greatly
+taxed. Gazing curiously into what seemed the hallway to Erebus,
+he was presently reassured by a stream of light that bisected the
+darkness, far down the passage. Then he heard her call, and
+fluttered lampward, like the moth. She beckoned him through a
+doorway into the room whence emanated the light. The room was
+bare of nearly everything except books, which had subjugated all
+its space. Here and there little spots of territory had been
+reconquered. An elderly, bald man, with a superlatively calm,
+remote eye, stood by a table with a book in his hand, his finger
+still marking a page. His dress was sombre and appertained to a
+religious order. His eye denoted an acquaintance with the
+perspective.
+
+"Father Rogan," said Norah, "this is _he_."
+
+"The two of ye," said Father Rogan, "want to get married?"
+
+They did not deny it. He married them. The ceremony was quickly
+done. One who could have witnessed it, and felt its scope, might have
+trembled at the terrible inadequacy of it to rise to the dignity of
+its endless chain of results.
+
+Afterward the priest spake briefly, as if by rote, of certain other
+civil and legal addenda that either might or should, at a later time,
+cap the ceremony. Lorison tendered a fee, which was declined, and
+before the door closed after the departing couple Father Rogan's book
+popped open again where his finger marked it.
+
+In the dark hall Norah whirled and clung to her companion, tearful.
+
+"Will you never, never be sorry?"
+
+At last she was reassured.
+
+At the first light they reached upon the street, she asked the time,
+just as she had each night. Lorison looked at his watch. Half-past
+eight.
+
+Lorison thought it was from habit that she guided their steps toward
+the corner where they always parted. But, arrived there, she
+hesitated, and then released his arm. A drug store stood on the
+corner; its bright, soft light shone upon them.
+
+"Please leave me here as usual to-night," said Norah, sweetly. "I
+must--I would rather you would. You will not object? At six
+to-morrow evening I will meet you at Antonio's. I want to sit with
+you there once more. And then--I will go where you say." She gave
+him a bewildering, bright smile, and walked swiftly away.
+
+Surely it needed all the strength of her charm to carry off this
+astounding behaviour. It was no discredit to Lorison's strength of
+mind that his head began to whirl. Pocketing his hands, he rambled
+vacuously over to the druggist's windows, and began assiduously to
+spell over the names of the patent medicines therein displayed.
+
+As soon as be had recovered his wits, he proceeded along the street in
+an aimless fashion. After drifting for two or three squares, he
+flowed into a somewhat more pretentious thoroughfare, a way much
+frequented by him in his solitary ramblings. For here was a row of
+shops devoted to traffic in goods of the widest range of choice--
+handiworks of art, skill and fancy, products of nature and labour from
+every zone.
+
+Here, for a time, he loitered among the conspicuous windows, where was
+set, emphasized by congested floods of light, the cunningest spoil of
+the interiors. There were few passers, and of this Lorison was glad.
+He was not of the world. For a long time he had touched his fellow
+man only at the gear of a levelled cog-wheel--at right angles, and
+upon a different axis. He had dropped into a distinctly new orbit.
+The stroke of ill fortune had acted upon him, in effect, as a blow
+delivered upon the apex of a certain ingenious toy, the musical top,
+which, when thus buffeted while spinning, gives forth, with scarcely
+retarded motion, a complete change of key and chord.
+
+Strolling along the pacific avenue, he experienced singular,
+supernatural calm, accompanied by an unusual a activity of brain.
+Reflecting upon recent affairs, he assured himself of his happiness in
+having won for a bride the one he had so greatly desired, yet he
+wondered mildly at his dearth of active emotion. Her strange
+behaviour in abandoning him without valid excuse on his bridal eve
+aroused in him only a vague and curious speculation. Again, he found
+himself contemplating, with complaisant serenity, the incidents of her
+somewhat lively career. His perspective seemed to have been queerly
+shifted.
+
+As he stood before a window near a corner, his ears were assailed by a
+waxing clamour and commotion. He stood close to the window to allow
+passage to the cause of the hubbub--a procession of human beings,
+which rounded the corner and headed in his direction. He perceived a
+salient hue of blue and a glitter of brass about a central figure of
+dazzling white and silver, and a ragged wake of black, bobbing
+figures.
+
+Two ponderous policemen were conducting between them a woman dressed
+as if for the stage, in a short, white, satiny skirt reaching to the
+knees, pink stockings, and a sort of sleeveless bodice bright with
+relucent, armour-like scales. Upon her curly, light hair was perched,
+at a rollicking angle, a shining tin helmet. The costume was to be
+instantly recognized as one of those amazing conceptions to which
+competition has harried the inventors of the spectacular ballet. One
+of the officers bore a long cloak upon his arm, which, doubtless, had
+been intended to veil the I candid attractions of their effulgent
+prisoner, but, for some reason, it had not been called into use, to
+the vociferous delight of the tail of the procession.
+
+Compelled by a sudden and vigorous movement of the woman, the parade
+halted before the window by which Lorison stood. He saw that she was
+young, and, at the first glance, was deceived by a sophistical
+prettiness of her face, which waned before a more judicious scrutiny.
+Her look was bold and reckless, and upon her countenance, where yet
+the contours of youth survived, were the finger-marks of old age's
+credentialed courier, Late Hours.
+
+The young woman fixed her unshrinking gaze upon Lorison, and called to
+him in the voice of the wronged heroine in straits:
+
+"Say! You look like a good fellow; come and put up the bail, won't
+you? I've done nothing to get pinched for. It's all a mistake. See
+how they're treating me! You won't be sorry, if you'll help me out of
+this. Think of your sister or your girl being dragged along the
+streets this way! I say, come along now, like a good fellow."
+
+It may be that Lorison, in spite of the unconvincing bathos of this
+appeal, showed a sympathetic face, for one of the officers left the
+woman's side, and went over to him.
+
+"It's all right, Sir," he said, in a husky, confidential tone; "she's
+the right party. We took her after the first act at the Green Light
+Theatre, on a wire from the chief of police of Chicago. It's only a
+square or two to the station. Her rig's pretty bad, but she refused
+to change clothes--or, rather," added the officer, with a smile, "to
+put on some. I thought I'd explain matters to you so you wouldn't
+think she was being imposed upon."
+
+"What is the charge?" asked Lorison.
+
+"Grand larceny. Diamonds. Her husband is a jeweller in Chicago. She
+cleaned his show case of the sparklers, and skipped with a comic-opera
+troupe."
+
+The policeman, perceiving that the interest of the entire group of
+spectators was centred upon himself and Lorison--their conference
+being regarded as a possible new complication--was fain to prolong
+the situation--which reflected his own importance--by a little
+afterpiece of philosophical comment.
+
+"A gentleman like you, Sir," he went on affably, "would never notice
+it, but it comes in my line to observe what an immense amount of
+trouble is made by that combination--I mean the stage, diamonds
+and light-headed women who aren't satisfied with good homes. I tell
+you, Sir, a man these days and nights wants to know what his women
+folks are up to."
+
+The policeman smiled a good night, and returned to the side of his
+charge, who had been intently watching Lorison's face during the
+conversation, no doubt for some indication of his intention to render
+succour. Now, at the failure of the sign, and at the movement made to
+continue the ignominious progress, she abandoned hope, and addressed
+him thus, pointedly:
+
+"You damn chalk-faced quitter! You was thinking of giving me a hand,
+but you let the cop talk you out of it the first word. You're a dandy
+to tie to. Say, if you ever get a girl, she'll have a picnic. Won't
+she work you to the queen's taste! Oh, my!" She concluded with a
+taunting, shrill laugh that rasped Lorison like a saw. The policemen
+urged her forward; the delighted train of gaping followers closed up
+the rear; and the captive Amazon, accepting her fate, extended the
+scope of her maledictions so that none in hearing might seem to be
+slighted.
+
+Then there came upon Lorison an overwhelming revulsion of his
+perspective. It may be that he had been ripe for it, that the
+abnormal condition of mind in which he had for so long existed was
+already about to revert to its balance; however, it is certain that
+the events of the last few minutes had furnished the channel, if not
+the impetus, for the change.
+
+The initial determining influence had been so small a thing as the
+fact and manner of his having been approached by the officer. That
+agent had, by the style of his accost, restored the loiterer to his
+former place in society. In an instant he had been transformed from a
+somewhat rancid prowler along the fishy side streets of gentility into
+an honest gentleman, with whom even so lordly a guardian of the peace
+might agreeably exchange the compliments.
+
+This, then, first broke the spell, and set thrilling in him a
+resurrected longing for the fellowship of his kind, and the rewards of
+the virtuous. To what end, he vehemently asked himself, was this
+fanciful self-accusation, this empty renunciation, this moral
+squeamishness through which he had been led to abandon what was his
+heritage in life, and not beyond his deserts? Technically, he was
+uncondemned; his sole guilty spot was in thought rather than deed, and
+cognizance of it unshared by others. For what good, moral or
+sentimental, did he slink, retreating like the hedgehog from his own
+shadow, to and fro in this musty Bohemia that lacked even the
+picturesque?
+
+But the thing that struck home and set him raging was the part played
+by the Amazonian prisoner. To the counterpart of that astounding
+belligerent--identical at least, in the way of experience--to one,
+by her own confession, thus far fallen, had he, not three hours since,
+been united in marriage. How desirable and natural it had seemed to
+him then, and how monstrous it seemed now! How the words of diamond
+thief number two yet burned in his ears: "If you ever get a girl,
+she'll have a picnic." What did that mean but that women instinctively
+knew him for one they could hoodwink? Still again, there reverberated
+the policeman's sapient contribution to his agony: "A man these days
+and nights wants to know what his women folks are up to." Oh, yes, he
+had been a fool; he had looked at things from the wrong standpoint.
+
+But the wildest note in all the clamour was struck by pain's
+forefinger, jealousy. Now, at least, he felt that keenest sting--a
+mounting love unworthily bestowed. Whatever she might be, he loved
+her; he bore in his own breast his doom. A grating, comic flavour to
+his predicament struck him suddenly, and he laughed creakingly as he
+swung down the echoing pavement. An impetuous desire to act, to
+battle with his fate, seized him. He stopped upon his heel, and smote
+his palms together triumphantly. His wife was--where? But there
+was a tangible link; an outlet more or less navigable, through which
+his derelict ship of matrimony might yet be safely towed--the
+priest!
+
+Like all imaginative men with pliable natures, Lorison was, when
+thoroughly stirred, apt to become tempestuous. With a high and
+stubborn indignation upon him, be retraced his steps to the
+intersecting street by which he had come. Down this he hurried to the
+corner where he had parted with--an astringent grimace tinctured the
+thought--his wife. Thence still back he harked, following through
+an unfamiliar district his stimulated recollections of the way they
+had come from that preposterous wedding. Many times he went abroad,
+and nosed his way back to the trail, furious.
+
+At last, when he reached the dark, calamitous building in which his
+madness had culminated, and found the black hallway, he dashed down
+it, perceiving no light or sound. But he raised his voice, hailing
+loudly; reckless of everything but that he should find the old
+mischief-maker with the eyes that looked too far away to see the
+disaster he had wrought. The door opened, and in the stream of light
+Father Rogan stood, his book in hand, with his finger marking the
+place.
+
+"Ah!" cried Lorison. "You are the man I want. I had a wife of you a
+few hours ago. I would not trouble you, but I neglected to note how
+it was done. Will you oblige me with the information whether the
+business is beyond remedy?"
+
+"Come inside," said the priest; "there are other lodgers in the
+house, who might prefer sleep to even a gratified curiosity."
+
+Lorison entered the room and took the chair offered him. The priest's
+eyes looked a courteous interrogation.
+
+"I must apologize again," said the young man, "for so soon intruding
+upon you with my marital infelicities, but, as my wife has neglected
+to furnish me with her address, I am deprived of the legitimate
+recourse of a family row."
+
+"I am quite a plain man," said Father Rogan, pleasantly; "but I do
+not see how I am to ask you questions."
+
+"Pardon my indirectness," said Lorison; "I will ask one. In this room
+to-night you pronounced me to be a husband. You afterward spoke of
+additional rites or performances that either should or could be
+effected. I paid little attention to your words then, but I am hungry
+to hear them repeated now. As matters stand, am I married past all
+help?"
+
+"You are as legally and as firmly bound," said the priest, "as though
+it had been done in a cathedral, in the presence of thousands. The
+additional observances I referred to are not necessary to the
+strictest legality of the act, but were advised as a precaution for
+the future--for convenience of proof in such contingencies as wills,
+inheritances and the like."
+
+Lorison laughed harshly.
+
+"Many thanks," he said. "Then there is no mistake, and I am the happy
+benedict. I suppose I should go stand upon the bridal corner, and
+when my wife gets through walking the streets she will look me up."
+
+Father Rogan regarded him calmly.
+
+"My son," he said, "when a man and woman come to me to be married I
+always marry them. I do this for the sake of other people whom they
+might go away and marry if they did not marry each other. As you see,
+I do not seek your confidence; but your case seems to me to be one not
+altogether devoid of interest. Very few marriages that have come to
+my notice have brought such well-expressed regret within so short a
+time. I will hazard one question: were you not under the impression
+that you loved the lady you married, at the time you did so?"
+
+"Loved her!" cried Lorison, wildly. "Never so well as now, though
+she told me she deceived and sinned and stole. Never more than now,
+when, perhaps, she is laughing at the fool she cajoled and left, with
+scarcely a word, to return to God only knows what particular line of
+her former folly."
+
+Father Rogan answered nothing. During the silence that succeeded, he
+sat with a quiet expectation beaming in his full, lambent eye.
+
+"If you would listen--" began Lorison. The priest held up his hand.
+
+"As I hoped," he said. "I thought you would trust me. Wait but a
+moment." He brought a long clay pipe, filled and lighted it.
+
+"Now, my son," he said.
+
+Lorison poured a twelve month's accumulated confidence into Father
+Rogan's ear. He told all; not sparing himself or omitting the facts
+of his past, the events of the night, or his disturbing conjectures
+and fears.
+
+"The main point," said the priest, when he had concluded, "seems to
+me to be this--are you reasonably sure that you love this woman whom
+you have married?"
+
+"Why," exclaimed Lorison, rising impulsively to his feet--"why
+should I deny it? But look at me--am fish, flesh or fowl? That is
+the main point to me, I assure you."
+
+"I understand you," said the priest, also rising, and laying down his
+pipe. "The situation is one that has taxed the endurance of much
+older men than you--in fact, especially much older men than you. I
+will try to relieve you from it, and this night. You shall see for
+yourself into exactly what predicament you have fallen, and how you
+shall, possibly, be extricated. There is no evidence so credible as
+that of the eyesight."
+
+Father Rogan moved about the room, and donned a soft black hat.
+Buttoning his coat to his throat, he laid his hand on the doorknob.
+"Let us walk," he said.
+
+The two went out upon the street. The priest turned his face down it,
+and Lorison walked with him through a squalid district, where the
+houses loomed, awry and desolate-looking, high above them. Presently
+they turned into a less dismal side street, where the houses were
+smaller, and, though hinting of the most meagre comfort, lacked the
+concentrated wretchedness of the more populous byways.
+
+At a segregated, two-story house Father Rogan halted, and mounted the
+steps with the confidence of a familiar visitor. He ushered Lorison
+into a narrow hallway, faintly lighted by a cobwebbed hanging lamp.
+Almost immediately a door to the right opened and a dingy Irishwoman
+protruded her head.
+
+"Good evening to ye, Mistress Geehan," said the priest, unconsciously,
+it seemed, falling into a delicately flavoured brogue. "And is it
+yourself can tell me if Norah has gone out again, the night, maybe?"
+
+"Oh, it's yer blissid riverence! Sure and I can tell ye the same.
+The purty darlin' wint out, as usual, but a bit later. And she says:
+'Mother Geehan,' says she, 'it's me last noight out, praise the
+saints, this noight is!' And, oh, yer riverence, the swate, beautiful
+drame of a dress she had this toime! White satin and silk and
+ribbons, and lace about the neck and arrums--'twas a sin, yer
+reverence, the gold was spint upon it."
+
+The priest heard Lorison catch his breath painfully, and a faint smile
+flickered across his own clean-cut mouth.
+
+"Well, then, Mistress Geehan," said he, "I'll just step upstairs and
+see the bit boy for a minute, and I'll take this gentleman up with
+me."
+
+"He's awake, thin," said the woman. "I've just come down from sitting
+wid him the last hour, tilling him fine shtories of ould County
+Tyrone. 'Tis a greedy gossoon, it is, yer riverence, for me
+shtories."
+
+"Small the doubt," said Father Rogan. "There's no rocking would put
+him to slape the quicker, I'm thinking."
+
+Amid the woman's shrill protest against the retort, the two men
+ascended the steep stairway. The priest pushed open the door of a
+room near its top.
+
+"Is that you already, sister?" drawled a sweet, childish voice from
+the darkness.
+
+"It's only ould Father Denny come to see ye, darlin'; and a foine
+gentleman I've brought to make ye a gr-r-and call. And ye resaves us
+fast aslape in bed! Shame on yez manners!"
+
+"Oh, Father Denny, is that you? I'm glad. And will you light the
+lamp, please? It's on the table by the door. And quit talking like
+Mother Geehan, Father Denny."
+
+The priest lit the lamp, and Lorison saw a tiny, towsled-haired boy,
+with a thin, delicate face, sitting up in a small bed in a corner.
+Quickly, also, his rapid glance considered the room and its
+contents. It was furnished with more than comfort, and its adornments
+plainly indicated a woman's discerning taste. An open door beyond
+revealed the blackness of an adjoining room's interior.
+
+The boy clutched both of Father Rogan's hands. "I'm so glad you
+came," he said; "but why did you come in the night? Did sister send
+you?"
+
+"Off wid ye! Am I to be sint about, at me age, as was Terence
+McShane, of Ballymahone? I come on me own r-r-responsibility."
+
+Lorison had also advanced to the boy's bedside. He was fond of
+children; and the wee fellow, laying himself down to sleep alone in
+that dark room, stirred-his heart.
+
+"Aren't you afraid, little man?" he asked, stooping down beside him.
+
+"Sometimes," answered the boy, with a shy smile, "when the rats make
+too much noise. But nearly every night, when sister goes out, Mother
+Geehan stays a while with me, and tells me funny stories. I'm not
+often afraid, sir."
+
+"This brave little gentleman," said Father Rogan, "is a scholar of
+mine. Every day from half-past six to half-past eight--when sister
+comes for him--he stops in my study, and we find out what's in the
+inside of books. He knows multiplication, division and fractions; and
+he's troubling me to begin wid the chronicles of Ciaran of
+Clonmacnoise, Corurac McCullenan and Cuan O'Lochain, the gr-r-reat
+Irish histhorians." The boy was evidently accustomed to the priest's
+Celtic pleasantries. A little, appreciative grin was all the attention
+the insinuation of pedantry received.
+
+Lorison, to have saved his life, could not have put to the child one
+of those vital questions that were wildly beating about, unanswered,
+in his own brain. The little fellow was very like Norah; he had the
+same shining hair and candid eyes.
+
+"Oh, Father Denny," cried the boy, suddenly, "I forgot to tell you!
+Sister is not going away at night any more! She told me so when she
+kissed me good night as she was leaving. And she said she was so
+happy, and then she cried. Wasn't that queer? But I'm glad; aren't
+you?"
+
+"Yes, lad. And now, ye omadhaun, go to sleep, and say good night; we
+must be going."
+
+"Which shall I do first, Father Denny?"
+
+"Faith, he's caught me again! Wait till I get the sassenach into the
+annals of Tageruach, the hagiographer; I'll give him enough of the
+Irish idiom to make him more respectful."
+
+The light was out, and the small, brave voice bidding them good night
+from the dark room. They groped downstairs, and tore away from the
+garrulity of Mother Geehan.
+
+Again the priest steered them through the dim ways, but this time in
+another direction. His conductor was serenely silent, and Lorison
+followed his example to the extent of seldom speaking. Serene he
+could not be. His heart beat suffocatingly in his breast. The
+following of this blind, menacing trail was pregnant with he knew not
+what humiliating revelation to be delivered at its end.
+
+They came into a more pretentious street, where trade, it could be
+surmised, flourished by day. And again the priest paused; this time
+before a lofty building, whose great doors and windows in the lowest
+floor were carefully shuttered and barred. Its higher apertures were
+dark, save in the third story, the windows of which were brilliantly
+lighted. Lorison's ear caught a distant, regular, pleasing thrumming,
+as of music above. They stood at an angle of the building. Up, along
+the side nearest them, mounted an iron stairway. At its top was an
+upright, illuminated parallelogram. Father Rogan had stopped, and
+stood, musing.
+
+"I will say this much," he remarked, thoughtfully: "I believe you to
+be a better man than you think yourself to be, and a better man than I
+thought some hours ago. But do not take this," he added, with a smile,
+"as much praise. I promised you a possible deliverance from an
+unhappy perplexity. I will have to modify that promise. I can only
+remove the mystery that enhanced that perplexity. Your deliverance
+depends upon yourself. Come."
+
+He led his companion up the stairway. Halfway up, Lorison caught him
+by the sleeve. "Remember," he gasped, "I love that woman."
+
+"You desired to know.
+
+"I--Go on."
+
+The priest reached the landing at the top of the stairway. Lorison,
+behind him, saw that the illuminated space was the glass upper half of
+a door opening into the lighted room. The rhythmic music increased as
+they neared it; the stairs shook with the mellow vibrations.
+
+Lorison stopped breathing when he set foot upon the highest step, for
+the priest stood aside, and motioned him to look through the glass of
+the door.
+
+His eye, accustomed to the darkness, met first a blinding glare,
+and then he made out the faces and forms of many people, amid
+an extravagant display of splendid robings--billowy laces,
+brilliant-hued finery, ribbons, silks and misty drapery. And then
+he caught the meaning of that jarring hum, and he saw the tired,
+pale, happy face of his wife, bending, as were a score of others,
+over her sewing machine--toiling, toiling. Here was the folly she
+pursued, and the end of his quest.
+
+But not his deliverance, though even then remorse struck him. His
+shamed soul fluttered once more before it retired to make room for the
+other and better one. For, to temper his thrill of joy, the shine of
+the satin and the glimmer of ornaments recalled the disturbing figure
+of the bespangled Amazon, and the base duplicate histories lit by the
+glare of footlights and stolen diamonds. It is past the wisdom of him
+who only sets the scenes, either to praise or blame the man. But this
+time his love overcame his scruples. He took a quick step, and
+reached out his hand for the doorknob. Father Rogan was quicker to
+arrest it and draw him back.
+
+"You use my trust in you queerly," said the priest sternly. "What are
+you about to do?"
+
+"I am going to my wife," said Lorison. "Let me pass."
+
+"Listen," said the priest, holding him firmly by the arm. "I am about
+to put you in possession of a piece of knowledge of which, thus far,
+you have scarcely proved deserving. I do not think you ever will; but
+I will not dwell upon that. You see in that room the woman you
+married, working for a frugal living for herself, and a generous
+comfort for an idolized brother. This building belongs to the chief
+costumer of the city. For months the advance orders for the coming
+Mardi Gras festivals have kept the work going day and night. I myself
+secured employment here for Norah. She toils here each night from
+nine o'clock until daylight, and, besides, carries home with her some
+of the finer costumes, requiring more delicate needlework, and works
+there part of the day. Somehow, you two have remained strangely
+ignorant of each other's lives. Are you convinced now that your wife
+is not walking the streets?"
+
+"Let me go to her," cried Lorison, again struggling, "and beg her
+forgiveness!'
+
+"Sir," said the priest, "do you owe me nothing? Be quiet. It seems
+so often that Heaven lets fall its choicest gifts into hands that must
+be taught to hold them. Listen again. You forgot that repentant sin
+must not compromise, but look up, for redemption, to the purest and
+best. You went to her with the fine-spun sophistry that peace could be
+found in a mutual guilt; and she, fearful of losing what her heart so
+craved, thought it worth the price to buy it with a desperate, pure,
+beautiful lie. I have known her since the day she was born; she is as
+innocent and unsullied in life and deed as a holy saint. In that
+lowly street where she dwells she first saw the light, and she has
+lived there ever since, spending her days in generous self-sacrifice
+for others. Och, ye spalpeen!" continued Father Rogan, raising his
+finger in kindly anger at Lorison. "What for, I wonder, could she be
+after making a fool of hersilf, and shamin' her swate soul with lies,
+for the like of you!"
+
+"Sir," said Lorison, trembling, "say what you please of me. Doubt it
+as you must, I will yet prove my gratitude to you, and my devotion to
+her. But let me speak to her once now, let me kneel for just one
+moment at her feet, and--"
+
+"Tut, tut!" said the priest. "How many acts of a love drama do you
+think an old bookworm like me capable of witnessing? Besides, what
+kind of figures do we cut, spying upon the mysteries of midnight
+millinery! Go to meet your wife to-morrow, as she ordered you, and
+obey her thereafter, and maybe some time I shall get forgiveness for
+the part I have played in this night's work. Off wid yez down the
+shtairs, now! 'Tis late, and an ould man like me should be takin' his
+rest."
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES
+
+
+"Aunt Ellen," said Octavia, cheerfully, as she threw her black kid
+gloves carefully at the dignified Persian cat on the window-seat, "I'm
+a pauper."
+
+"You are so extreme in your statements, Octavia, dear," said Aunt
+Ellen, mildly, looking up from her paper. "If you find yourself
+temporarily in need of some small change for bonbons, you will find
+my purse in the drawer of the writing desk."
+
+Octavia Beaupree removed her hat and seated herself on a footstool
+near her aunt's chair, clasping her hands about her knees. Her slim
+and flexible figure, clad in a modish mourning costume, accommodated
+itself easily and gracefully to the trying position. Her bright and
+youthful face, with its pair of sparkling, life-enamoured eyes, tried
+to compose itself to the seriousness that the occasion seemed to
+demand.
+
+"You good auntie, it isn't a case of bonbons; it is abject, staring,
+unpicturesque poverty, with ready-made clothes, gasolined gloves, and
+probably one o'clock dinners all waiting with the traditional wolf at
+the door. I've just come from my lawyer, auntie, and, 'Please, ma'am,
+I ain't got nothink 't all. Flowers, lady? Buttonhole, gentleman?
+Pencils, sir, three for five, to help a poor widow?' Do I do it
+nicely, auntie, or, as a bread-winner accomplishment, were my lessons
+in elocution entirely wasted?"
+
+"Do be serious, my dear," said Aunt Ellen, letting her paper fall to
+the floor, "long enough to tell me what you mean. Colonel Beaupree's
+estate--"
+
+"Colonel Beaupree's estate," interrupted Octavia, emphasizing her
+words with appropriate dramatic gestures, "is of Spanish castellar
+architecture. Colonel Beaupree's resources are--wind. Colonel
+Beaupree's stocks are--water. Colonel Beaupree's income is--all
+in. The statement lacks the legal technicalities to which I have been
+listening for an hour, but that is what it means when translated."
+
+"Octavia!" Aunt Ellen was now visibly possessed by consternation. "I
+can hardly believe it. And it was the impression that he was worth a
+million. And the De Peysters themselves introduced him!"
+
+Octavia rippled out a laugh, and then became properly grave.
+
+"_De mortuis nil_, auntie--not even the rest of it. The dear old
+colonel--what a gold brick he was, after all! I paid for my bargain
+fairly--I'm all here, am I not?--items: eyes, fingers, toes,
+youth, old family, unquestionable position in society as called for
+in the contract--no wild-cat stock here." Octavia picked up the morning
+paper from the floor. "But I'm not going to 'squeal'--isn't that
+what they call it when you rail at Fortune because you've, lost the
+game?" She turned the pages of the paper calmly. "'Stock market'--no
+use for that. 'Society's doings'--that's done. Here is my page--the
+wish column. A Van Dresser could not be said to 'want' for anything,
+of course. 'Chamber-maids, cooks, canvassers, stenographers--'"
+
+"Dear," said Aunt Ellen, with a little tremor in her voice, "please do
+not talk in that way. Even if your affairs are in so unfortunate a
+condition, there is my three thousand--"
+
+Octavia sprang up lithely, and deposited a smart kiss on the delicate
+cheek of the prim little elderly maid.
+
+"Blessed auntie, your three thousand is just sufficient to insure your
+Hyson to be free from willow leaves and keep the Persian in sterilized
+cream. I know I'd be welcome, but I prefer to strike bottom like
+Beelzebub rather than hang around like the Peri listening to the music
+from the side entrance. I'm going to earn my own living. There's
+nothing else to do. I'm a--Oh, oh, oh!--I had forgotten. There's
+one thing saved from the wreck. It's a corral--no, a ranch in--let
+me see--Texas: an asset, dear old Mr. Bannister called it. How
+pleased he was to show me something he could describe as unencumbered!
+I've a description of it among those stupid papers he made me bring
+away with me from his office. I'll try to find it."
+
+Octavia found her shopping-bag, and drew from it a long envelope
+filled with typewritten documents.
+
+"A ranch in Texas," sighed Aunt Ellen. "It sounds to me more like a
+liability than an asset. Those are the places where the centipedes are
+found, and cowboys, and fandangos."
+
+"'The Rancho de las Sombras,'" read Octavia from a sheet of violently
+purple typewriting, "'is situated one hundred and ten miles southeast
+of San Antonio, and thirty-eight miles from its nearest railroad
+station, Nopal, on the I. and G. N. Ranch, consists of 7,680 acres
+of well-watered land, with title conferred by State patents, and
+twenty-two sections, or 14,080 acres, partly under yearly running
+lease and partly bought under State's twenty-year-purchase act. Eight
+thousand graded merino sheep, with the necessary equipment of horses,
+vehicles and general ranch paraphernalia. Ranch-house built of brick,
+with six rooms comfortably furnished according to the requirements of
+the climate. All within a strong barbed-wire fence.
+
+"'The present ranch manager seems to be competent and reliable, and is
+rapidly placing upon a paying basis a business that, in other hands,
+had been allowed to suffer from neglect and misconduct.
+
+"'This property was secured by Colonel Beaupree in a deal with a
+Western irrigation syndicate, and the title to it seems to be perfect.
+With careful management and the natural increase of land values, it
+ought to be made the foundation for a comfortable fortune for its
+owner.'"
+
+When Octavia ceased reading, Aunt Ellen uttered something as near a
+sniff as her breeding permitted.
+
+"The prospectus," she said, with uncompromising metropolitan
+suspicion, "doesn't mention the centipedes, or the Indians. And you
+never did like mutton, Octavia. I don't see what advantage you can
+derive from this--desert."
+
+But Octavia was in a trance. Her eyes were steadily regarding
+something quite beyond their focus. Her lips were parted, and her face
+was lighted by the kindling furor of the explorer, the ardent,
+stirring disquiet of the adventurer. Suddenly she clasped her hands
+together exultantly.
+
+"The problem solves itself, auntie," she cried. "I'm going to that
+ranch. I'm going to live on it. I'm going to learn to like mutton,
+and even concede the good qualities of centipedes--at a respectful
+distance. It's just what I need. It's a new life that comes when my
+old one is just ending. It's a release, auntie; it isn't a narrowing.
+Think of the gallops over those leagues of prairies, with the wind
+tugging at the roots of your hair, the coming close to the earth
+and learning over again the stories of the growing grass and the
+little wild flowers without names! Glorious is what it will be. Shall
+I be a shepherdess with a Watteau hat, and a crook to keep the bad
+wolves from the lambs, or a typical Western ranch girl, with short
+hair, like the pictures of her in the Sunday papers? I think the
+latter. And they'll have my picture, too, with the wild-cats I've
+slain, single-handed, hanging from my saddle horn. 'From the Four
+Hundred to the Flocks' is the way they'll headline it, and they'll
+print photographs of the old Van Dresser mansion and the church where
+I was married. They won't have my picture, but they'll get an artist
+to draw it. I'll be wild and woolly, and I'll grow my own wool."
+
+"Octavia!" Aunt Ellen condensed into the one word all the protests
+she was unable to utter.
+
+"Don't say a word, auntie. I'm going. I'll see the sky at night fit
+down on the world like a big butter-dish cover, and I'll make friends
+again with the stars that I haven't had a chat with since I was a wee
+child. I wish to go. I'm tired of all this. I'm glad I haven't any
+money. I could bless Colonel Beaupree for that ranch, and forgive him
+for all his bubbles. What if the life will be rough and lonely! I--I
+deserve it. I shut my heart to everything except that miserable
+ambition. I--oh, I wish to go away, and forget--forget!"
+
+Octavia swerved suddenly to her knees, laid her flushed face in her
+aunt's lap, and shook with turbulent sobs.
+
+Aunt Ellen bent over her, and smoothed the coppery-brown hair.
+
+"I didn't know," she said, gently; "I didn't know--that. Who was it,
+dear?"
+
+
+When Mrs. Octavia Beaupree, nee Van Dresser, stepped from the train at
+Nopal, her manner lost, for the moment, some of that easy certitude
+which had always marked her movements. The town was of recent
+establishment, and seemed to have been hastily constructed of undressed
+lumber and flapping canvas. The element that had congregated about the
+station, though not offensively demonstrative, was clearly composed of
+citizens accustomed to and prepared for rude alarms.
+
+Octavia stood on the platform, against the telegraph office, and
+attempted to choose by intuition from the swaggering, straggling
+string, of loungers the manager of the Rancho de las Sombras, who
+had been instructed by Mr. Bannister to meet her there. That tall,
+serious, looking, elderly man in the blue flannel shirt and white tie
+she thought must be he. But, no; he passed by, removing his gaze from
+the lady as hers rested on him, according to the Southern custom. The
+manager, she thought, with some impatience at being kept waiting,
+should have no difficulty in selecting her. Young women wearing the
+most recent thing in ash-coloured travelling suits were not so
+plentiful in Nopal!
+
+Thus keeping a speculative watch on all persons of possible managerial
+aspect, Octavia, with a catching breath and a start of surprise,
+suddenly became aware of Teddy Westlake hurrying along the platform in
+the direction of the train--of Teddy Westlake or his sun-browned
+ghost in cheviot, boots and leather-girdled hat--Theodore Westlake,
+Jr., amateur polo (almost) champion, all-round butterfly and cumberer
+of the soil; but a broader, surer, more emphasized and determined
+Teddy than the one she had known a year ago when last she saw him.
+
+He perceived Octavia at almost the same time, deflected his course,
+and steered for her in his old, straightforward way. Something like
+awe came upon her as the strangeness of his metamorphosis was
+brought into closer range; the rich, red-brown of his complexion
+brought out so vividly his straw-coloured mustache and steel-gray
+eyes. He seemed more grown-up, and, somehow, farther away. But, when
+he spoke, the old, boyish Teddy came back again. They had been friends
+from childhood.
+
+"Why, 'Tave!" he exclaimed, unable to reduce his perplexity to
+coherence. "How--what--when--where?"
+
+"Train," said Octavia; "necessity; ten minutes ago; home. Your
+complexion's gone, Teddy. Now, how--what--when--where?"
+
+"I'm working down here," said Teddy. He cast side glances about the
+station as one does who tries to combine politeness with duty.
+
+"You didn't notice on the train," he asked, "an old lady with gray
+curls and a poodle, who occupied two seats with her bundles and
+quarrelled with the conductor, did you?"
+
+"I think not," answered Octavia, reflecting. "And you haven't, by
+any chance, noticed a big, gray-mustached man in a blue shirt and
+six-shooters, with little flakes of merino wool sticking in his hair,
+have you?"
+
+"Lots of 'em," said Teddy, with symptoms of mental delirium under the
+strain. "Do you happen to know any such individual?"
+
+"No; the description is imaginary. Is your interest in the old lady
+whom you describe a personal one?"
+
+"Never saw her in my life. She's painted entirely from fancy. She owns
+the little piece of property where I earn my bread and butter--the
+Rancho de las Sombras. I drove up to meet her according to arrangement
+with her lawyer."
+
+Octavia leaned against the wall of the telegraph office. Was this
+possible? And didn't he know?
+
+"Are you the manager of that ranch?" she asked weakly.
+
+"I am," said Teddy, with pride.
+
+"I am Mrs. Beaupree," said Octavia faintly; "but my hair never would
+curl, and I was polite to the conductor."
+
+For a moment that strange, grown-up look came back, and removed Teddy
+miles away from her.
+
+"I hope you'll excuse me," he said, rather awkwardly. "You see, I've
+been down here in the chaparral a year. I hadn't heard. Give me your
+checks, please, and I'll have your traps loaded into the wagon. Jose
+will follow with them. We travel ahead in the buckboard."
+
+Seated by Teddy in a feather-weight buckboard, behind a pair of wild,
+cream-coloured Spanish ponies, Octavia abandoned all thought for the
+exhilaration of the present. They swept out of the little town and
+down the level road toward the south. Soon the road dwindled and
+disappeared, and they struck across a world carpeted with an endless
+reach of curly mesquite grass. The wheels made no sound. The tireless
+ponies bounded ahead at an unbroken gallop. The temperate wind, made
+fragrant by thousands of acres of blue and yellow wild flowers, roared
+gloriously in their ears. The motion was aerial, ecstatic, with a
+thrilling sense of perpetuity in its effect. Octavia sat silent,
+possessed by a feeling of elemental, sensual bliss. Teddy seemed to be
+wrestling with some internal problem.
+
+"I'm going to call you madama," he announced as the result of his
+labours. "That is what the Mexicans will call you--they're nearly
+all Mexicans on the ranch, you know. That seems to me about the proper
+thing."
+
+"Very well, Mr. Westlake," said Octavia, primly.
+
+"Oh, now," said Teddy, in some consternation, "that's carrying the
+thing too far, isn't it?"
+
+"Don't worry me with your beastly etiquette. I'm just beginning to
+live. Don't remind me of anything artificial. If only this air could
+be bottled! This much alone is worth coming for. Oh, look I there goes
+a deer!"
+
+"Jack-rabbit," said Teddy, without turning his head.
+
+"Could I--might I drive?" suggested Octavia, panting, with rose-tinted
+cheeks and the eye of an eager child.
+
+"On one condition. Could I--might I smoke?"
+
+"Forever!" cried Octavia, taking the lines with solemn joy. "How shall
+I know which way to drive?"
+
+"Keep her sou' by sou'east, and all sail set. You see that black speck
+on the horizon under that lowermost Gulf cloud? That's a group of
+live-oaks and a landmark. Steer halfway between that and the little
+hill to the left. I'll recite you the whole code of driving rules for
+the Texas prairies: keep the reins from under the horses' feet, and
+swear at 'em frequent."
+
+"I'm too happy to swear, Ted. Oh, why do people buy yachts or travel
+in palace-cars, when a buckboard and a pair of plugs and a spring
+morning like this can satisfy all desire?"
+
+"Now, I'll ask you," protested Teddy, who was futilely striking match
+after match on the dashboard, "not to call those denizens of the air
+plugs. They can kick out a hundred miles between daylight and dark."
+At last he succeeded in snatching a light for his cigar from the flame
+held in the hollow of his hands.
+
+"Room!" said Octavia, intensely. "That's what produces the effect. I
+know now what I've wanted--scope--range--room!"
+
+"Smoking-room," said Teddy, unsentimentally. "I love to smoke in a
+buckboard. The wind blows the smoke into you and out again. It saves
+exertion."
+
+The two fell so naturally into their old-time goodfellowship that it
+was only by degrees that a sense of the strangeness of the new
+relations between them came to be felt.
+
+"Madama," said Teddy, wonderingly, "however did you get it into your
+bead to cut the crowd and come down here? Is it a fad now among the
+upper classes to trot off to sheep ranches instead of to Newport?"
+
+"I was broke, Teddy," said Octavia, sweetly, with her interest centred
+upon steering safely between a Spanish dagger plant and a clump of
+chaparral; "I haven't a thing in the world but this ranch--not even
+any other home to go to."
+
+"Come, now," said Teddy, anxiously but incredulously, "you don't
+mean it?"
+
+"When my husband," said Octavia, with a shy slurring of the word,
+"died three months ago I thought I had a reasonable amount of the
+world's goods. His lawyer exploded that theory in a sixty-minute fully
+illustrated lecture. I took to the sheep as a last resort. Do you
+happen to know of any fashionable caprice among the gilded youth of
+Manhattan that induces them to abandon polo and club windows to become
+managers of sheep ranches?"
+
+"It's easily explained in my case," responded Teddy, promptly. "I
+had to go to work. I couldn't have earned my board in New York, so I
+chummed a while with old Sandford, one of the syndicate that owned the
+ranch before Colonel Beaupree bought it, and got a place down here. I
+wasn't manager at first. I jogged around on ponies and studied the
+business in detail, until I got all the points in my head. I saw where
+it was losing and what the remedies were, and then Sandford put me
+in charge. I get a hundred dollars a month, and I earn it."
+
+"Poor Teddy!" said Octavia, with a smile.
+
+"You needn't. I like it. I save half my wages, and I'm as hard as a
+water plug. It beats polo."
+
+"Will it furnish bread and tea and jam for another outcast from
+civilization?"
+
+"The spring shearing," said the manager, "just cleaned up a deficit in
+last year's business. Wastefulness and inattention have been the rule
+heretofore. The autumn clip will leave a small profit over all
+expenses. Next year there will be jam."
+
+When, about four o'clock in the afternoon, the ponies rounded a
+gentle, brush-covered hill, and then swooped, like a double
+cream-coloured cyclone, upon the Rancho de las Sombras, Octavia gave
+a little cry of delight. A lordly grove of magnificent live-oaks cast
+an area of grateful, cool shade, whence the ranch had drawn its name,
+"de las Sombras"--of the shadows. The house, of red brick, one story,
+ran low and long beneath the trees. Through its middle, dividing its
+six rooms in half, extended a broad, arched passageway, picturesque
+with flowering cactus and hanging red earthern jars. A "gallery," low
+and broad, encircled the building. Vines climbed about it, and the
+adjacent ground was, for a space, covered with transplanted grass and
+shrubs. A little lake, long and narrow, glimmered in the sun at the
+rear. Further away stood the shacks of the Mexican workers, the
+corrals, wool sheds and shearing pens. To the right lay the low hills,
+splattered with dark patches of chaparral; to the left the unbounded
+green prairie blending against the blue heavens.
+
+"It's a home, Teddy," said Octavia, breathlessly; "that's what it
+is--it's a home."
+
+"Not so bad for a sheep ranch," admitted Teddy, with excusable pride.
+"I've been tinkering on it at odd times."
+
+A Mexican youth sprang from somewhere in the grass, and took charge of
+the creams. The mistress and the manager entered the house.
+
+"Here's Mrs. MacIntyre," said Teddy, as a placid, neat, elderly lady
+came out upon the gallery to meet them. "Mrs. Mac, here's the boss.
+Very likely she will be wanting a hunk of ham and a dish of beans
+after her drive."
+
+Mrs. MacIntyre, the housekeeper, as much a fixture on the place as the
+lake or the live-oaks, received the imputation of the ranch's
+resources of refreshment with mild indignation, and was about to give
+it utterance when Octavia spoke.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. MacIntyre, don't apologize for Teddy. Yes, I call him Teddy.
+So does every one whom he hasn't duped into taking him seriously. You
+see, we used to cut paper dolls and play jackstraws together ages ago.
+No one minds what he says."
+
+"No," said Teddy, "no one minds what he says, just so he doesn't do it
+again."
+
+Octavia cast one of those subtle, sidelong glances toward him from
+beneath her lowered eyelids--a glance that Teddy used to describe as
+an upper-cut. But there was nothing in his ingenuous, weather-tanned
+face to warrant a suspicion that he was making an allusion--nothing.
+Beyond a doubt, thought Octavia, he had forgotten.
+
+"Mr. Westlake likes his fun," said Mrs. Maclntyre, as she conducted
+Octavia to her rooms. "But," she added, loyally, "people around here
+usually pay attention to what he says when he talks in earnest. I
+don't know what would have become of this place without him."
+
+Two rooms at the east end of the house had been arranged for the
+occupancy of the ranch's mistress. When she entered them a slight
+dismay seized her at their bare appearance and the scantiness of
+their furniture; but she quickly reflected that the climate was a
+semi-tropical one, and was moved to appreciation of the well-conceived
+efforts to conform to it. The sashes had already been removed from the
+big windows, and white curtains waved in the Gulf breeze that streamed
+through the wide jalousies. The bare floor was amply strewn with cool
+rugs; the chairs were inviting, deep, dreamy willows; the walls were
+papered with a light, cheerful olive. One whole side of her sitting
+room was covered with books on smooth, unpainted pine shelves. She
+flew to these at once. Before her was a well-selected library. She
+caught glimpses of titles of volumes of fiction and travel not yet
+seasoned from the dampness of the press.
+
+Presently, recollecting that she was now in a wilderness given over to
+mutton, centipedes and privations, the incongruity of these luxuries
+struck her, and, with intuitive feminine suspicion, she began turning
+to the fly-leaves of volume after volume. Upon each one was inscribed
+in fluent characters the name of Theodore Westlake, Jr.
+
+Octavia, fatigued by her long journey, retired early that night. Lying
+upon her white, cool bed, she rested deliciously, but sleep coquetted
+long with her. She listened to faint noises whose strangeness kept her
+faculties on the alert--the fractious yelping of the coyotes, the
+ceaseless, low symphony of the wind, the distant booming of the frogs
+about the lake, the lamentation of a concertina in the Mexicans'
+quarters. There were many conflicting feelings in her heart--
+thankfulness and rebellion, peace and disquietude, loneliness and a
+sense of protecting care, happiness and an old, haunting pain.
+
+She did what any other woman would have done--sought relief in a
+wholesome tide of unreasonable tears, and her last words, murmured to
+herself before slumber, capitulating, came softly to woo her, were "He
+has forgotten."
+
+The manager of the Rancho de las Sombras was no dilettante. He was a
+"hustler." He was generally up, mounted, and away of mornings before
+the rest of the household were awake, making the rounds of the flocks
+and camps. This was the duty of the major-domo, a stately old Mexican
+with a princely air and manner, but Teddy seemed to have a great deal
+of confidence in his own eyesight. Except in the busy seasons, he
+nearly always returned to the ranch to breakfast at eight o'clock,
+with Octavia and Mrs. Maclntyre, at the little table set in the
+central hallway, bringing with him a tonic and breezy cheerfulness
+full of the health and flavour of the prairies.
+
+A few days after Octavia's arrival he made her get out one of her
+riding skirts, and curtail it to a shortness demanded by the chaparral
+brakes.
+
+With some misgivings she donned this and the pair of buckskin leggings
+he prescribed in addition, and, mounted upon a dancing pony, rode with
+him to view her possessions. He showed her everything--the flocks
+of ewes, muttons and grazing lambs, the dipping vats, the shearing
+pens, the uncouth merino rams in their little pasture, the water-tanks
+prepared against the summer drought--giving account of his stewardship
+with a boyish enthusiasm that never flagged.
+
+Where was the old Teddy that she knew so well? This side of him was
+the same, and it was a side that pleased her; but this was all she
+ever saw of him now. Where was his sentimentality--those old,
+varying moods of impetuous love-making, of fanciful, quixotic
+devotion, of heart-breaking gloom, of alternating, absurd tenderness
+and haughty dignity? His nature had been a sensitive one, his
+temperament bordering closely on the artistic. She knew that, besides
+being a follower of fashion and its fads and sports, he had cultivated
+tastes of a finer nature. He had written things, he had tampered with
+colours, he was something of a student in certain branches of art, and
+once she had been admitted to all his aspirations and thoughts. But
+now--and she could not avoid the conclusion--Teddy had barricaded
+against her every side of himself except one--the side that showed the
+manager of the Rancho de las Sombras and a jolly chum who had forgiven
+and forgotten. Queerly enough the words of Mr. Bannister's description
+of her property came into her mind--"all inclosed within a strong
+barbed-wire fence."
+
+"Teddy's fenced, too," said Octavia to herself.
+
+It was not difficult for her to reason out the cause of his
+fortifications. It had originated one night at the Hammersmiths' ball.
+It occurred at a time soon after she had decided to accept Colonel
+Beaupree and his million, which was no more than her looks and the
+entree she held to the inner circles were worth. Teddy had proposed
+with all his impetuosity and fire, and she looked him straight in the
+eyes, an said, coldly and finally: "Never let me hear any such silly
+nonsense from you again." "You won't," said Teddy, with an expression
+around his mouth, and--now Teddy was inclosed within a strong
+barbed-wire fence.
+
+It was on this first ride of inspection that Teddy was seized by the
+inspiration that suggested the name of Mother Goose's heroine, and he
+at once bestowed it upon Octavia. The idea, supported by both a
+similarity of names and identity of occupations, seemed to strike him
+as a peculiarly happy one, and he never tired of using it. The
+Mexicans on the ranch also took up the name, adding another syllable
+to accommodate their lingual incapacity for the final "p," gravely
+referring to her as "La Madama Bo-Peepy." Eventually it spread, and
+"Madame Bo-Peep's ranch" was as often mentioned as the "Rancho de las
+Sombras."
+
+Came the long, hot season from May to September, when work is scarce
+on the ranches. Octavia passed the days in a kind of lotus-eater's
+dream. Books, hammocks, correspondence with a few intimate friends, a
+renewed interest in her old water-colour box and easel--these
+disposed of the sultry hours of daylight. The evenings were always
+sure to bring enjoyment. Best of all were the rapturous horseback
+rides with Teddy, when the moon gave light over the wind-swept
+leagues, chaperoned by the wheeling night-hawk and the startled owl.
+Often the Mexicans would come up from their shacks with their guitars
+and sing the weirdest of heart-breaking songs. There were long, cosy
+chats on the breezy gallery, and an interminable warfare of wits
+between Teddy and Mrs. MacIntyre, whose abundant Scotch shrewdness
+often more than overmatched the lighter humour in which she was
+lacking.
+
+And the nights came, one after another, and were filed away by weeks
+and months--nights soft and languorous and fragrant, that should
+have driven Strephon to Chloe over wires however barbed, that might
+have drawn Cupid himself to hunt, lasso in hand, among those amorous
+pastures--but Teddy kept his fences up.
+
+One July night Madame Bo-Peep and her ranch manager were sitting on
+the east gallery. Teddy had been exhausting the science of
+prognostication as to the probabilities of a price of twenty-four
+cents for the autumn clip, and had then subsided into an anesthetic
+cloud of Havana smoke. Only as incompetent a judge as a woman would
+have failed to note long ago that at least a third of his salary must
+have gone up in the fumes of those imported Regalias.
+
+"Teddy," said Octavia, suddenly, and rather sharply, "what are you
+working down here on a ranch for?"
+
+"One hundred per," said Teddy, glibly, "and found."
+
+"I've a good mind to discharge you."
+
+"Can't do it," said Teddy, with a grin.
+
+"Why not?" demanded Octavia, with argumentative heat.
+
+"Under contract. Terms of sale respect all unexpired contracts. Mine
+runs until 12 P. M., December thirty-first. You might get up at
+midnight on that date and fire me. If you try it sooner I'll be in a
+position to bring legal proceedings."
+
+Octavia seemed to be considering the prospects of litigation.
+
+"But," continued Teddy cheerfully, "I've been thinking of resigning
+anyway."
+
+Octavia's rocking-chair ceased its motion. There were centipedes in
+this country, she felt sure; and Indians, and vast, lonely, desolate,
+empty wastes; all within strong barbed-wire fence. There was a Van
+Dresser pride, but there was also a Van Dresser heart. She must know
+for certain whether or not he had forgotten.
+
+"Ah, well, Teddy," she said, with a fine assumption of polite
+interest, "it's lonely down here; you're longing to get back to the
+old life--to polo and lobsters and theatres and balls."
+
+"Never cared much for balls," said Teddy virtuously.
+
+"You're getting old, Teddy. Your memory is failing. Nobody ever knew
+you to miss a dance, unless it occurred on the same night with another
+one which you attended. And you showed such shocking bad taste, too,
+in dancing too often with the same partner. Let me see, what was that
+Forbes girl's name--the one with wall eyes--Mabel, wasn't it?"
+
+"No; Adele. Mabel was the one with the bony elbows. That wasn't wall
+in Adele's eyes. It was soul. We used to talk sonnets together, and
+Verlaine. Just then I was trying to run a pipe from the Pierian
+spring."
+
+"You were on the floor with her," said Octavia, undeflected, "five
+times at the Hammersmiths'."
+
+"Hammersmiths' what?" questioned Teddy, vacuously.
+
+"Ball--ball," said Octavia, viciously. "What were we talking of?"
+
+"Eyes, I thought," said Teddy, after some reflection; "and elbows."
+
+"Those Hammersmiths," went on Octavia, in her sweetest society
+prattle, after subduing an intense desire to yank a handful of
+sunburnt, sandy hair from the head lying back contentedly against the
+canvas of the steamer chair, "had too much money. Mines, wasn't it? It
+was something that paid something to the ton. You couldn't get a glass
+of plain water in their house. Everything at that ball was dreadfully
+overdone."
+
+"It was," said Teddy.
+
+"Such a crowd there was!" Octavia continued, conscious that she was
+talking the rapid drivel of a school-girl describing her first dance.
+"The balconies were as warm as the rooms. I--lost--something at
+that ball." The last sentence was uttered in a tone calculated to
+remove the barbs from miles of wire.
+
+"So did I," confessed Teddy, in a lower voice.
+
+"A glove," said Octavia, falling back as the enemy approached her
+ditches.
+
+"Caste," said Teddy, halting his firing line without loss. "I
+hobnobbed, half the evening with one of Hammersmith's miners, a fellow
+who kept his hands in his pockets, and talked like an archangel about
+reduction plants and drifts and levels and sluice-boxes."
+
+"A pearl-gray glove, nearly new," sighed Octavia, mournfully.
+
+"A bang-up chap, that McArdle," maintained Teddy approvingly. "A
+man who hated olives and elevators; a man who handled mountains as
+croquettes, and built tunnels in the air; a man who never uttered a
+word of silly nonsense in his life. Did you sign those lease-renewal
+applications yet, madama? They've got to be on file in the land office
+by the thirty-first."
+
+Teddy turned his head lazily. Octavia's chair was vacant.
+
+
+A certain centipede, crawling along the lines marked out by fate,
+expounded the situation. It was early one morning while Octavia and
+Mrs. Maclntyre were trimming the honeysuckle on the west gallery.
+Teddy had risen and departed hastily before daylight in response to
+word that a flock of ewes had been scattered from their bedding ground
+during the night by a thunder-storm.
+
+The centipede, driven by destiny, showed himself on the floor of the
+gallery, and then, the screeches of the two women giving him his cue,
+he scuttled with all his yellow legs through the open door into the
+furthermost west room, which was Teddy's. Arming themselves with
+domestic utensils selected with regard to their length, Octavia and
+Mrs. Maclntyre, with much clutching of skirts and skirmishing for the
+position of rear guard in the attacking force, followed.
+
+Once outside, the centipede seemed to have disappeared, and his
+prospective murderers began a thorough but cautious search for their
+victim.
+
+Even in the midst of such a dangerous and absorbing adventure Octavia
+was conscious of an awed curiosity on finding herself in Teddy's
+sanctum. In that room he sat alone, silently communing with those
+secret thoughts that he now shared with no one, dreamed there whatever
+dreams he now called on no one to interpret.
+
+It was the room of a Spartan or a soldier. In one corner stood a wide,
+canvas-covered cot; in another, a small bookcase; in another, a grim
+stand of Winchesters and shotguns. An immense table, strewn with
+letters, papers and documents and surmounted by a set of pigeon-holes,
+occupied one side.
+
+The centipede showed genius in concealing himself in such bare
+quarters. Mrs. Maclntyre was poking a broom-handle behind the
+bookcase. Octavia approached Teddy's cot. The room was just as the
+manager had left it in his hurry. The Mexican maid had not yet given
+it her attention. There was his big pillow with the imprint of his
+head still in the centre. She thought the horrid beast might have
+climbed the cot and hidden itself to bite Teddy. Centipedes were thus
+cruel and vindictive toward managers.
+
+She cautiously overturned the pillow, and then parted her lips to give
+the signal for reinforcements at sight of a long, slender, dark object
+lying there. But, repressing it in time, she caught up a glove, a
+pearl-gray glove, flattened--it might be conceived--by many, many
+months of nightly pressure beneath the pillow of the man who had
+forgotten the Hammersmiths' ball. Teddy must have left so hurriedly
+that morning that he had, for once, forgotten to transfer it to its
+resting-place by day. Even managers, who are notoriously wily and
+cunning, are sometimes caught up with.
+
+Octavia slid the gray glove into the bosom of her summery morning gown.
+It was hers. Men who put themselves within a strong barbed-wire fence,
+and remember Hammersmith balls only by the talk of miners about
+sluice-boxes, should not be allowed to possess such articles.
+
+After all, what a paradise this prairie country was! How it blossomed
+like the rose when you found things that were thought to be lost! How
+delicious was that morning breeze coming in the windows, fresh and
+sweet with the breath of the yellow ratama blooms! Might one not
+stand, for a minute, with shining, far-gazing eyes, and dream that
+mistakes might be corrected?
+
+Why was Mrs. Maclntyre poking about so absurdly with a broom?
+
+"I've found it," said Mrs. MacIntyre, banging the door. "Here it is."
+
+"Did you lose something? asked Octavia, with sweetly polite
+non-interest.
+
+"The little devil!" said Mrs. Maclntyre, driven to violence. "Ye've no
+forgotten him alretty?"
+
+Between them they slew the centipede. Thus was he rewarded for his
+agency toward the recovery of things lost at the Hammersmiths' ball.
+
+It seems that Teddy, in due course, remembered the glove, and when he
+returned to the house at sunset made a secret but exhaustive search
+for it. Not until evening, upon the moonlit eastern gallery, did he
+find it. It was upon the hand that he had thought lost to him forever,
+and so he was moved to repeat certain nonsense that he had been
+commanded never, never to utter again. Teddy's fences were down.
+
+This time there was no ambition to stand in the way, and the wooing
+was as natural and successful as should be between ardent shepherd and
+gentle shepherdess.
+
+The prairies changed to a garden. The Rancho de las Sombras became the
+Ranch of Light.
+
+A few days later Octavia received a letter from Mr. Bannister, in
+reply to one she had written to him asking some questions about her
+business. A portion of the letter ran as follows:
+
+
+ "I am at a loss to account for your references to the sheep ranch.
+ Two months after your departure to take up your residence upon it,
+ it was discovered that Colonel Beaupree's title was worthless. A
+ deed came to light showing that he disposed of the property before
+ his death. The matter was reported to your manager, Mr. Westlake,
+ who at once repurchased the property. It is entirely beyond my
+ powers of conjecture to imagine how you have remained in ignorance
+ of this fact. I beg that you that will at once confer with that
+ gentleman, who will, at least, corroborate my statement."
+
+
+Octavia sought Teddy, with battle in her eye.
+
+"What are you working on this ranch for?" she asked once more.
+
+"One hundred--" he began to repeat, but saw in her face that she
+knew. She held Mr. Bannister's letter in her hand. He knew that the
+game was up.
+
+"It's my ranch," said Teddy, like a schoolboy detected in evil. "It's
+a mighty poor manager that isn't able to absorb the boss's business if
+you give him time."
+
+"Why were you working down here?" pursued Octavia still struggling
+after the key to the riddle of Teddy.
+
+"To tell the truth, 'Tave," said Teddy, with quiet candour, "it wasn't
+for the salary. That about kept me in cigars and sunburn lotions. I
+was sent south by my doctor. 'Twas that right lung that was going to
+the bad on account of over-exercise and strain at polo and gymnastics.
+I needed climate and ozone and rest and things of that sort."
+
+In an instant Octavia was close against the vicinity of the affected
+organ. Mr. Bannister's letter fluttered to the floor.
+
+"It's--it's well now, isn't it, Teddy?"
+
+"Sound as a mesquite chunk. I deceived you in one thing. I paid fifty
+thousand for your ranch as soon as I found you had no title. I had
+just about that much income accumulated at my banker's while I've been
+herding sheep down here, so it was almost like picking the thing up on
+a bargain-counter for a penny. There's another little surplus of
+unearned increment piling up there, 'Tave. I've been thinking of a
+wedding trip in a yacht with white ribbons tied to the mast, through
+the Mediterranean, and then up among the Hebrides and down Norway to
+the Zuyder Zee."
+
+"And I was thinking," said Octavia, softly, "of a wedding gallop with
+my manager among the flocks of sheep and back to a wedding breakfast
+with Mrs. MacIntyre on the gallery, with, maybe, a sprig of orange
+blossom fastened to the red jar above the table."
+
+Teddy laughed, and began to chant:
+
+ "Little Bo-Peep has lost her sheep,
+ And doesn't know where to find 'em.
+ Let 'em alone, and they'll come home,
+ And--"
+
+Octavia drew his head down, and whispered in his ear, But that is one
+of the tales they brought behind them.
+
+
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Whirligigs, by O. Henry
+(#3 in our series by O. Henry)
+
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+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Whirligigs
+
+Author: O. Henry
+
+Release Date: January, 1999 [EBook #1595]
+[Most recently updated: May 2, 2004]
+
+Edition: 11
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, WHIRLIGIGS ***
+
+
+
+
+E-text prepared by anonymous Project Gutenberg Volunteers and revised by
+Joseph E. Loewenstein, M.D.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHIRLIGIGS
+
+by
+
+O. HENRY
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. THE WORLD AND THE DOOR
+
+ II. THE THEORY AND THE HOUND
+
+ III. THE HYPOTHESES OF FAILURE
+
+ IV. CALLOWAY'S CODE
+
+ V. A MATTER OF MEAN ELEVATION
+
+ VI. "GIRL"
+
+ VII. SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW
+
+ VIII. THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF
+
+ IX. THE MARRY MONTH OF MAY
+
+ X. A TECHNICAL ERROR
+
+ XI. SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE
+
+ XII. THE WHIRLIGIG OF LIFE
+
+ XIII. A SACRIFICE HIT
+
+ XIV. THE ROADS WE TAKE
+
+ XV. A BLACKJACK BARGAINER
+
+ XVI. THE SONG AND THE SERGEANT
+
+ XVII. ONE DOLLAR'S WORTH
+
+XVIII. A NEWSPAPER STORY
+
+ XIX. TOMMY'S BURGLAR
+
+ XX. A CHAPARRAL CHRISTMAS
+
+ XXI. A LITTLE LOCAL COLOUR
+
+ XXII. GEORGIA'S RULING
+
+XXIII. BLIND MAN'S HOLIDAY
+
+ XXIV. MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+THE WORLD AND THE DOOR
+
+
+A favourite dodge to get your story read by the public is to assert
+that it is true, and then add that Truth is stranger than Fiction.
+I do not know if the yarn I am anxious for you to read is true; but
+the Spanish purser of the fruit steamer _El Carrero_ swore to me by
+the shrine of Santa Guadalupe that he had the facts from the U. S.
+vice-consul at La Paz--a person who could not possibly have been
+cognizant of half of them.
+
+As for the adage quoted above, I take pleasure in puncturing it by
+affirming that I read in a purely fictional story the other day the
+line: "'Be it so,' said the policeman." Nothing so strange has yet
+cropped out in Truth.
+
+
+When H. Ferguson Hedges, millionaire promoter, investor and man-about-
+New-York, turned his thoughts upon matters convivial, and word of it
+went "down the line," bouncers took a precautionary turn at the Indian
+clubs, waiters put ironstone china on his favourite tables, cab
+drivers crowded close to the curbstone in front of all-night cafes,
+and careful cashiers in his regular haunts charged up a few bottles to
+his account by way of preface and introduction.
+
+As a money power a one-millionaire is of small account in a city where
+the man who cuts your slice of beef behind the free-lunch counter
+rides to work in his own automobile. But Hedges spent his money as
+lavishly, loudly and showily as though he were only a clerk
+squandering a week's wages. And, after all, the bartender takes no
+interest in your reserve fund. He would rather look you up on his
+cash register than in Bradstreet.
+
+On the evening that the material allegation of facts begins, Hedges
+was bidding dull care begone in the company of five or six good
+fellows--acquaintances and friends who had gathered in his wake.
+
+Among them were two younger men--Ralph Merriam, a broker, and Wade,
+his friend.
+
+Two deep-sea cabmen were chartered. At Columbus Circle they hove to
+long enough to revile the statue of the great navigator,
+unpatriotically rebuking him for having voyaged in search of land
+instead of liquids. Midnight overtook the party marooned in the rear
+of a cheap cafe far uptown.
+
+Hedges was arrogant, overriding and quarrelsome. He was burly and
+tough, iron-gray but vigorous, "good" for the rest of the night. There
+was a dispute--about nothing that matters--and the five-fingered words
+were passed--the words that represent the glove cast into the lists.
+Merriam played the role of the verbal Hotspur.
+
+Hedges rose quickly, seized his chair, swung it once and smashed
+wildly down at Merriam's head. Merriam dodged, drew a small revolver
+and shot Hedges in the chest. The leading roysterer stumbled, fell in
+a wry heap, and lay still.
+
+Wade, a commuter, had formed that habit of promptness. He juggled
+Merriam out a side door, walked him to the corner, ran him a block and
+caught a hansom. They rode five minutes and then got out on a dark
+corner and dismissed the cab. Across the street the lights of a small
+saloon betrayed its hectic hospitality.
+
+"Go in the back room of that saloon," said Wade, "and wait. I'll go
+find out what's doing and let you know. You may take two drinks while
+I am gone--no more."
+
+At ten minutes to one o'clock Wade returned. "Brace up, old chap," he
+said. "The ambulance got there just as I did. The doctor says he's
+dead. You may have one more drink. You let me run this thing for
+you. You've got to skip. I don't believe a chair is legally a deadly
+weapon. You've got to make tracks, that's all there is to it."
+
+Merriam complained of the cold querulously, and asked for another
+drink. "Did you notice what big veins he had on the back of his
+hands?" he said. "I never could stand--I never could--"
+
+"Take one more," said Wade, "and then come on. I'll see you through."
+
+Wade kept his promise so well that at eleven o'clock the next morning
+Merriam, with a new suit case full of new clothes and hair-brushes,
+stepped quietly on board a little 500-ton fruit steamer at an East
+River pier. The vessel had brought the season's first cargo of limes
+from Port Limon, and was homeward bound. Merriam had his bank balance
+of $2,800 in his pocket in large bills, and brief instructions to pile
+up as much water as he could between himself and New York. There was
+no time for anything more.
+
+From Port Limon Merriam worked down the coast by schooner and sloop to
+Colon, thence across the isthmus to Panama, where he caught a tramp
+bound for Callao and such intermediate ports as might tempt the
+discursive skipper from his course.
+
+It was at La Paz that Merriam decided to land--La Paz the Beautiful,
+a little harbourless town smothered in a living green ribbon that
+banded the foot of a cloud-piercing mountain. Here the little
+steamer stopped to tread water while the captain's dory took him
+ashore that he might feel the pulse of the cocoanut market. Merriam
+went too, with his suit case, and remained.
+
+Kalb, the vice-consul, a Graeco-Armenian citizen of the United States,
+born in Hessen-Darmstadt, and educated in Cincinnati ward primaries,
+considered all Americans his brothers and bankers. He attached
+himself to Merriam's elbow, introduced him to every one in La Paz who
+wore shoes, borrowed ten dollars and went back to his hammock.
+
+There was a little wooden hotel in the edge of a banana grove, facing
+the sea, that catered to the tastes of the few foreigners that had
+dropped out of the world into the _triste_ Peruvian town. At Kalb's
+introductory: "Shake hands with ----," he had obediently exchanged
+manual salutations with a German doctor, one French and two Italian
+merchants, and three or four Americans who were spoken of as gold men,
+rubber men, mahogany men--anything but men of living tissue.
+
+After dinner Merriam sat in a corner of the broad front _galeria_ with
+Bibb, a Vermonter interested in hydraulic mining, and smoked and drank
+Scotch "smoke." The moonlit sea, spreading infinitely before him,
+seemed to separate him beyond all apprehension from his old life. The
+horrid tragedy in which he had played such a disastrous part now
+began, for the first time since he stole on board the fruiter, a
+wretched fugitive, to lose its sharper outlines. Distance lent
+assuagement to his view. Bibb had opened the flood-gates of a stream
+of long-dammed discourse, overjoyed to have captured an audience that
+had not suffered under a hundred repetitions of his views and
+theories.
+
+"One year more," said Bibb, "and I'll go back to God's country. Oh, I
+know it's pretty here, and you get _dolce far niente_ handed to you in
+chunks, but this country wasn't made for a white man to live in.
+You've got to have to plug through snow now and then, and see a game
+of baseball and wear a stiff collar and have a policeman cuss you.
+Still, La Paz is a good sort of a pipe-dreamy old hole. And Mrs.
+Conant is here. When any of us feels particularly like jumping into
+the sea we rush around to her house and propose. It's nicer to be
+rejected by Mrs. Conant than it is to be drowned. And they say
+drowning is a delightful sensation."
+
+"Many like her here?" asked Merriam.
+
+"Not anywhere," said Bibb, with a comfortable sigh. She's the only
+white woman in La Paz. The rest range from a dappled dun to the
+colour of a b-flat piano key. She's been here a year. Comes from--
+well, you know how a woman can talk--ask 'em to say 'string' and
+they'll say 'crow's foot' or 'cat's cradle.' Sometimes you'd think
+she was from Oshkosh, and again from Jacksonville, Florida, and the
+next day from Cape Cod."
+
+"Mystery?" ventured Merriam.
+
+"M--well, she looks it; but her talk's translucent enough. But
+that's a woman. I suppose if the Sphinx were to begin talking she'd
+merely say: 'Goodness me! more visitors coming for dinner, and nothing
+to eat but the sand which is here.' But you won't think about that
+when you meet her, Merriam. You'll propose to her too."
+
+To make a hard story soft, Merriam did meet her and propose to her.
+He found her to be a woman in black with hair the colour of a bronze
+turkey's wings, and mysterious, _remembering_ eyes that--well, that
+looked as if she might have been a trained nurse looking on when Eve
+was created. Her words and manner, though, were translucent, as Bibb
+had said. She spoke, vaguely, of friends in California and some of
+the lower parishes in Louisiana. The tropical climate and indolent
+life suited her; she had thought of buying an orange grove later on;
+La Paz, all in all, charmed her.
+
+Merriam's courtship of the Sphinx lasted three months, although be did
+not know that he was courting her. He was using her as an antidote
+for remorse, until he found, too late, that he had acquired the habit.
+During that time he had received no news from home. Wade did not know
+where he was; and he was not sure of Wade's exact address, and was
+afraid to write. He thought he had better let matters rest as they
+were for a while.
+
+One afternoon he and Mrs. Conant hired two ponies and rode out along
+the mountain trail as far as the little cold river that came tumbling
+down the foothills. There they stopped for a drink, and Merriam spoke
+his piece--he proposed, as Bibb had prophesied.
+
+Mrs. Conant gave him one glance of brilliant tenderness, and then her
+face took on such a strange, haggard look that Merriam was shaken out
+of his intoxication and back to his senses.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Florence," he said, releasing her hand; "but I'll
+have to hedge on part of what I said. I can't ask you to marry me, of
+course. I killed a man in New York--a man who was my friend--shot
+him down--in quite a cowardly manner, I understand. Of course, the
+drinking didn't excuse it. Well, I couldn't resist having my say; and
+I'll always mean it. I'm here as a fugitive from justice, and--I
+suppose that ends our acquaintance."
+
+Mrs. Conant plucked little leaves assiduously from the low-hanging
+branch of a lime tree.
+
+"I suppose so," she said, in low and oddly uneven tones; "but that
+depends upon you. I'll be as honest as you were. I poisoned my
+husband. I am a self-made widow. A man cannot love a murderess. So
+I suppose that ends our acquaintance."
+
+She looked up at him slowly. His face turned a little pale, and he
+stared at her blankly, like a deaf-and-dumb man who was wondering what
+it was all about.
+
+She took a swift step toward him, with stiffened arms and eyes
+blazing.
+
+"Don't look at me like that!" she cried, as though she were in acute
+pain. "Curse me, or turn your back on me, but don't look that way.
+Am I a woman to be beaten? If I could show you--here on my arms,
+and on my back are scars--and it has been more than a year--scars
+that he made in his brutal rages. A holy nun would have risen and
+struck the fiend down. Yes, I killed him. The foul and horrible
+words that he hurled at me that last day are repeated in my ears every
+night when I sleep. And then came his blows, and the end of my
+endurance. I got the poison that afternoon. It was his custom to
+drink every night in the library before going to bed a hot punch made
+of rum and wine. Only from my fair hands would he receive it--
+because he knew the fumes of spirits always sickened me. That night
+when the maid brought it to me I sent her downstairs on an errand.
+Before taking him his drink I went to my little private cabinet and
+poured into it more than a tea-spoonful of tincture of aconite--
+enough to kill three men, so I had learned. I had drawn $6,000 that I
+had in bank, and with that and a few things in a satchel I left the
+house without any one seeing me. As I passed the library I heard him
+stagger up and fall heavily on a couch. I took a night train for New
+Orleans, and from there I sailed to the Bermudas. I finally cast
+anchor in La Paz. And now what have you to say? Can you open your
+mouth?"
+
+Merriam came back to life.
+
+"Florence," he said earnestly, "I want you. I don't care what you've
+done. If the world--"
+
+"Ralph," she interrupted, almost with a scream, "be my world!"
+
+Her eyes melted; she relaxed magnificently and swayed toward Merriam
+so suddenly that he had to jump to catch her.
+
+Dear me! in such scenes how the talk runs into artificial prose. But
+it can't be helped. It's the subconscious smell of the footlights'
+smoke that's in all of us. Stir the depths of your cook's soul
+sufficiently and she will discourse in Bulwer-Lyttonese.
+
+Merriam and Mrs. Conant were very happy. He announced their
+engagement at the Hotel Orilla del Mar. Eight foreigners and four
+native Astors pounded his back and shouted insincere congratulations
+at him. Pedrito, the Castilian-mannered barkeep, was goaded to extra
+duty until his agility would have turned a Boston cherry-phosphate
+clerk a pale lilac with envy.
+
+They were both very happy. According to the strange mathematics of
+the god of mutual affinity, the shadows that clouded their pasts when
+united became only half as dense instead of darker. They shut the
+world out and bolted the doors. Each was the other's world. Mrs.
+Conant lived again. The remembering look left her eyes. Merriam was
+with her every moment that was possible. On a little plateau under a
+grove of palms and calabash trees they were going to build a fairy
+bungalow. They were to be married in two months. Many hours of the
+day they had their heads together over the house plans. Their joint
+capital would set up a business in fruit or woods that would yield a
+comfortable support. "Good night, my world," would say Mrs. Conant
+every evening when Merriam left her for his hotel. They were very
+happy. Their love had, circumstantially, that element of melancholy
+in it that it seems to require to attain its supremest elevation. And
+it seemed that their mutual great misfortune or sin was a bond that
+nothing could sever.
+
+One day a steamer hove in the offing. Bare-legged and bare-shouldered
+La Paz scampered down to the beach, for the arrival of a steamer was
+their loop-the-loop, circus, Emancipation Day and four-o'clock tea.
+
+When the steamer was near enough, wise ones proclaimed that she was
+the _Pajaro_, bound up-coast from Callao to Panama.
+
+The _Pajaro_ put on brakes a mile off shore. Soon a boat came bobbing
+shoreward. Merriam strolled down on the beach to look on. In the
+shallow water the Carib sailors sprang out and dragged the boat with a
+mighty rush to the firm shingle. Out climbed the purser, the captain
+and two passengers, ploughing their way through the deep sand toward
+the hotel. Merriam glanced toward them with the mild interest due to
+strangers. There was something familiar to him in the walk of one of
+the passengers. He looked again, and his blood seemed to turn to
+strawberry ice cream in his veins. Burly, arrogant, debonair as ever,
+H. Ferguson Hedges, the man he had killed, was coming toward him ten
+feet away.
+
+When Hedges saw Merriam his face flushed a dark red. Then he shouted
+in his old, bluff way: "Hello, Merriam. Glad to see you. Didn't
+expect to find you out here. Quinby, this is my old friend Merriam,
+of New York--Merriam, Mr. Quinby."
+
+Merriam gave Hedges and then Quinby an ice-cold hand. "Br-r-r-r!" said
+Hedges. "But you've got a frapped flipper! Man, you're not well.
+You're as yellow as a Chinaman. Malarial here? Steer us to a bar if
+there is such a thing, and let's take a prophylactic."
+
+Merriam, still half comatose, led them toward the Hotel Orilla del
+Mar.
+
+"Quinby and I," explained Hedges, puffing through the slippery sand,
+"are looking out along the coast for some investments. We've just
+come up from Concepcion and Valparaiso and Lima. The captain of this
+subsidized ferry boat told us there was some good picking around
+here in silver mines. So we got off. Now, where is that cafe,
+Merriam? Oh, in this portable soda water pavilion?"
+
+Leaving Quinby at the bar, Hedges drew Merriam aside.
+
+"Now, what does this mean?" he said, with gruff kindness. "Are you
+sulking about that fool row we had?"
+
+"I thought," stammered Merriam--"I heard--they told me you were--
+that I had--"
+
+"Well, you didn't, and I'm not," said Hedges. "That fool young
+ambulance surgeon told Wade I was a candidate for a coffin just
+because I'd got tired and quit breathing. I laid up in a private
+hospital for a month; but here I am, kicking as hard as ever. Wade
+and I tried to find you, but couldn't. Now, Merriam, shake hands and
+forget it all. I was as much to blame as you were; and the shot
+really did me good--I came out of the hospital as healthy and fit as
+a cab horse. Come on; that drink's waiting."
+
+"Old man," said Merriam, brokenly, "I don't know how to thank you--I
+--well, you know--"
+
+"Oh, forget it," boomed Hedges. "Quinby'll die of thirst if we don't
+join him."
+
+Bibb was sitting on the shady side of the gallery waiting for the
+eleven-o'clock breakfast. Presently Merriam came out and joined him.
+His eye was strangely bright.
+
+"Bibb, my boy," said he, slowly waving his hand, "do you see those
+mountains and that sea and sky and sunshine?--they're mine, Bibbsy
+--all mine."
+
+"You go in," said Bibb, "and take eight grains of quinine, right away.
+It won't do in this climate for a man to get to thinking he's
+Rockefeller, or James O'Neill either."
+
+Inside, the purser was untying a great roll of newspapers, many of
+them weeks old, gathered in the lower ports by the _Pajaro_ to be
+distributed at casual stopping-places. Thus do the beneficent voyagers
+scatter news and entertainment among the prisoners of sea and
+mountains.
+
+Tio Pancho, the hotel proprietor, set his great silver-rimmed _anteojos_
+upon his nose and divided the papers into a number of smaller rolls.
+A barefooted _muchacho_ dashed in, desiring the post of messenger.
+
+"_Bien venido_," said Tio Pancho. "This to Senora Conant; that to el
+Doctor S-S-Schlegel--_Dios_! what a name to say!--that to Senor Davis
+--one for Don Alberto. These two for the _Casa de Huespedes, Numero
+6, en la calle de las Buenas Gracias_. And say to them all, _muchacho_,
+that the _Pajaro_ sails for Panama at three this afternoon. If any have
+letters to send by the post, let them come quickly, that they may
+first pass through the _correo_."
+
+Mrs. Conant received her roll of newspapers at four o'clock. The boy
+was late in delivering them, because he had been deflected from his
+duty by an iguana that crossed his path and to which he immediately
+gave chase. But it made no hardship, for she had no letters to send.
+
+She was idling in a hammock in the patio of the house that she
+occupied, half awake, half happily dreaming of the paradise that she
+and Merriam had created out of the wrecks of their pasts. She was
+content now for the horizon of that shimmering sea to be the horizon
+of her life. They had shut out the world and closed the door.
+
+Merriam was coming to her house at seven, after his dinner at the
+hotel. She would put on a white dress and an apricot-coloured lace
+mantilla, and they would walk an hour under the cocoanut palms by the
+lagoon. She smiled contentedly, and chose a paper at random from the
+roll the boy had brought.
+
+At first the words of a certain headline of a Sunday newspaper meant
+nothing to her; they conveyed only a visualized sense of familiarity.
+The largest type ran thus: "Lloyd B. Conant secures divorce." And then
+the subheadings: "Well-known Saint Louis paint manufacturer wins
+suit, pleading one year's absence of wife." "Her mysterious
+disappearance recalled." "Nothing has been heard of her since."
+
+Twisting herself quickly out of the hammock, Mrs. Conant's eye soon
+traversed the half-column of the "Recall." It ended thus: "It will be
+remembered that Mrs. Conant disappeared one evening in March of last
+year. It was freely rumoured that her marriage with Lloyd B. Conant
+resulted in much unhappiness. Stories were not wanting to the effect
+that his cruelty toward his wife had more than once taken the form of
+physical abuse. After her departure a full bottle of tincture of
+aconite, a deadly poison, was found in a small medicine cabinet in her
+bedroom. This might have been an indication that she meditated
+suicide. It is supposed that she abandoned such an intention if she
+possessed it, and left her home instead."
+
+Mrs. Conant slowly dropped the paper, and sat on a chair, clasping her
+hands tightly.
+
+"Let me think--O God!--let me think," she whispered. "I took
+the bottle with me . . . I threw it out of the window of the train
+. . . I-- . . . there was another bottle in the cabinet . . .
+there were two, side by side--the aconite--and the valerian that I
+took when I could not sleep . . . If they found the aconite bottle
+full, why--but, he is alive, of course--I gave him only a
+harmless dose of valerian . . . I am not a murderess in fact . . .
+Ralph, I--O God, don't let this be a dream!"
+
+She went into the part of the house that she rented from the old
+Peruvian man and his wife, shut the door, and walked up and down her
+room swiftly and feverishly for half an hour. Merriam's photograph
+stood in a frame on a table. She picked it up, looked at it with a
+smile of exquisite tenderness, and--dropped four tears on it. And
+Merriam only twenty rods away! Then she stood still for ten minutes,
+looking into space. She looked into space through a slowly opening
+door. On her side of the door was the building material for a castle
+of Romance--love, an Arcady of waving palms, a lullaby of waves on
+the shore of a haven of rest, respite, peace, a lotus land of dreamy
+ease and security--a life of poetry and heart's ease and refuge.
+Romanticist, will you tell me what Mrs. Conant saw on the other side
+of the door? You cannot?--that is, you will not? Very well; then
+listen.
+
+_She saw herself go into a department store and buy five spools of
+silk thread and three yards of gingham to make an apron for the cook.
+"Shall I charge it, ma'am?" asked the clerk. As she walked out a
+lady whom she met greeted her cordially. "Oh, where did you get the
+pattern for those sleeves, dear Mrs. Conant?" she said. At the corner
+a policeman helped her across the street and touched his helmet. "Any
+callers?" she asked the maid when she reached home. "Mrs. Waldron,"
+answered the maid, "and the two Misses Jenkinson." "Very well," she
+said. "You may bring me a cup of tea, Maggie._"
+
+Mrs. Conant went to the door and called Angela, the old Peruvian
+woman. "If Mateo is there send him to me." Mateo, a half-breed,
+shuffling and old but efficient, came.
+
+"Is there a steamer or a vessel of any kind leaving this coast
+to-night or to-morrow that I can get passage on?" she asked.
+
+Mateo considered.
+
+"At Punta Reina, thirty miles down the coast, senora," he answered,
+"there is a small steamer loading with cinchona and dyewoods. She
+sails for San Francisco to-morrow at sunrise. So says my brother, who
+arrived in his sloop to-day, passing by Punta Reina."
+
+"You must take me in that sloop to that steamer to-night. Will you do
+that?"
+
+"Perhaps--" Mateo shrugged a suggestive shoulder. Mrs. Conant
+took a handful of money from a drawer and gave it to him.
+
+"Get the sloop ready behind the little point of land below the town,"
+she ordered. "Get sailors, and be ready to sail at six o'clock. In
+half an hour bring a cart partly filled with straw into the patio
+here, and take my trunk to the sloop. There is more money yet. Now,
+hurry."
+
+For one time Mateo walked away without shuffling his feet.
+
+"Angela," cried Mrs. Conant, almost fiercely, "come and help me pack.
+I am going away. Out with this trunk. My clothes first. Stir
+yourself. Those dark dresses first. Hurry."
+
+From the first she did not waver from her decision. Her view was clear
+and final. Her door had opened and let the world in. Her love for
+Merriam was not lessened; but it now appeared a hopeless and
+unrealizable thing. The visions of their future that had seemed so
+blissful and complete had vanished. She tried to assure herself that
+her renunciation was rather for his sake than for her own. Now that
+she was cleared of her burden--at least, technically--would not
+his own weigh too heavily upon him? If she should cling to him, would
+not the difference forever silently mar and corrode their happiness?
+Thus she reasoned; but there were a thousand little voices calling to
+her that she could feel rather than hear, like the hum of distant,
+powerful machinery--the little voices of the world, that, when
+raised in unison, can send their insistent call through the thickest
+door.
+
+Once while packing, a brief shadow of the lotus dream came back to
+her. She held Merriam's picture to her heart with one hand, while she
+threw a pair of shoes into the trunk with her other.
+
+At six o'clock Mateo returned and reported the sloop ready. He and
+his brother lifted the trunk into the cart, covered it with straw and
+conveyed it to the point of embarkation. From there they transferred
+it on board in the sloop's dory. Then Mateo returned for additional
+orders.
+
+Mrs. Conant was ready. She had settled all business matters with
+Angela, and was impatiently waiting. She wore a long, loose black-silk
+duster that she often walked about in when the evenings were chilly.
+On her head was a small round hat, and over it the apricot-coloured
+lace mantilla.
+
+Dusk had quickly followed the short twilight. Mateo led her by dark
+and grass-grown streets toward the point behind which the sloop was
+anchored. On turning a corner they beheld the Hotel Orilla del Mar
+three streets away, nebulously aglow with its array of kerosene lamps.
+
+Mrs. Conant paused, with streaming eyes. "I must, I _must_ see him
+once before I go," she murmured in anguish. But even then she did not
+falter in her decision. Quickly she invented a plan by which she might
+speak to him, and yet make her departure without his knowing. She
+would walk past the hotel, ask some one to call him out and talk a few
+moments on some trivial excuse, leaving him expecting to see her at
+her home at seven.
+
+She unpinned her hat and gave it to Mateo. "Keep this, and wait here
+till I come," she ordered. Then she draped the mantilla over her head
+as she usually did when walking after sunset, and went straight to the
+Orilla del Mar.
+
+She was glad to see the bulky, white-clad figure of Tio Pancho
+standing alone on the gallery.
+
+"Tio Pancho," she said, with a charming smile, "may I trouble you to
+ask Mr. Merriam to come out for just a few moments that I may speak
+with him?"
+
+Tio Pancho bowed as an elephant bows.
+
+"Buenas tardes, Senora Conant," he said, as a cavalier talks. And
+then he went on, less at his ease:
+
+"But does not the senora know that Senor Merriam sailed on the _Pajaro_
+for Panama at three o'clock of this afternoon?"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+THE THEORY AND THE HOUND
+
+
+Not many days ago my old friend from the tropics, J. P. Bridger,
+United States consul on the island of Ratona, was in the city. We
+had wassail and jubilee and saw the Flatiron building, and missed
+seeing the Bronxless menagerie by about a couple of nights. And
+then, at the ebb tide, we were walking up a street that parallels and
+parodies Broadway.
+
+A woman with a comely and mundane countenance passed us, holding in
+leash a wheezing, vicious, waddling, brute of a yellow pug. The dog
+entangled himself with Bridger's legs and mumbled his ankles in a
+snarling, peevish, sulky bite. Bridger, with a happy smile, kicked
+the breath out of the brute; the woman showered us with a quick rain
+of well-conceived adjectives that left us in no doubt as to our place
+in her opinion, and we passed on. Ten yards farther an old woman
+with disordered white hair and her bankbook tucked well hidden
+beneath her tattered shawl begged. Bridger stopped and disinterred
+for her a quarter from his holiday waistcoat.
+
+On the next corner a quarter of a ton of well-clothed man with a
+rice-powdered, fat, white jowl, stood holding the chain of a
+devil-born bulldog whose forelegs were strangers by the length of a
+dachshund. A little woman in a last-season's hat confronted him and
+wept, which was plainly all she could do, while he cursed her in low
+sweet, practised tones.
+
+Bridger smiled again--strictly to himself--and this time he took out
+a little memorandum book and made a note of it. This he had no right
+to do without due explanation, and I said so.
+
+"It's a new theory," said Bridger, "that I picked up down in Ratona.
+I've been gathering support for it as I knock about. The world isn't
+ripe for it yet, but--well I'll tell you; and then you run your
+mind back along the people you've known and see what you make of it."
+
+And so I cornered Bridger in a place where they have artificial palms
+and wine; and he told me the story which is here in my words and on
+his responsibility.
+
+One afternoon at three o'clock, on the island of Ratona, a boy raced
+along the beach screaming, "_Pajaro_, ahoy!"
+
+Thus he made known the keenness of his hearing and the justice of his
+discrimination in pitch.
+
+He who first heard and made oral proclamation concerning the toot
+of an approaching steamer's whistle, and correctly named the steamer,
+was a small hero in Ratona--until the next steamer came. Wherefore,
+there was rivalry among the barefoot youth of Ratona, and many fell
+victims to the softly blown conch shells of sloops which, as they
+enter harbour, sound surprisingly like a distant steamer's signal.
+And some could name you the vessel when its call, in your duller
+ears, sounded no louder than the sigh of the wind through the
+branches of the cocoanut palms.
+
+But to-day he who proclaimed the _Pajaro_ gained his honours. Ratona
+bent its ear to listen; and soon the deep-tongued blast grew louder
+and nearer, and at length Ratona saw above the line of palms on the
+low "point" the two black funnels of the fruiter slowly creeping
+toward the mouth of the harbour.
+
+You must know that Ratona is an island twenty miles off the south of
+a South American republic. It is a port of that republic; and it
+sleeps sweetly in a smiling sea, toiling not nor spinning; fed by the
+abundant tropics where all things "ripen, cease and fall toward the
+grave."
+
+Eight hundred people dream life away in a green-embowered village
+that follows the horseshoe curve of its bijou harbour. They are
+mostly Spanish and Indian _mestizos_, with a shading of San Domingo
+Negroes, a lightening of pure-blood Spanish officials and a slight
+leavening of the froth of three or four pioneering white races. No
+steamers touch at Ratona save the fruit steamers which take on their
+banana inspectors there on their way to the coast. They leave Sunday
+newspapers, ice, quinine, bacon, watermelons and vaccine matter at
+the island and that is about all the touch Ratona gets with the
+world.
+
+The _Pajaro_ paused at the mouth of the harbour, rolling heavily in
+the swell that sent the whitecaps racing beyond the smooth water
+inside. Already two dories from the village--one conveying fruit
+inspectors, the other going for what it could get--were halfway out
+to the steamer.
+
+The inspectors' dory was taken on board with them, and the _Pajaro_
+steamed away for the mainland for its load of fruit.
+
+The other boat returned to Ratona bearing a contribution from the
+_Pajaro's_ store of ice, the usual roll of newspapers and one
+passenger--Taylor Plunkett, sheriff of Chatham County, Kentucky.
+
+Bridger, the United States consul at Ratona, was cleaning his rifle
+in the official shanty under a bread-fruit tree twenty yards from the
+water of the harbour. The consul occupied a place somewhat near the
+tail of his political party's procession. The music of the band
+wagon sounded very faintly to him in the distance. The plums of
+office went to others. Bridger's share of the spoils--the
+consulship at Ratona--was little more than a prune--a dried prune
+from the boarding-house department of the public crib. But $900
+yearly was opulence in Ratona. Besides, Bridger had contracted a
+passion for shooting alligators in the lagoons near his consulate,
+and was not unhappy.
+
+He looked up from a careful inspection of his rifle lock and saw a
+broad man filling his doorway. A broad, noiseless, slow-moving man,
+sunburned almost to the brown of Vandyke. A man of forty-five,
+neatly clothed in homespun, with scanty light hair, a close-clipped
+brown-and-gray beard and pale-blue eyes expressing mildness and
+simplicity.
+
+"You are Mr. Bridger, the consul," said the broad man. "They
+directed me here. Can you tell me what those big bunches of things
+like gourds are in those trees that look like feather dusters along
+the edge of the water?"
+
+"Take that chair," said the consul, reoiling his cleaning rag.
+"No, the other one--that bamboo thing won't hold you. Why, they're
+cocoanuts--green cocoanuts. The shell of 'em is always a light
+green before they're ripe."
+
+"Much obliged," said the other man, sitting down carefully. "I
+didn't quite like to tell the folks at home they were olives unless I
+was sure about it. My name is Plunkett. I'm sheriff of Chatham
+County, Kentucky. I've got extradition papers in my pocket
+authorizing the arrest of a man on this island. They've been signed
+by the President of this country, and they're in correct shape. The
+man's name is Wade Williams. He's in the cocoanut raising
+business. What he's wanted for is the murder of his wife two years
+ago. Where can I find him?"
+
+The consul squinted an eye and looked through his rifle barrel.
+
+"There's nobody on the island who calls himself 'Williams,'" he
+remarked.
+
+"Didn't suppose there was," said Plunkett mildly. "He'll do by any
+other name."
+
+"Besides myself," said Bridger, "there are only two Americans on
+Ratona--Bob Reeves and Henry Morgan."
+
+"The man I want sells cocoanuts," suggested Plunkett.
+
+"You see that cocoanut walk extending up to the point?" said the
+consul, waving his hand toward the open door. "That belongs to Bob
+Reeves. Henry Morgan owns half the trees to loo'ard on the island."
+
+"One, month ago," said the sheriff, "Wade Williams wrote a
+confidential letter to a man in Chatham county, telling him where he
+was and how he was getting along. The letter was lost; and the person
+that found it gave it away. They sent me after him, and I've got the
+papers. I reckon he's one of your cocoanut men for certain."
+
+"You've got his picture, of course," said Bridger. "It might be
+Reeves or Morgan, but I'd hate to think it. They're both as fine
+fellows as you'd meet in an all-day auto ride."
+
+"No," doubtfully answered Plunkett; "there wasn't any picture of
+Williams to be had. And I never saw him myself. I've been sheriff
+only a year. But I've got a pretty accurate description of him. About
+5 feet 11; dark-hair and eyes; nose inclined to be Roman; heavy about
+the shoulders; strong, white teeth, with none missing; laughs a good
+deal, talkative; drinks considerably but never to intoxication; looks
+you square in the eye when talking; age thirty-five. Which one of
+your men does that description fit?"
+
+The consul grinned broadly.
+
+"I'll tell you what you do," he said, laying down his rifle and
+slipping on his dingy black alpaca coat. "You come along, Mr.
+Plunkett, and I'll take you up to see the boys. If you can tell
+which one of 'em your description fits better than it does the
+other you have the advantage of me."
+
+Bridger conducted the sheriff out and along the hard beach close to
+which the tiny houses of the village were distributed. Immediately
+back of the town rose sudden, small, thickly wooded hills. Up one of
+these, by means of steps cut in the hard clay, the consul led
+Plunkett. On the very verge of an eminence was perched a two-room
+wooden cottage with a thatched roof. A Carib woman was washing
+clothes outside. The consul ushered the sheriff to the door of the
+room that overlooked the harbour.
+
+Two men were in the room, about to sit down, in their shirt sleeves,
+to a table spread for dinner. They bore little resemblance one to
+the other in detail; but the general description given by Plunkett
+could have been justly applied to either. In height, colour of hair,
+shape of nose, build and manners each of them tallied with it. They
+were fair types of jovial, ready-witted, broad-gauged Americans who
+had gravitated together for companionship in an alien land.
+
+"Hello, Bridger" they called in unison at sight Of the consul. "Come
+and have dinner with us!" And then they noticed Plunkett at his
+heels, and came forward with hospitable curiosity.
+
+"Gentlemen," said the consul, his voice taking on unaccustomed
+formality, "this is Mr. Plunkett. Mr. Plunkett--Mr. Reeves and Mr.
+Morgan."
+
+The cocoanut barons greeted the newcomer joyously. Reeves seemed
+about an inch taller than Morgan, but his laugh was not quite as
+loud. Morgan's eyes were deep brown; Reeves's were black. Reeves
+was the host and busied himself with fetching other chairs and
+calling to the Carib woman for supplemental table ware. It was
+explained that Morgan lived in a bamboo shack to "loo'ard," but that
+every day the two friends dined together. Plunkett stood still
+during the preparations, looking about mildly with his pale-blue
+eyes. Bridger looked apologetic and uneasy.
+
+At length two other covers were laid and the company was assigned to
+places. Reeves and Morgan stood side by side across the table from
+the visitors. Reeves nodded genially as a signal for all to seat
+themselves. And then suddenly Plunkett raised his hand with a
+gesture of authority. He was looking straight between Reeves and
+Morgan.
+
+"Wade Williams," he said quietly, "you are under arrest for murder."
+
+Reeves and Morgan instantly exchanged a quick, bright glance, the
+quality of which was interrogation, with a seasoning of surprise.
+Then, simultaneously they turned to the speaker with a puzzled and
+frank deprecation in their gaze.
+
+"Can't say that we understand you, Mr. Plunkett," said Morgan,
+cheerfully. "Did you say 'Williams'?"
+
+"What's the joke, Bridgy?" asked Reeves, turning, to the consul with
+a smile.
+
+Before Bridger could answer Plunkett spoke again.
+
+"I'll explain," he said, quietly. "One of you don't need any
+explanation, but this is for the other one. One of you is Wade
+Williams of Chatham County, Kentucky. You murdered your wife on May
+5, two years ago, after ill-treating and abusing her continually for
+five years. I have the proper papers in my pocket for taking you
+back with me, and you are going. We will return on the fruit steamer
+that comes back by this island to-morrow to leave its inspectors. I
+acknowledge, gentlemen, that I'm not quite sure which one of you is
+Williams. But Wade Williams goes back to Chatham County to-morrow. I
+want you to understand that."
+
+A great sound of merry laughter from Morgan and Reeves went out over
+the still harbour. Two or three fishermen in the fleet of sloops
+anchored there looked up at the house of the diablos Americanos on
+the hill and wondered.
+
+"My dear Mr. Plunkett," cried Morgan, conquering his mirth, "the
+dinner is getting, cold. Let us sit down and eat. I am anxious to
+get my spoon into that shark-fin soup. Business afterward."
+
+"Sit down, gentlemen, if you please," added Reeves, pleasantly. "I
+am sure Mr. Plunkett will not object. Perhaps a little time may be of
+advantage to him in identifying--the gentleman he wishes to
+arrest."
+
+"No objections, I'm sure," said Plunkett, dropping into his chair
+heavily. "I'm hungry myself. I didn't want to accept the
+hospitality of you folks without giving you notice; that's all."
+
+Reeves set bottles and glasses on the table.
+
+"There's cognac," he said, "and anisada, and Scotch 'smoke,' and rye.
+Take your choice."
+
+Bridger chose rye, Reeves poured three fingers of Scotch for himself,
+Morgan took the same. The sheriff, against much protestation, filled
+his glass from the water bottle.
+
+"Here's to the appetite," said Reeves, raising his glass, "of Mr.
+Williams!" Morgan's laugh and his drink encountering sent him into a
+choking splutter. All began to pay attention to the dinner, which
+was well cooked and palatable.
+
+"Williams!" called Plunkett, suddenly and sharply.
+
+All looked up wonderingly. Reeves found the sheriff's mild eye
+resting upon him. He flushed a little.
+
+"See here," he said, with some asperity, "my name's Reeves, and I
+don't want you to--" But the comedy of the thing came to his rescue,
+and he ended with a laugh.
+
+"I suppose, Mr. Plunkett," said Morgan, carefully seasoning an
+alligator pear, "that you are aware of the fact that you will import
+a good deal of trouble for yourself into Kentucky if you take back
+the wrong man--that is, of course, if you take anybody back?"
+
+"Thank you for the salt," said the sheriff. "Oh, I'll take somebody
+back. It'll be one of you two gentlemen. Yes, I know I'd get stuck
+for damages if I make a mistake. But I'm going to try to get the
+right man."
+
+"I'll tell you what you do," said Morgan, leaning forward with a
+jolly twinkle in his eyes. "You take me. I'll go without any
+trouble. The cocoanut business hasn't panned out well this year, and
+I'd like to make some extra money out of your bondsmen."
+
+"That's not fair," chimed in Reeves. "I got only $16 a thousand for
+my last shipment. Take me, Mr. Plunkett."
+
+"I'll take Wade Williams," said the sheriff, patiently, "or I'll come
+pretty close to it."
+
+"It's like dining with a ghost," remarked Morgan, with a pretended
+shiver. "The ghost of a murderer, too! Will somebody pass the
+toothpicks to the shade of the naughty Mr. Williams?"
+
+Plunkett seemed as unconcerned as if he were dining at his own table
+in Chatham County. He was a gallant trencherman, and the strange
+tropic viands tickled his palate. Heavy, commonplace, almost
+slothful in his movements, he appeared to be devoid of all the
+cunning and watchfulness of the sleuth. He even ceased to observe,
+with any sharpness or attempted discrimination, the two men, one of
+whom he had undertaken with surprising self-confidence, to drag
+away upon the serious charge of wife-murder. Here, indeed, was a
+problem set before him that if wrongly solved would have amounted to
+his serious discomfiture, yet there he sat puzzling his soul (to all
+appearances) over the novel flavour of a broiled iguana cutlet.
+
+The consul felt a decided discomfort. Reeves and Morgan were his
+friends and pals; yet the sheriff from Kentucky had a certain right
+to his official aid and moral support. So Bridger sat the silentest
+around the board and tried to estimate the peculiar situation. His
+conclusion was that both Reeves and Morgan, quickwitted, as he knew
+them to be, had conceived at the moment of Plunkett's disclosure of
+his mission--and in the brief space of a lightning flash--the
+idea that the other might be the guilty Williams; and that each of
+them had decided in that moment loyally to protect his comrade
+against the doom that threatened him. This was the consul's theory
+and if he had been a bookmaker at a race of wits for life and liberty
+he would have offered heavy odds against the plodding sheriff from
+Chatham County, Kentucky.
+
+When the meal was concluded the Carib woman came and removed the
+dishes and cloth. Reeves strewed the table with excellent cigars,
+and Plunkett, with the others, lighted one of these with evident
+gratification.
+
+"I may be dull," said Morgan, with a grin and a wink at Bridger; "but
+I want to know if I am. Now, I say this is all a joke of Mr.
+Plunkett's, concocted to frighten two babes-in-the-woods. Is this
+Williamson to be taken seriously or not?"
+
+"'Williams,'" corrected Plunkett gravely. "I never got off any jokes
+in my life. I know I wouldn't travel 2,000 miles to get off a poor
+one as this would be if I didn't take Wade Williams back with me.
+Gentlemen!" continued the sheriff, now letting his mild eyes travel
+impartially from one of the company to another, "see if you can find
+any joke in this case. Wade Williams is listening to the words I
+utter now; but out of politeness, I will speak of him as a third
+person. For five years he made his wife lead the life of a dog--No;
+I'll take that back. No dog in Kentucky was ever treated as she
+was. He spent the money that she brought him--spent it at races, at
+the card table and on horses and hunting. He was a good fellow to
+his friends, but a cold, sullen demon at home. He wound up the five
+years of neglect by striking her with his closed hand--a hand as
+hard as a stone--when she was ill and weak from suffering. She
+died the next day; and he skipped. That's all there is to it. It's
+enough. I never saw Williams; but I knew his wife. I'm not a man to
+tell half. She and I were keeping company when she met him. She
+went to Louisville on a visit and saw him there. I'll admit that he
+spoilt my chances in no time. I lived then on the edge of the
+Cumberland mountains. I was elected sheriff of Chatham County a year
+after Wade Williams killed his wife. My official duty sends me out
+here after him; but I'll admit that there's personal feeling, too.
+And he's going back with me. Mr.--er--Reeves, will you pass me a
+match?
+
+"Awfully imprudent of Williams," said Morgan, putting his feet up
+against the wall, "to strike a Kentucky lady. Seems to me I've heard
+they were scrappers."
+
+"Bad, bad Williams," said Reeves, pouring out more Scotch.
+
+The two men spoke lightly, but the consul saw and felt the tension
+and the carefulness in their actions and words. "Good old fellows,"
+he said to himself; "they're both all right. Each of 'em is standing
+by the other like a little brick church."
+
+And then a dog walked into the room where they sat--a black-and-tan
+hound, long-eared, lazy, confident of welcome.
+
+Plunkett turned his head and looked at the animal, which halted,
+confidently, within a few feet of his chair.
+
+Suddenly the sheriff, with a deep-mouthed oath, left his seat and,
+bestowed upon the dog a vicious and heavy kick, with his ponderous
+shoe.
+
+The hound, heartbroken, astonished, with flapping ears and incurved
+tail, uttered a piercing yelp of pain and surprise.
+
+Reeves and the consul remained in their chairs, saying nothing, but
+astonished at the unexpected show of intolerance from the easy-going
+man from Chatham county.
+
+But Morgan, with a suddenly purpling face, leaped, to his feet and
+raised a threatening arm above the guest.
+
+"You--brute!" he shouted, passionately; "why did you do that?"
+
+Quickly the amenities returned, Plunkett muttered some indistinct
+apology and regained his seat. Morgan with a decided effort
+controlled his indignation and also returned to his chair.
+
+And then Plunkett with the spring of a tiger, leaped around the
+corner of the table and snapped handcuffs on the paralyzed Morgan's
+wrists.
+
+"Hound-lover and woman-killer!" he cried; "get ready to meet your
+God."
+
+When Bridger had finished I asked him:
+
+"Did he get the right man?"
+
+"He did," said the Consul.
+
+"And how did he know?" I inquired, being in a kind of bewilderment.
+
+"When he put Morgan in the dory," answered Bridger, "the next day to
+take him aboard the _Pajaro_, this man Plunkett stopped to shake hands
+with me and I asked him the same question."
+
+"'Mr. Bridger,' said he, 'I'm a Kentuckian, and I've seen a great
+deal of both men and animals. And I never yet saw a man that was
+overfond of horses and dogs but what was cruel to women.'"
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+THE HYPOTHESES OF FAILURE
+
+
+Lawyer Gooch bestowed his undivided attention upon the engrossing arts
+of his profession. But one flight of fancy did he allow his mind to
+entertain. He was fond of likening his suite of office rooms to the
+bottom of a ship. The rooms were three in number, with a door
+opening from one to another. These doors could also be closed.
+
+"Ships," Lawyer Gooch would say, "are constructed for safety, with
+separate, water-tight compartments in their bottoms. If one
+compartment springs a leak it fills with water; but the good ship goes
+on unhurt. Were it not for the separating bulkheads one leak would
+sink the vessel. Now it often happens that while I am occupied with
+clients, other clients with conflicting interests call. With the
+assistance of Archibald--an office boy with a future--I cause the
+dangerous influx to be diverted into separate compartments, while I
+sound with my legal plummet the depth of each. If necessary, they
+may be baled into the hallway and permitted to escape by way of the
+stairs, which we may term the lee scuppers. Thus the good ship of
+business is kept afloat; whereas if the element that supports her were
+allowed to mingle freely in her hold we might be swamped--ha, ha, ha!"
+
+The law is dry. Good jokes are few. Surely it might be permitted
+Lawyer Gooch to mitigate the bore of briefs, the tedium of torts and
+the prosiness of processes with even so light a levy upon the good
+property of humour.
+
+Lawyer Gooch's practice leaned largely to the settlement of marital
+infelicities. Did matrimony languish through complications, he
+mediated, soothed and arbitrated. Did it suffer from implications,
+he readjusted, defended and championed. Did it arrive at the
+extremity of duplications, he always got light sentences for his
+clients.
+
+But not always was Lawyer Gooch the keen, armed, wily belligerent,
+ready with his two-edged sword to lop off the shackles of Hymen. He
+had been known to build up instead of demolishing, to reunite instead
+of severing, to lead erring and foolish ones back into the fold
+instead of scattering the flock. Often had he by his eloquent and
+moving appeals sent husband and wife, weeping, back into each other's
+arms. Frequently he had coached childhood so successfully that, at
+the psychological moment (and at a given signal) the plaintive pipe of
+"Papa, won't you tum home adain to me and muvver?" had won the day
+and upheld the pillars of a tottering home.
+
+Unprejudiced persons admitted that Lawyer Gooch received as big fees
+from these reyoked clients as would have been paid him had the cases
+been contested in court. Prejudiced ones intimated that his fees were
+doubled, because the penitent couples always came back later for the
+divorce, anyhow.
+
+There came a season in June when the legal ship of Lawyer Gooch (to
+borrow his own figure) was nearly becalmed. The divorce mill grinds
+slowly in June. It is the month of Cupid and Hymen.
+
+Lawyer Gooch, then, sat idle in the middle room of his clientless
+suite. A small anteroom connected--or rather separated--this
+apartment from the hallway. Here was stationed Archibald, who wrested
+from visitors their cards or oral nomenclature which he bore to his
+master while they waited.
+
+Suddenly, on this day, there came a great knocking at the outermost
+door.
+
+Archibald, opening it, was thrust aside as superfluous by the visitor,
+who without due reverence at once penetrated to the office of Lawyer
+Gooch and threw himself with good-natured insolence into a comfortable
+chair facing that gentlemen.
+
+"You are Phineas C. Gooch, attorney-at-law?" said the visitor, his
+tone of voice and inflection making his words at once a question, an
+assertion and an accusation.
+
+Before committing himself by a reply, the lawyer estimated his
+possible client in one of his brief but shrewd and calculating
+glances.
+
+The man was of the emphatic type--large-sized, active, bold and
+debonair in demeanour, vain beyond a doubt, slightly swaggering, ready
+and at ease. He was well-clothed, but with a shade too much
+ornateness. He was seeking a lawyer; but if that fact would seem to
+saddle him with troubles they were not patent in his beaming eye and
+courageous air.
+
+"My name is Gooch," at length the lawyer admitted. Upon pressure he
+would also have confessed to the Phineas C. But he did not consider it
+good practice to volunteer information. "I did not receive your
+card," he continued, by way of rebuke, "so I--"
+
+"I know you didn't," remarked the visitor, coolly; "And you won't just
+yet. Light up?" He threw a leg over an arm of his chair, and tossed
+a handful of rich-hued cigars upon the table. Lawyer Gooch knew the
+brand. He thawed just enough to accept the invitation to smoke.
+
+"You are a divorce lawyer," said the cardless visitor. This time there
+was no interrogation in his voice. Nor did his words constitute a
+simple assertion. They formed a charge--a denunciation--as one would
+say to a dog: "You are a dog." Lawyer Gooch was silent under the
+imputation.
+
+"You handle," continued the visitor, "all the various ramifications of
+busted-up connubiality. You are a surgeon, we might saw, who extracts
+Cupid's darts when he shoots 'em into the wrong parties. You furnish
+patent, incandescent lights for premises where the torch of Hymen has
+burned so low you can't light a cigar at it. Am I right, Mr. Gooch?"
+
+"I have undertaken cases," said the lawyer, guardedly, "in the line to
+which your figurative speech seems to refer. Do you wish to consult me
+professionally, Mr.--" The lawyer paused, with significance.
+
+"Not yet," said the other, with an arch wave of his cigar, "not just
+yet. Let us approach the subject with the caution that should have
+been used in the original act that makes this pow-wow necessary.
+There exists a matrimonial jumble to be straightened out. But before
+I give you names I want your honest--well, anyhow, your professional
+opinion on the merits of the mix-up. I want you to size up the
+catastrophe--abstractly--you understand? I'm Mr. Nobody; and I've got
+a story to tell you. Then you say what's what. Do you get my
+wireless?"
+
+"You want to state a hypothetical case?" suggested Lawyer Gooch.
+
+"That's the word I was after. 'Apothecary' was the best shot I could
+make at it in my mind. The hypothetical goes. I'll state the case.
+Suppose there's a woman--a deuced fine-looking woman--who has run
+away from her husband and home? She's badly mashed on another man who
+went to her town to work up some real estate business. Now, we may as
+well call this woman's husband Thomas R. Billings, for that's his
+name. I'm giving you straight tips on the cognomens. The Lothario
+chap is Henry K. Jessup. The Billingses lived in a little town called
+Susanville--a good many miles from here. Now, Jessup leaves
+Susanville two weeks ago. The next day Mrs. Billings follows him.
+She's dead gone on this man Jessup; you can bet your law library on
+that."
+
+Lawyer Gooch's client said this with such unctuous satisfaction that
+even the callous lawyer experienced a slight ripple of repulsion. He
+now saw clearly in his fatuous visitor the conceit of the lady-killer,
+the egoistic complacency of the successful trifler.
+
+"Now," continued the visitor, "suppose this Mrs. Billings wasn't happy
+at home? We'll say she and her husband didn't gee worth a cent.
+They've got incompatibility to burn. The things she likes, Billings
+wouldn't have as a gift with trading-stamps. It's Tabby and Rover
+with them all the time. She's an educated woman in science and
+culture, and she reads things out loud at meetings. Billings is not
+on. He don't appreciate progress and obelisks and ethics, and
+things of that sort. Old Billings is simply a blink when it comes to
+such things. The lady is out and out above his class. Now, lawyer,
+don't it look like a fair equalization of rights and wrongs that a
+woman like that should be allowed to throw down Billings and take the
+man that can appreciate her?
+
+"Incompatibility," said Lawyer Gooch, "is undoubtedly the source of
+much marital discord and unhappiness. Where it is positively proved,
+divorce would seem to be the equitable remedy. Are you--excuse me--is
+this man Jessup one to whom the lady may safely trust her future?"
+
+"Oh, you can bet on Jessup," said the client, with a confident wag of
+his head. "Jessup's all right. He'll do the square thing. Why, he
+left Susanville just to keep people from talking about Mrs. Billings.
+But she followed him up, and now, of course, he'll stick to her.
+When she gets a divorce, all legal and proper, Jessup will do the
+proper thing."
+
+"And now," said Lawyer Gooch, "continuing the hypothesis, if you
+prefer, and supposing that my services should be desired in the case,
+what--"
+
+The client rose impulsively to his feet.
+
+"Oh, dang the hypothetical business," he exclaimed, impatiently.
+"Let's let her drop, and get down to straight talk. You ought to know
+who I am by this time. I want that woman to have her divorce. I'll
+pay for it. The day you set Mrs. Billings free I'll pay you five
+hundred dollars."
+
+Lawyer Gooch's client banged his fist upon the table to punctuate his
+generosity.
+
+"If that is the case--" began the lawyer.
+
+"Lady to see you, sir," bawled Archibald, bouncing in from his
+anteroom. He had orders to always announce immediately any client
+that might come. There was no sense in turning business away.
+
+Lawyer Gooch took client number one by the arm and led him suavely
+into one of the adjoining rooms. "Favour me by remaining here a few
+minutes, sir," said he. "I will return and resume our consultation
+with the least possible delay. I am rather expecting a visit from a
+very wealthy old lady in connection with a will. I will not keep you
+waiting long."
+
+The breezy gentleman seated himself with obliging acquiescence, and
+took up a magazine. The lawyer returned to the middle office,
+carefully closing behind him the connecting door.
+
+"Show the lady in, Archibald," he said to the office boy, who was
+awaiting the order.
+
+A tall lady, of commanding presence and sternly handsome, entered
+the room. She wore robes--robes; not clothes--ample and fluent.
+In her eye could be perceived the lambent flame of genius and soul.
+In her hand was a green bag of the capacity of a bushel, and an
+umbrella that also seemed to wear a robe, ample and fluent. She
+accepted a chair.
+
+"Are you Mr. Phineas C. Gooch, the lawyer?" she asked, in formal and
+unconciliatory tones.
+
+"I am," answered Lawyer Gooch, without circumlocution. He never
+circumlocuted when dealing with a woman. Women circumlocute. Time is
+wasted when both sides in debate employ the same tactics.
+
+"As a lawyer, sir," began the lady, "you may have acquired some
+knowledge of the human heart. Do you believe that the pusillanimous
+and petty conventions of our artificial social life should stand as an
+obstacle in the way of a noble and affectionate heart when it finds
+its true mate among the miserable and worthless wretches in the world
+that are called men?"
+
+"Madam," said Lawyer Gooch, in the tone that he used in curbing his
+female clients, "this is an office for conducting the practice of law.
+I am a lawyer, not a philosopher, nor the editor of an 'Answers to the
+Lovelorn' column of a newspaper. I have other clients waiting. I
+will ask you kindly to come to the point."
+
+"Well, you needn't get so stiff around the gills about it," said the
+lady, with a snap of her luminous eyes and a startling gyration of her
+umbrella. "Business is what I've come for. I want your opinion in
+the matter of a suit for divorce, as the vulgar would call it, but
+which is really only the readjustment of the false and ignoble
+conditions that the short-sighted laws of man have interposed between
+a loving--"
+
+"I beg your pardon, madam," interrupted Lawyer Gooch, with some
+impatience, "for reminding you again that this is a law office.
+Perhaps Mrs. Wilcox--"
+
+"Mrs. Wilcox is all right," cut in the lady, with a hint of asperity.
+"And so are Tolstoi, and Mrs. Gertrude Atherton, and Omar Khayyam, and
+Mr. Edward Bok. I've read 'em all. I would like to discuss with you
+the divine right of the soul as opposed to the freedom-destroying
+restrictions of a bigoted and narrow-minded society. But I will
+proceed to business. I would prefer to lay the matter before you in
+an impersonal way until you pass upon its merits. That is to describe
+it as a supposable instance, without--"
+
+"You wish to state a hypothetical case?" said Lawyer Gooch.
+
+"I was going to say that," said the lady, sharply. "Now, suppose there
+is a woman who is all soul and heart and aspirations for a complete
+existence. This woman has a husband who is far below her in intellect,
+in taste--in everything. Bah! he is a brute. He despises literature.
+He sneers at the lofty thoughts of the world's great thinkers. He
+thinks only of real estate and such sordid things. He is no mate for a
+woman with soul. We will say that this unfortunate wife one day meets
+with her ideal--a man with brain and heart and force. She loves him.
+Although this man feels the thrill of a new-found affinity he is too
+noble, too honourable to declare himself. He flies from the presence
+of his beloved. She flies after him, trampling, with superb
+indifference, upon the fetters with which an unenlightened social
+system would bind her. Now, what will a divorce cost? Eliza Ann
+Timmins, the poetess of Sycamore Gap, got one for three hundred and
+forty dollars. Can I--I mean can this lady I speak of get one that
+cheap?"
+
+"Madam," said Lawyer Gooch, "your last two or three sentences delight
+me with their intelligence and clearness. Can we not now abandon the
+hypothetical and come down to names and business?"
+
+"I should say so," exclaimed the lady, adopting the practical with
+admirable readiness. "Thomas R. Billings is the name of the low
+brute who stands between the happiness of his legal--his legal, but
+not his spiritual--wife and Henry K. Jessup, the noble man whom
+nature intended for her mate. I," concluded the client, with an air
+of dramatic revelation, "am Mrs. Billings!"
+
+"Gentlemen to see you, sir," shouted Archibald, invading the room
+almost at a handspring. Lawyer Gooch arose from his chair.
+
+"Mrs. Billings," he said courteously, "allow me to conduct you into
+the adjoining office apartment for a few minutes. I am expecting a
+very wealthy old gentleman on business connected with a will. In a
+very short while I will join you, and continue our consultation."
+
+With his accustomed chivalrous manner, Lawyer Gooch ushered his
+soulful client into the remaining unoccupied room, and came out,
+closing the door with circumspection.
+
+The next visitor introduced by Archibald was a thin, nervous,
+irritable-looking man of middle age, with a worried and apprehensive
+expression of countenance. He carried in one hand a small satchel,
+which he set down upon the floor beside the chair which the lawyer
+placed for him. His clothing was of good quality, but it was worn
+without regard to neatness or style, and appeared to be covered with
+the dust of travel.
+
+"You make a specialty of divorce cases," he said, in, an agitated but
+business-like tone.
+
+"I may say," began Lawyer Gooch, "that my practice has not
+altogether avoided--"
+
+"I know you do," interrupted client number three. "You needn't tell
+me. I've heard all about you. I have a case to lay before you
+without necessarily disclosing any connection that I might have with
+it--that is--"
+
+"You wish," said Lawyer Gooch, "to state a hypothetical case.
+
+"You may call it that. I am a plain man of business. I will be as
+brief as possible. We will first take up hypothetical woman. We will
+say she is married uncongenially. In many ways she is a superior
+woman. Physically she is considered to be handsome. She is devoted
+to what she calls literature--poetry and prose, and such stuff. Her
+husband is a plain man in the business walks of life. Their home has
+not been happy, although the husband has tried to make it so. Some
+time ago a man--a stranger--came to the peaceful town in which
+they lived and engaged in some real estate operations. This woman met
+him, and became unaccountably infatuated with him. Her attentions
+became so open that the man felt the community to be no safe place for
+him, so he left it. She abandoned husband and home, and followed him.
+She forsook her home, where she was provided with every comfort, to
+follow this man who had inspired her with such a strange affection.
+Is there anything more to be deplored," concluded the client, in a
+trembling voice, "than the wrecking of a home by a woman's
+uncalculating folly?"
+
+Lawyer Gooch delivered the cautious opinion that there was not.
+
+"This man she has gone to join," resumed the visitor, "is not the man
+to make her happy. It is a wild and foolish self-deception that makes
+her think he will. Her husband, in spite of their many disagreements,
+is the only one capable of dealing with her sensitive and peculiar
+nature. But this she does not realize now."
+
+"Would you consider a divorce the logical cure in the case you
+present?" asked Lawyer Gooch, who felt that the conversation was
+wandering too far from the field of business.
+
+"A divorce!" exclaimed the client, feelingly--almost tearfully.
+"No, no--not that. I have read, Mr. Gooch, of many instances where
+your sympathy and kindly interest led you to act as a mediator
+between estranged husband and wife, and brought them together again.
+Let us drop the hypothetical case--I need conceal no longer that it
+is I who am the sufferer in this sad affair--the names you shall
+have--Thomas R. Billings and wife--and Henry K. Jessup, the man
+with whom she is infatuated."
+
+Client number three laid his hand upon Mr. Gooch's arm. Deep emotion
+was written upon his careworn face. "For Heaven's sake", he said
+fervently, "help me in this hour of trouble. Seek out Mrs. Billings,
+and persuade her to abandon this distressing pursuit of her lamentable
+folly. Tell her, Mr. Gooch, that her husband is willing to receive
+her back to his heart and home--promise her anything that will
+induce her to return. I have heard of your success in these matters.
+Mrs. Billings cannot be very far away. I am worn out with travel
+and weariness. Twice during the pursuit I saw her, but various
+circumstances prevented our having an interview. Will you undertake
+this mission for me, Mr. Gooch, and earn my everlasting gratitude?"
+
+"It is true," said Lawyer Gooch, frowning slightly at the other's last
+words, but immediately calling up an expression of virtuous
+benevolence, "that on a number of occasions I have been successful in
+persuading couples who sought the severing of their matrimonial bonds
+to think better of their rash intentions and return to their homes
+reconciled. But I assure you that the work is often exceedingly
+difficult. The amount of argument, perseverance, and, if I may be
+allowed to say it, eloquence that it requires would astonish you. But
+this is a case in which my sympathies would be wholly enlisted. I
+feel deeply for you sir, and I would be most happy to see husband and
+wife reunited. But my time," concluded the lawyer, looking at his
+watch as if suddenly reminded of the fact, "is valuable."
+
+"I am aware of that," said the client, "and if you will take the case
+and persuade Mrs. Billings to return home and leave the man alone that
+she is following--on that day I will pay you the sum of one thousand
+dollars. I have made a little money in real estate during the recent
+boom in Susanville, and I will not begrudge that amount."
+
+"Retain your seat for a few moments, please," said Lawyer Gooch,
+arising, and again consulting his watch. "I have another client
+waiting in an adjoining room whom I had very nearly forgotten. I will
+return in the briefest possible space."
+
+The situation was now one that fully satisfied Lawyer Gooch's love of
+intricacy and complication. He revelled in cases that presented such
+subtle problems and possibilities. It pleased him to think that he
+was master of the happiness and fate of the three individuals who sat,
+unconscious of one another's presence, within his reach. His old
+figure of the ship glided into his mind. But now the figure failed,
+for to have filled every compartment of an actual vessel would have
+been to endanger her safety; with his compartments full, his ship of
+affairs could but sail on to the advantageous port of a fine, fat fee.
+The thing for him to do, of course, was to wring the best bargain he
+could from some one of his anxious cargo.
+
+First he called to the office boy: "Lock the outer door, Archibald,
+and admit no one." Then he moved, with long, silent strides into the
+room in which client number one waited. That gentleman sat, patiently
+scanning the pictures in the magazine, with a cigar in his mouth and
+his feet upon a table.
+
+"Well," he remarked, cheerfully, as the lawyer entered, "have you made
+up your mind? Does five hundred dollars go for getting the fair lady
+a divorce?"
+
+"You mean that as a retainer?" asked Lawyer Gooch, softly
+interrogative.
+
+"Hey? No; for the whole job. It's enough, ain't it?"
+
+"My fee," said Lawyer Gooch, "would be one thousand five hundred
+dollars. Five hundred dollars down, and the remainder upon issuance
+of the divorce."
+
+A loud whistle came from client number one. His feet descended to the
+floor.
+
+"Guess we can't close the deal," he said, arising, "I cleaned up five
+hundred dollars in a little real estate dicker down in Susanville.
+I'd do anything I could to free the lady, but it out-sizes my pile."
+
+"Could you stand one thousand two hundred dollars?" asked the lawyer,
+insinuatingly.
+
+"Five hundred is my limit, I tell you. Guess I'll have to hunt up a
+cheaper lawyer." The client put on his hat.
+
+"Out this way, please," said Lawyer Gooch, opening the door that led
+into the hallway.
+
+As the gentleman flowed out of the compartment and down the stairs,
+Lawyer Gooch smiled to himself. "Exit Mr. Jessup," he murmured, as he
+fingered the Henry Clay tuft of hair at his ear. "And now for the
+forsaken husband." He returned to the middle office, and assumed a
+businesslike manner.
+
+"I understand," he said to client number three, "that you agree to pay
+one thousand dollars if I bring about, or am instrumental in bringing
+about, the return of Mrs. Billings to her home, and her abandonment of
+her infatuated pursuit of the man for whom she has conceived such a
+violent fancy. Also that the case is now unreservedly in my hands on
+that basis. Is that correct?"
+
+"Entirely", said the other, eagerly. "And I can produce the cash any
+time at two hours' notice."
+
+Lawyer Gooch stood up at his full height. His thin figure seemed to
+expand. His thumbs sought the arm-holes of his vest. Upon his face
+was a look of sympathetic benignity that he always wore during such
+undertakings.
+
+"Then, sir," he said, in kindly tones, "I think I can promise you an
+early relief from your troubles. I have that much confidence in my
+powers of argument and persuasion, in the natural impulses of the
+human heart toward good, and in the strong influence of a husband's
+unfaltering love. Mrs. Billings, sir, is here--in that room--" the
+lawyer's long arm pointed to the door. "I will call her in at once;
+and our united pleadings--"
+
+Lawyer Gooch paused, for client number three had leaped from his chair
+as if propelled by steel springs, and clutched his satchel.
+
+"What the devil," he exclaimed, harshly, "do you mean? That woman in
+there! I thought I shook her off forty miles back."
+
+He ran to the open window, looked out below, and threw one leg over
+the sill.
+
+"Stop!" cried Lawyer Gooch, in amazement. "What would you do? Come,
+Mr. Billings, and face your erring but innocent wife. Our combined
+entreaties cannot fail to--"
+
+"Billings!" shouted the now thoroughly moved client. "I'll Billings
+you, you old idiot!"
+
+Turning, he hurled his satchel with fury at the lawyer's head. It
+struck that astounded peacemaker between the eyes, causing him to
+stagger backward a pace or two. When Lawyer Gooch recovered his wits
+he saw that his client had disappeared. Rushing to the window, he
+leaned out, and saw the recreant gathering himself up from the top of
+a shed upon which he had dropped from the second-story window.
+Without stopping to collect his hat he then plunged downward the
+remaining ten feet to the alley, up which he flew with prodigious
+celerity until the surrounding building swallowed him up from view.
+
+Lawyer Gooch passed his hand tremblingly across his brow. It was a
+habitual act with him, serving to clear his thoughts. Perhaps also it
+now seemed to soothe the spot where a very hard alligator-hide satchel
+had struck.
+
+The satchel lay upon the floor, wide open, with its contents spilled
+about. Mechanically, Lawyer Gooch stooped to gather up the articles.
+The first was a collar; and the omniscient eye of the man of law
+perceived, wonderingly, the initials H. K. J. marked upon it. Then
+came a comb, a brush, a folded map, and a piece of soap. Lastly, a
+handful of old business letters, addressed--every one of them--to
+"Henry K. Jessup, Esq."
+
+Lawyer Gooch closed the satchel, and set it upon the table. He
+hesitated for a moment, and then put on his hat and walked into the
+office boy's anteroom.
+
+"Archibald," he said mildly, as he opened the hall door, "I am going
+around to the Supreme Court rooms. In five minutes you may step into
+the inner office, and inform the lady who is waiting there that"--
+here Lawyer Gooch made use of the vernacular--"that there's nothing
+doing."
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+CALLOWAY'S CODE
+
+
+The New York _Enterprise_ sent H. B. Calloway as special correspondent
+to the Russo-Japanese-Portsmouth war.
+
+For two months Calloway hung about Yokohama and Tokio, shaking dice
+with the other correspondents for drinks of 'rickshaws--oh, no,
+that's something to ride in; anyhow, he wasn't earning the salary
+that his paper was paying him. But that was not Calloway's fault.
+The little brown men who held the strings of Fate between their
+fingers were not ready for the readers of the _Enterprise_ to season
+their breakfast bacon and eggs with the battles of the descendants of
+the gods.
+
+But soon the column of correspondents that were to go out with the
+First Army tightened their field-glass belts and went down to the
+Yalu with Kuroki. Calloway was one of these.
+
+Now, this is no history of the battle of the Yalu River. That has
+been told in detail by the correspondents who gazed at the shrapnel
+smoke rings from a distance of three miles. But, for justice's sake,
+let it be understood that the Japanese commander prohibited a nearer
+view.
+
+Calloway's feat was accomplished before the battle. What he did was
+to furnish the _Enterprise_ with the biggest beat of the war. That
+paper published exclusively and in detail the news of the attack on
+the lines of the Russian General on the same day that it was made.
+No other paper printed a word about it for two days afterward, except
+a London paper, whose account was absolutely incorrect and untrue.
+
+Calloway did this in face of the fact that General Kuroki was making
+his moves and laying his plans with the profoundest secrecy as far
+as the world outside his camps was concerned. The correspondents
+were forbidden to send out any news whatever of his plans; and every
+message that was allowed on the wires was censored with rigid
+severity.
+
+The correspondent for the London paper handed in a cablegram
+describing Kuroki's plans; but as it was wrong from beginning to end
+the censor grinned and let it go through.
+
+So, there they were--Kuroki on one side of the Yalu with forty-two
+thousand infantry, five thousand cavalry, and one hundred and
+twenty-four guns. On the other side, Zassulitch waited for him with
+only twenty-three thousand men, and with a long stretch of river to
+guard. And Calloway had got hold of some important inside information
+that he knew would bring the _Enterprise_ staff around a cablegram as
+thick as flies around a Park Row lemonade stand. If he could only get
+that message past the censor--the new censor who had arrived and
+taken his post that day!
+
+Calloway did the obviously proper thing. He lit his pipe and sat down
+on a gun carriage to think it over. And there we must leave him; for
+the rest of the story belongs to Vesey, a sixteen-dollar-a-week
+reporter on the _Enterprise_.
+
+
+Calloway's cablegram was handed to the managing editor at four
+o'clock in the afternoon. He read it three times; and then drew a
+pocket mirror from a pigeon-hole in his desk, and looked at his
+reflection carefully. Then he went over to the desk of Boyd, his
+assistant (he usually called Boyd when he wanted him), and laid the
+cablegram before him.
+
+"It's from Calloway," he said. "See what you make of it."
+
+The message was dated at Wi-ju, and these were the words of it:
+
+
+ Foregone preconcerted rash witching goes muffled rumour mine dark
+ silent unfortunate richmond existing great hotly brute select
+ mooted parlous beggars ye angel incontrovertible.
+
+
+Boyd read it twice.
+
+"It's either a cipher or a sunstroke," said he.
+
+"Ever hear of anything like a code in the office--a secret code?"
+asked the m. e., who had held his desk for only two years. Managing
+editors come and go.
+
+"None except the vernacular that the lady specials write in," said
+Boyd. "Couldn't be an acrostic, could it?"
+
+"I thought of that," said the m. e., "but the beginning letters
+contain only four vowels. It must be a code of some sort."
+
+"Try em in groups," suggested Boyd. "Let's see--'Rash witching
+goes'--not with me it doesn't. 'Muffled rumour mine'--must
+have an underground wire. 'Dark silent unfortunate richmond'--no
+reason why he should knock that town so hard. 'Existing great
+hotly'--no it doesn't pan out. I'll call Scott."
+
+The city editor came in a hurry, and tried his luck. A city editor
+must know something about everything; so Scott knew a little about
+cipher-writing.
+
+"It may be what is called an inverted alphabet cipher," said he.
+"I'll try that. 'R' seems to be the oftenest used initial letter,
+with the exception of 'm.' Assuming 'r' to mean 'e', the most
+frequently used vowel, we transpose the letters--so."
+
+Scott worked rapidly with his pencil for two minutes; and then showed
+the first word according to his reading--the word "Scejtzez."
+
+"Great!" cried Boyd. "It's a charade. My first is a Russian
+general. Go on, Scott."
+
+"No, that won't work," said the city editor. "It's undoubtedly a
+code. It's impossible to read it without the key. Has the office
+ever used a cipher code?"
+
+"Just what I was asking," said the m.e. "Hustle everybody up that
+ought to know. We must get at it some way. Calloway has evidently
+got hold of something big, and the censor has put the screws on, or
+he wouldn't have cabled in a lot of chop suey like this."
+
+Throughout the office of the _Enterprise_ a dragnet was sent, hauling
+in such members of the staff as would be likely to know of a code,
+past or present, by reason of their wisdom, information, natural
+intelligence, or length of servitude. They got together in a group
+in the city room, with the m. e. in the centre. No one had heard
+of a code. All began to explain to the head investigator that
+newspapers never use a code, anyhow--that is, a cipher code. Of
+course the Associated Press stuff is a sort of code--an abbreviation,
+rather--but--
+
+The m. e. knew all that, and said so. He asked each man how long he
+had worked on the paper. Not one of them had drawn pay from an
+_Enterprise_ envelope for longer than six years. Calloway had been on
+the paper twelve years.
+
+"Try old Heffelbauer," said the m. e. "He was here when Park Row was
+a potato patch."
+
+Heffelbauer was an institution. He was half janitor, half handy-man
+about the office, and half watchman--thus becoming the peer of
+thirteen and one-half tailors. Sent for, he came, radiating his
+nationality.
+
+"Heffelbauer," said the m. e., "did you ever hear of a code belonging
+to the office a long time ago--a private code? You know what a code
+is, don't you?"
+
+"Yah," said Heffelbauer. "Sure I know vat a code is. Yah, apout
+dwelf or fifteen year ago der office had a code. Der reborters in der
+city-room haf it here."
+
+"Ah!" said the m. e. "We're getting on the trail now. Where was it
+kept, Heffelbauer? What do you know about it?"
+
+"Somedimes," said the retainer, "dey keep it in der little room
+behind der library room."
+
+"Can you find it?" asked the m. e. eagerly. "Do you know where it is?"
+
+"Mein Gott!" said Heffelbauer. "How long you dink a code live? Der
+reborters call him a maskeet. But von day he butt mit his head der
+editor, und--"
+
+"Oh, he's talking about a goat," said Boyd. "Get out, Heffelbauer."
+
+Again discomfited, the concerted wit and resource of the _Enterprise_
+huddled around Calloway's puzzle, considering its mysterious words
+in vain.
+
+Then Vesey came in.
+
+Vesey was the youngest reporter. He had a thirty-two-inch chest and
+wore a number fourteen collar; but his bright Scotch plaid suit gave
+him presence and conferred no obscurity upon his whereabouts. He
+wore his hat in such a position that people followed him about to see
+him take it off, convinced that it must be hung upon a peg driven
+into the back of his head. He was never without an immense, knotted,
+hard-wood cane with a German-silver tip on its crooked handle. Vesey
+was the best photograph hustler in the office. Scott said it was
+because no living human being could resist the personal triumph it
+was to hand his picture over to Vesey. Vesey always wrote his own
+news stories, except the big ones, which were sent to the rewrite
+men. Add to this fact that among all the inhabitants, temples, and
+groves of the earth nothing existed that could abash Vesey, and his
+dim sketch is concluded.
+
+Vesey butted into the circle of cipher readers very much as
+Heffelbauer's "code" would have done, and asked what was up. Some
+one explained, with the touch of half-familiar condescension that
+they always used toward him. Vesey reached out and took the
+cablegram from the m. e.'s hand. Under the protection of some
+special Providence, he was always doing appalling things like that,
+and coming, off unscathed.
+
+"It's a code," said Vesey. "Anybody got the key?"
+
+"The office has no code," said Boyd, reaching for the message. Vesey
+held to it.
+
+"Then old Calloway expects us to read it, anyhow," said he. "He's up
+a tree, or something, and he's made this up so as to get it by the
+censor. It's up to us. Gee! I wish they had sent me, too. Say--we
+can't afford to fall down on our end of it. 'Foregone, preconcerted
+rash, witching'--h'm."
+
+Vesey sat down on a table corner and began to whistle softly,
+frowning at the cablegram.
+
+"Let's have it, please," said the m. e. "We've got to get to work on
+it."
+
+"I believe I've got a line on it," said Vesey. "Give me ten
+minutes."
+
+He walked to his desk, threw his hat into a waste-basket, spread out
+flat on his chest like a gorgeous lizard, and started his pencil
+going. The wit and wisdom of the _Enterprise_ remained in a loose
+group, and smiled at one another, nodding their heads toward Vesey.
+Then they began to exchange their theories about the cipher.
+
+It took Vesey exactly fifteen minutes. He brought to the m. e. a pad
+with the code-key written on it.
+
+"I felt the swing of it as soon as I saw it," said Vesey. "Hurrah for
+old Calloway! He's done the Japs and every paper in town that prints
+literature instead of news. Take a look at that."
+
+Thus had Vesey set forth the reading of the code:
+
+ Foregone - conclusion
+ Preconcerted - arrangement
+ Rash - act
+ Witching - hour of midnight
+ Goes - without saying
+ Muffled - report
+ Rumour - hath it
+ Mine - host
+ Dark - horse
+ Silent - majority
+ Unfortunate - pedestrians*
+ Richmond - in the field
+ Existing - conditions
+ Great - White Way
+ Hotly - contested
+ Brute - force
+ Select - few
+ Mooted - question
+ Parlous - times
+ Beggars - description
+ Ye - correspondent
+ Angel - unawares
+ Incontrovertible - fact
+
+ *Mr. Vesey afterward explained that the logical journalistic
+ complement of the word "unfortunate" was once the word
+ "victim." But, since the automobile became so popular, the
+ correct following word is now "pedestrians." Of course, in
+ Calloway's code it meant infantry.
+
+"It's simply newspaper English," explained Vesey. "I've been
+reporting on the _Enterprise_ long enough to know it by heart. Old
+Calloway gives us the cue word, and we use the word that naturally
+follows it just as we use 'em in the paper. Read it over, and you'll
+see how pat they drop into their places. Now, here's the message he
+intended us to get."
+
+Vesey handed out another sheet of paper.
+
+ Concluded arrangement to act at hour of midnight
+ without saying. Report hath it that a large body of
+ cavalry and an overwhelming force of infantry will be
+ thrown into the field. Conditions white. Way contested
+ by only a small force. Question the Times description.
+ Its correspondent is unaware of the facts.
+
+"Great stuff!" cried Boyd excitedly. "Kuroki crosses the Yalu
+to-night and attacks. Oh, we won't do a thing to the sheets that make
+up with Addison's essays, real estate transfers, and bowling scores!"
+
+"Mr. Vesey," said the m. e., with his jollying-which-you-should-regard-
+as-a-favour manner, "you have cast a serious reflection upon the
+literary standards of the paper that employs you. You have also
+assisted materially in giving us the biggest 'beat' of the year. I
+will let you know in a day or two whether you are to be discharged or
+retained at a larger salary. Somebody send Ames to me."
+
+Ames was the king-pin, the snowy-petalled Marguerite, the star-bright
+looloo of the rewrite men. He saw attempted murder in the pains of
+green-apple colic, cyclones in the summer zephyr, lost children in
+every top-spinning urchin, an uprising of the down-trodden masses in
+every hurling of a derelict potato at a passing automobile. When not
+rewriting, Ames sat on the porch of his Brooklyn villa playing
+checkers with his ten-year-old son.
+
+Ames and the "war editor" shut themselves in a room. There was a map
+in there stuck full of little pins that represented armies and
+divisions. Their fingers had been itching for days to move those
+pins along the crooked line of the Yalu. They did so now; and in
+words of fire Ames translated Calloway's brief message into a front
+page masterpiece that set the world talking. He told of the secret
+councils of the Japanese officers; gave Kuroki's flaming speeches in
+full; counted the cavalry and infantry to a man and a horse;
+described the quick and silent building, of the bridge at Suikauchen,
+across which the Mikado's legions were hurled upon the surprised
+Zassulitch, whose troops were widely scattered along the river. And
+the battle!--well, you know what Ames can do with a battle if you give
+him just one smell of smoke for a foundation. And in the same story,
+with seemingly supernatural knowledge, he gleefully scored the most
+profound and ponderous paper in England for the false and misleading
+account of the intended movements of the Japanese First Army printed
+in its issue of _the same date_.
+
+Only one error was made; and that was the fault of the cable operator
+at Wi-ju. Calloway pointed it out after he came back. The word
+"great" in his code should have been "gage," and its complemental
+words "of battle." But it went to Ames "conditions white," and of
+course he took that to mean snow. His description of the Japanese
+army struggling through the snowstorm, blinded by the whirling flakes,
+was thrillingly vivid. The artists turned out some effective
+illustrations that made a hit as pictures of the artillery dragging
+their guns through the drifts. But, as the attack was made on the
+first day of May, "conditions white" excited some amusement. But it
+in made no difference to the _Enterprise_, anyway.
+
+It was wonderful. And Calloway was wonderful in having made the new
+censor believe that his jargon of words meant no more than a
+complaint of the dearth of news and a petition for more expense
+money. And Vesey was wonderful. And most wonderful of all are
+words, and how they make friends one with another, being oft
+associated, until not even obituary notices them do part.
+
+
+On the second day following, the city editor halted at Vesey's desk
+where the reporter was writing the story of a man who had broken his
+leg by falling into a coal-hole--Ames having failed to find a
+murder motive in it.
+
+"The old man says your salary is to be raised to twenty a week," said
+Scott.
+
+"All right," said Vesey. "Every little helps. Say--Mr. Scott,
+which would you say--'We can state without fear of successful
+contradiction,' or, 'On the whole it can be safely asserted'?"
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+A MATTER OF MEAN ELEVATION
+
+
+One winter the Alcazar Opera Company of New Orleans made a speculative
+trip along the Mexican, Central American and South American coasts.
+The venture proved a most successful one. The music-loving,
+impressionable Spanish-Americans deluged the company with dollars and
+"vivas." The manager waxed plump and amiable. But for the
+prohibitive climate he would have put forth the distinctive flower of
+his prosperity--the overcoat of fur, braided, frogged and opulent.
+Almost was he persuaded to raise the salaries of his company. But
+with a mighty effort he conquered the impulse toward such an
+unprofitable effervescence of joy.
+
+At Macuto, on the coast of Venezuela, the company scored its greatest
+success. Imagine Coney Island translated into Spanish and you will
+comprehend Macuto. The fashionable season is from November to March.
+Down from La Guayra and Caracas and Valencia and other interior towns
+flock the people for their holiday season. There are bathing and
+fiestas and bull fights and scandal. And then the people have a
+passion for music that the bands in the plaza and on the sea beach
+stir but do not satisfy. The coming of the Alcazar Opera Company
+aroused the utmost ardour and zeal among the pleasure seekers.
+
+The illustrious Guzman Blanco, President and Dictator of Venezuela,
+sojourned in Macuto with his court for the season. That potent ruler
+--who himself paid a subsidy of 40,000 pesos each year to grand opera
+in Caracas--ordered one of the Government warehouses to be cleared
+for a temporary theatre. A stage was quickly constructed and rough
+wooden benches made for the audience. Private boxes were added for
+the use of the President and the notables of the army and Government.
+
+The company remained in Macuto for two weeks. Each performance filled
+the house as closely as it could be packed. Then the music-mad people
+fought for room in the open doors and windows, and crowded about,
+hundreds deep, on the outside. Those audiences formed a brilliantly
+diversified patch of colour. The hue of their faces ranged from the
+clear olive of the pure-blood Spaniards down through the yellow and
+brown shades of the Mestizos to the coal-black Carib and the Jamaica
+Negro. Scattered among them were little groups of Indians with faces
+like stone idols, wrapped in gaudy fibre-woven blankets--Indians
+down from the mountain states of Zamora and Los Andes and Miranda to
+trade their gold dust in the coast towns.
+
+The spell cast upon these denizens of the interior fastnesses was
+remarkable. They sat in petrified ecstasy, conspicuous among the
+excitable Macutians, who wildly strove with tongue and hand to give
+evidence of their delight. Only once did the sombre rapture of these
+aboriginals find expression. During the rendition of "Faust," Guzman
+Blanco, extravagantly pleased by the "Jewel Song," cast upon the stage
+a purse of gold pieces. Other distinguished citizens followed his lead
+to the extent of whatever loose coin they had convenient, while some
+of the fair and fashionable senoras were moved, in imitation, to
+fling a jewel or a ring or two at the feet of the Marguerite--who
+was, according to the bills, Mlle. Nina Giraud. Then, from different
+parts of the house rose sundry of the stolid hillmen and cast upon the
+stage little brown and dun bags that fell with soft "thumps" and did
+not rebound. It was, no doubt, pleasure at the tribute to her art
+that caused Mlle. Giraud's eyes to shine so brightly when she opened
+these little deerskin bags in her dressing room and found them to
+contain pure gold dust. If so, the pleasure was rightly hers, for her
+voice in song, pure, strong and thrilling with the feeling of the
+emotional artist, deserved the tribute that it earned.
+
+But the triumph of the Alcazar Opera Company is not the theme--it
+but leans upon and colours it. There happened in Macuto a tragic
+thing, an unsolvable mystery, that sobered for a time the gaiety of
+the happy season.
+
+One evening between the short twilight and the time when she should
+have whirled upon the stage in the red and black of the ardent Carmen,
+Mlle. Nina Giraud disappeared from the sight and ken of 6,000 pairs
+of eyes and as many minds in Macuto. There was the usual turmoil and
+hurrying to seek her. Messengers flew to the little French-kept hotel
+where she stayed; others of the company hastened here or there where
+she might be lingering in some tienda or unduly prolonging her bath
+upon the beach. All search was fruitless. Mademoiselle had
+vanished.
+
+Half an hour passed and she did not appear. The dictator, unused to
+the caprices of prime donne, became impatient. He sent an aide from
+his box to say to the manager that if the curtain did not at once rise
+he would immediately hale the entire company to the calabosa, though
+it would desolate his heart, indeed, to be compelled to such an act.
+Birds in Macuto could be made to sing.
+
+The manager abandoned hope for the time of Mlle. Giraud. A member of
+the chorus, who had dreamed hopelessly for years of the blessed
+opportunity, quickly Carmenized herself and the opera went on.
+
+Afterward, when the lost cantatrice appeared not, the aid of the
+authorities was invoked. The President at once set the army, the
+police and all citizens to the search. Not one clue to Mlle. Giraud's
+disappearance was found. The Alcazar left to fill engagements farther
+down the coast.
+
+On the way back the steamer stopped at Macuto and the manager made
+anxious inquiry. Not a trace of the lady had been discovered. The
+Alcazar could do no more. The personal belongings of the missing lady
+were stored in the hotel against her possible later reappearance and
+the opera company continued upon its homeward voyage to New Orleans.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the camino real along the beach the two saddle mules and the four
+pack mules of Don Senor Johnny Armstrong stood, patiently awaiting the
+crack of the whip of the _arriero_, Luis. That would be the signal for
+the start on another long journey into the mountains. The pack mules
+were loaded with a varied assortment of hardware and cutlery. These
+articles Don Johnny traded to the interior Indians for the gold dust
+that they washed from the Andean streams and stored in quills and bags
+against his coming. It was a profitable business, and Senor Armstrong
+expected soon to be able to purchase the coffee plantation that he
+coveted.
+
+Armstrong stood on the narrow sidewalk, exchanging garbled Spanish
+with old Peralto, the rich native merchant who had just charged him
+four prices for half a gross of pot-metal hatchets, and abridged
+English with Rucker, the little German who was Consul for the United
+States.
+
+"Take with you, senor," said Peralto, "the blessings of the saints
+upon your journey."
+
+"Better try quinine," growled Rucker through his pipe. "Take two
+grains every night. And don't make your trip too long, Johnny,
+because we haf needs of you. It is ein villainous game dot Melville
+play of whist, and dere is no oder substitute. _Auf wiedersehen_, und
+keep your eyes dot mule's ears between when you on der edge of der
+brecipices ride."
+
+The bells of Luis's mule jingled and the pack train filed after the
+warning note. Armstrong, waved a good-bye and took his place at the
+tail of the procession. Up the narrow street they turned, and passed
+the two-story wooden Hotel Ingles, where Ives and Dawson and Richards
+and the rest of the chaps were dawdling on the broad piazza, reading
+week-old newspapers. They crowded to the railing and shouted many
+friendly and wise and foolish farewells after him. Across the plaza
+they trotted slowly past the bronze statue of Guzman Blanco, within
+its fence of bayoneted rifles captured from revolutionists, and out
+of the town between the rows of thatched huts swarming with the
+unclothed youth of Macuto. They plunged into the damp coolness of
+banana groves at length to emerge upon a bright stream, where brown
+women in scant raiment laundered clothes destructively upon the rocks.
+Then the pack train, fording the stream, attacked the sudden ascent,
+and bade adieu to such civilization as the coast afforded.
+
+For weeks Armstrong, guided by Luis, followed his regular route among
+the mountains. After he had collected an arroba of the precious
+metal, winning a profit of nearly $5,000, the heads of the lightened
+mules were turned down-trail again. Where the head of the Guarico
+River springs from a great gash in the mountain-side, Luis halted the
+train.
+
+"Half a day's journey from here, Senor," said he, "is the village of
+Tacuzama, which we have never visited. I think many ounces of gold may
+be procured there. It is worth the trial."
+
+Armstrong concurred, and they turned again upward toward Tacuzama.
+The trail was abrupt and precipitous, mounting through a dense
+forest. As night fell, dark and gloomy, Luis once more halted.
+Before them was a black chasm, bisecting the path as far as they could
+see.
+
+Luis dismounted. "There should be a bridge," he called, and ran along
+the cleft a distance. "It is here," he cried, and remounting, led the
+way. In a few moments Armstrong, heard a sound as though a thunderous
+drum were beating somewhere in the dark. It was the falling of the
+mules' hoofs upon the bridge made of strong hides lashed to poles and
+stretched across the chasm. Half a mile further was Tacuzama. The
+village was a congregation of rock and mud huts set in the
+profundity of an obscure wood. As they rode in a sound inconsistent
+with that brooding solitude met their ears. From a long, low mud hut
+that they were nearing rose the glorious voice of a woman in song.
+The words were English, the air familiar to Armstrong's memory, but
+not to his musical knowledge.
+
+He slipped from his mule and stole to a narrow window in one end of
+the house. Peering cautiously inside, he saw, within three feet of
+him, a woman of marvellous, imposing beauty, clothed in a splendid
+loose robe of leopard skins. The hut was packed close to the small
+space in which she stood with the squatting figures of Indians.
+
+The woman finished her song and seated herself close to the little
+window, as if grateful for the unpolluted air that entered it.
+When she had ceased several of the audience rose and cast little
+softly-falling bags at her feet. A harsh murmur--no doubt a
+barbarous kind of applause and comment--went through the grim
+assembly.
+
+Armstrong, was used to seizing opportunities promptly. Taking
+advantage of the noise he called to the woman in a low but distinct
+voice: "Do not turn your head this way, but listen. I am an American.
+If you need assistance tell me how I can render it. Answer as briefly
+as you can."
+
+The woman was worthy of his boldness. Only by a sudden flush of her
+pale cheek did she acknowledge understanding of his words. Then she
+spoke, scarcely moving her lips.
+
+"I am held a prisoner by these Indians. God knows I need help. In
+two hours come to the little hut twenty yards toward the Mountainside.
+There will be a light and a red curtain in the window. There is
+always a guard at the door, whom you will have to overcome. For the
+love of heaven, do not fail to come."
+
+The story seems to shrink from adventure and rescue and mystery. The
+theme is one too gentle for those brave and quickening tones. And yet
+it reaches as far back as time itself. It has been named
+"environment," which is as weak a word as any to express the
+unnameable kinship of man to nature, that queer fraternity that causes
+stones and trees and salt water and clouds to play upon our emotions.
+Why are we made serious and solemn and sublime by mountain heights,
+grave and contemplative by an abundance of overhanging trees,
+reduced to inconstancy and monkey capers by the ripples on a sandy
+beach? Did the protoplasm--but enough. The chemists are looking
+into the matter, and before long they will have all life in the table
+of the symbols.
+
+Briefly, then, in order to confine the story within scientific bounds,
+John Armstrong, went to the hut, choked the Indian guard and carried
+away Mlle. Giraud. With her was also conveyed a number of pounds of
+gold dust she had collected during her six months' forced engagement
+in Tacuzama. The Carabobo Indians are easily the most enthusiastic
+lovers of music between the equator and the French Opera House in New
+Orleans. They are also strong believers that the advice of Emerson
+was good when he said: "The thing thou wantest, O discontented man
+--take it, and pay the price." A number of them had attended the
+performance of the Alcazar Opera Company in Macuto, and found Mlle.
+Giraud's style and technique satisfactory. They wanted her, so they
+took her one evening suddenly and without any fuss. They treated her
+with much consideration, exacting only one song recital each day. She
+was quite pleased at being rescued by Mr. Armstrong. So much for
+mystery and adventure. Now to resume the theory of the protoplasm.
+
+John Armstrong and Mlle. Giraud rode among the Andean peaks, enveloped
+in their greatness and sublimity. The mightiest cousins, furthest
+removed, in nature's great family become conscious of the tie. Among
+those huge piles of primordial upheaval, amid those gigantic silences
+and elongated fields of distance the littlenesses of men are
+precipitated as one chemical throws down a sediment from another.
+They moved reverently, as in a temple. Their souls were uplifted in
+unison with the stately heights. They travelled in a zone of majesty
+and peace.
+
+To Armstrong the woman seemed almost a holy thing. Yet bathed in the
+white, still dignity of her martyrdom that purified her earthly beauty
+and gave out, it seemed, an aura of transcendent loveliness, in those
+first hours of companionship she drew from him an adoration that was
+half human love, half the worship of a descended goddess.
+
+Never yet since her rescue had she smiled. Over her dress she still
+wore the robe of leopard skins, for the mountain air was cold. She
+looked to be some splendid princess belonging to those wild and
+awesome altitudes. The spirit of the region chimed with hers. Her
+eyes were always turned upon the sombre cliffs, the blue gorges and
+the snow-clad turrets, looking a sublime melancholy equal to their
+own. At times on the journey she sang thrilling te deums and
+misereres that struck the true note of the hills, and made their
+route seem like a solemn march down a cathedral aisle. The rescued
+one spoke but seldom, her mood partaking of the hush of nature that
+surrounded them. Armstrong looked upon her as an angel. He could not
+bring himself to the sacrilege of attempting to woo her as other
+women may be wooed.
+
+On the third day they had descended as far as the _tierra templada_,
+the zona of the table lands and foot hills. The mountains were
+receding in their rear, but still towered, exhibiting yet impressively
+their formidable heads. Here they met signs of man. They saw the
+white houses of coffee plantations gleam across the clearings. They
+struck into a road where they met travellers and pack-mules. Cattle
+were grazing on the slopes. They passed a little village where the
+round-eyed _ninos_ shrieked and called at sight of them.
+
+Mlle. Giraud laid aside her leopard-skin robe. It seemed to be a
+trifle incongruous now. In the mountains it had appeared fitting
+and natural. And if Armstrong was not mistaken she laid aside with
+it something of the high dignity of her demeanour. As the country
+became more populous and significant of comfortable life he saw, with
+a feeling of joy, that the exalted princess and priestess of the
+Andean peaks was changing to a woman--an earth woman, but no less
+enticing. A little colour crept to the surface of her marble cheek.
+She arranged the conventional dress that the removal of the robe now
+disclosed with the solicitous touch of one who is conscious of the
+eyes of others. She smoothed the careless sweep of her hair. A
+mundane interest, long latent in the chilling atmosphere of the
+ascetic peaks, showed in her eyes.
+
+This thaw in his divinity sent Armstrong's heart going faster. So
+might an Arctic explorer thrill at his first ken of green fields and
+liquescent waters. They were on a lower plane of earth and life and
+were succumbing to its peculiar, subtle influence. The austerity of
+the hills no longer thinned the air they breathed. About them was the
+breath of fruit and corn and builded homes, the comfortable smell of
+smoke and warm earth and the consolations man has placed between
+himself and the dust of his brother earth from which he sprung.
+While traversing those awful mountains, Mile. Giraud had seemed to
+be wrapped in their spirit of reverent reserve. Was this that same
+woman--now palpitating, warm, eager, throbbing with conscious life and
+charm, feminine to her finger-tips? Pondering over this, Armstrong
+felt certain misgivings intrude upon his thoughts. He wished he could
+stop there with this changing creature, descending no farther. Here
+was the elevation and environment to which her nature seemed to
+respond with its best. He feared to go down upon the man-dominated
+levels. Would her spirit not yield still further in that artificial
+zone to which they were descending?
+
+Now from a little plateau they saw the sea flash at the edge of the
+green lowlands. Mile. Giraud gave a little, catching sigh.
+
+"Oh! look, Mr. Armstrong, there is the sea! Isn't it lovely? I'm so
+tired of mountains." She heaved a pretty shoulder in a gesture of
+repugnance. "Those horrid Indians! Just think of what I suffered!
+Although I suppose I attained my ambition of becoming a stellar
+attraction, I wouldn't care to repeat the engagement. It was very
+nice of you to bring me away. Tell me, Mr. Armstrong--honestly, now
+--do I look such an awful, awful fright? I haven't looked into a
+mirror, you know, for months."
+
+Armstrong made answer according to his changed moods. Also he laid
+his hand upon hers as it rested upon the horn of her saddle. Luis was
+at the head of the pack train and could not see. She allowed it to
+remain there, and her eyes smiled frankly into his.
+
+Then at sundown they dropped upon the coast level under the palms and
+lemons among the vivid greens and scarlets and ochres of the _tierra
+caliente_. They rode into Macuto, and saw the line of volatile bathers
+frolicking in the surf. The mountains were very far away.
+
+Mlle. Giraud's eyes were shining with a joy that could not have
+existed under the chaperonage of the mountain-tops. There were other
+spirits calling to her--nymphs of the orange groves, pixies from the
+chattering surf, imps, born of the music, the perfumes, colours and
+the insinuating presence of humanity. She laughed aloud, musically,
+at a sudden thought.
+
+"Won't there be a sensation?" she called to Armstrong. "Don't I wish
+I had an engagement just now, though! What a picnic the press agent
+would have! 'Held a prisoner by a band of savage Indians subdued by
+the spell of her wonderful voice'--wouldn't that make great stuff?
+But I guess I quit the game winner, anyhow--there ought to be a
+couple of thousand dollars in that sack of gold dust I collected as
+encores, don't you think?"
+
+He left her at the door of the little Hotel de Buen Descansar, where
+she had stopped before. Two hours later he returned to the hotel. He
+glanced in at the open door of the little combined reception room and
+cafe.
+
+Half a dozen of Macuto's representative social and official
+_caballeros_ were distributed about the room. Senor Villablanca, the
+wealthy rubber concessionist, reposed his fat figure on two chairs,
+with an emollient smile beaming upon his chocolate-coloured face.
+Guilbert, the French mining engineer, leered through his polished
+nose-glasses. Colonel Mendez, of the regular army, in gold-laced
+uniform and fatuous grin, was busily extracting corks from champagne
+bottles. Other patterns of Macutian gallantry and fashion pranced and
+posed. The air was hazy with cigarette smoke. Wine dripped upon the
+floor.
+
+Perched upon a table in the centre of the room in an attitude of easy
+preeminence was Mlle. Giraud. A chic costume of white lawn and cherry
+ribbons supplanted her travelling garb. There was a suggestion of
+lace, and a frill or two, with a discreet, small implication of
+hand-embroidered pink hosiery. Upon her lap rested a guitar. In her
+face was the light of resurrection, the peace of elysium attained
+through fire and suffering. She was singing to a lively accompaniment
+a little song:
+
+ "When you see de big round moon
+ Comin' up like a balloon,
+ Dis nigger skips fur to kiss de lips
+ Ob his stylish, black-faced coon."
+
+The singer caught sight of Armstrong.
+
+"Hi! there, Johnny," she called; "I've been expecting you for an
+hour. What kept you? Gee! but these smoked guys are the slowest you
+ever saw. They ain't on, at all. Come along in, and I'll make this
+coffee-coloured old sport with the gold epaulettes open one for you
+right off the ice."
+
+"Thank you," said Armstrong; "not just now, I believe. I've several
+things to attend to."
+
+He walked out and down the street, and met Rucker coming up from the
+Consulate.
+
+"Play you a game of billiards," said Armstrong. "I want something to
+take the taste of the sea level out of my mouth."
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+"GIRL"
+
+
+In gilt letters on the ground glass of the door of room No. 962 were
+the words: "Robbins & Hartley, Brokers." The clerks had gone. It was
+past five, and with the solid tramp of a drove of prize Percherons,
+scrub-women were invading the cloud-capped twenty-story office
+building. A puff of red-hot air flavoured with lemon peelings,
+soft-coal smoke and train oil came in through the half-open windows.
+
+Robbins, fifty, something of an overweight beau, and addicted to first
+nights and hotel palm-rooms, pretended to be envious of his partner's
+commuter's joys.
+
+"Going to be something doing in the humidity line to-night," he said.
+"You out-of-town chaps will be the people, with your katydids and
+moonlight and long drinks and things out on the front porch."
+
+Hartley, twenty-nine, serious, thin, good-looking, nervous, sighed
+and frowned a little.
+
+"Yes," said he, "we always have cool nights in Floralhurst, especially
+in the winter."
+
+A man with an air of mystery came in the door and went up to Hartley.
+
+"I've found where she lives," he announced in the portentous
+half-whisper that makes the detective at work a marked being to his
+fellow men.
+
+Hartley scowled him into a state of dramatic silence and quietude.
+But by that time Robbins had got his cane and set his tie pin to his
+liking, and with a debonair nod went out to his metropolitan
+amusements.
+
+"Here is the address," said the detective in a natural tone, being
+deprived of an audience to foil.
+
+Hartley took the leaf torn out of the sleuth's dingy memorandum book.
+On it were pencilled the words "Vivienne Arlington, No. 341 East
+----th Street, care of Mrs. McComus."
+
+"Moved there a week ago," said the detective. "Now, if you want any
+shadowing done, Mr. Hartley, I can do you as fine a job in that line
+as anybody in the city. It will be only $7 a day and expenses. Can
+send in a daily typewritten report, covering--"
+
+"You needn't go on," interrupted the broker. "It isn't a case of that
+kind. I merely wanted the address. How much shall I pay you?"
+
+"One day's work," said the sleuth. "A tenner will cover it."
+
+Hartley paid the man and dismissed him. Then he left the office and
+boarded a Broadway car. At the first large crosstown artery of travel
+he took an eastbound car that deposited him in a decaying avenue,
+whose ancient structures once sheltered the pride and glory of the
+town.
+
+Walking a few squares, he came to the building that he sought. It was
+a new flathouse, bearing carved upon its cheap stone portal its
+sonorous name, "The Vallambrosa." Fire-escapes zigzagged down its
+front--these laden with household goods, drying clothes, and
+squalling children evicted by the midsummer heat. Here and there a
+pale rubber plant peeped from the miscellaneous mass, as if wondering
+to what kingdom it belonged--vegetable, animal or artificial.
+
+Hartley pressed the "McComus" button. The door latch clicked
+spasmodically--now hospitably, now doubtfully, as though in
+anxiety whether it might be admitting friends or duns. Hartley
+entered and began to climb the stairs after the manner of those who
+seek their friends in city flat-houses--which is the manner of a boy
+who climbs an apple-tree, stopping when he comes upon what he wants.
+
+On the fourth floor he saw Vivienne standing in an open door. She
+invited him inside, with a nod and a bright, genuine smile. She
+placed a chair for him near a window, and poised herself gracefully
+upon the edge of one of those Jekyll-and-Hyde pieces of furniture that
+are masked and mysteriously hooded, unguessable bulks by day and
+inquisitorial racks of torture by night.
+
+Hartley cast a quick, critical, appreciative glance at her before
+speaking, and told himself that his taste in choosing had been
+flawless.
+
+Vivienne was about twenty-one. She was of the purest Saxon type. Her
+hair was a ruddy golden, each filament of the neatly gathered mass
+shining with its own lustre and delicate graduation of colour. In
+perfect harmony were her ivory-clear complexion and deep sea-blue eyes
+that looked upon the world with the ingenuous calmness of a mermaid or
+the pixie of an undiscovered mountain stream. Her frame was strong
+and yet possessed the grace of absolute naturalness. And yet with all
+her Northern clearness and frankness of line and colouring, there
+seemed to be something of the tropics in her--something of languor
+in the droop of her pose, of love of ease in her ingenious complacency
+of satisfaction and comfort in the mere act of breathing--something
+that seemed to claim for her a right as a perfect work of nature to
+exist and be admired equally with a rare flower or some beautiful,
+milk-white dove among its sober-hued companions.
+
+She was dressed in a white waist and dark skirt--that discreet
+masquerade of goose-girl and duchess.
+
+"Vivienne," said Hartley, looking at her pleadingly, "you did not
+answer my last letter. It was only by nearly a week's search that I
+found where you had moved to. Why have you kept me in suspense when
+you knew how anxiously I was waiting to see you and hear from you?"
+
+The girl looked out the window dreamily.
+
+"Mr. Hartley," she said hesitatingly, "I hardly know what to say to
+you. I realize all the advantages of your offer, and sometimes I feel
+sure that I could be contented with you. But, again, I am doubtful.
+I was born a city girl, and I am afraid to bind myself to a quiet
+suburban life."
+
+"My dear girl," said Hartley, ardently, "have I not told you that you
+shall have everything that your heart can desire that is in my power
+to give you? You shall come to the city for the theatres, for
+shopping and to visit your friends as often as you care to. You can
+trust me, can you not?"
+
+"To the fullest," she said, turning her frank eyes upon him with a
+smile. "I know you are the kindest of men, and that the girl you get
+will be a lucky one. I learned all about you when I was at the
+Montgomerys'."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Hartley, with a tender, reminiscent light in his eye;
+"I remember well the evening I first saw you at the Montgomerys'.
+Mrs. Montgomery was sounding your praises to me all the evening.
+And she hardly did you justice. I shall never forget that supper.
+Come, Vivienne, promise me. I want you. You'll never regret coming
+with me. No one else will ever give you as pleasant a home."
+
+The girl sighed and looked down at her folded hands.
+
+A sudden jealous suspicion seized Hartley.
+
+"Tell me, Vivienne," he asked, regarding her keenly, "is there
+another--is there some one else ?"
+
+A rosy flush crept slowly over her fair cheeks and neck.
+
+"You shouldn't ask that, Mr. Hartley," she said, in some confusion.
+"But I will tell you. There is one other--but he has no right--I
+have promised him nothing."
+
+"His name?" demanded Hartley, sternly.
+
+"Townsend."
+
+"Rafford Townsend!" exclaimed Hartley, with a grim tightening of his
+jaw. "How did that man come to know you? After all I've done for
+him--"
+
+"His auto has just stopped below," said Vivienne, bending over the
+window-sill. "He's coming for his answer. Oh I don't know what to
+do!"
+
+The bell in the flat kitchen whirred. Vivienne hurried to press the
+latch button.
+
+"Stay here," said Hartley. "I will meet him in the hall."
+
+Townsend, looking like a Spanish grandee in his light tweeds, Panama
+hat and curling black mustache, came up the stairs three at a time.
+He stopped at sight of Hartley and looked foolish.
+
+"Go back," said Hartley, firmly, pointing downstairs with his
+forefinger.
+
+"Hullo!" said Townsend, feigning surprise. "What's up? What are you
+doing here, old man?"
+
+"Go back," repeated Hartley, inflexibly. "The Law of the Jungle. Do
+you want the Pack to tear you in pieces? The kill is mine."
+
+"I came here to see a plumber about the bathroom connections," said
+Townsend, bravely.
+
+"All right," said Hartley. "You shall have that lying plaster to
+stick upon your traitorous soul. But, go back." Townsend went
+downstairs, leaving a bitter word to be wafted up the draught of the
+staircase. Hartley went back to his wooing.
+
+"Vivienne," said he, masterfully. "I have got to have you. I will
+take no more refusals or dilly-dallying."
+
+"When do you want me?" she asked.
+
+"Now. As soon as you can get ready."
+
+She stood calmly before him and looked him in the eye.
+
+"Do you think for one moment," she said, "that I would enter your home
+while Heloise is there?"
+
+Hartley cringed as if from an unexpected blow. He folded his arms and
+paced the carpet once or twice.
+
+"She shall go," he declared grimly. Drops stood upon his brow. "Why
+should I let that woman make my life miserable? Never have I seen one
+day of freedom from trouble since I have known her. You are right,
+Vivienne. Heloise must be sent away before I can take you home. But
+she shall go. I have decided. I will turn her from my doors."
+
+"When will you do this?" asked the girl.
+
+Hartley clinched his teeth and bent his brows together.
+
+"To-night," he said, resolutely. "I will send her away to-night."
+
+"Then," said Vivienne, "my answer is 'yes.' Come for me when you
+will."
+
+She looked into his eyes with a sweet, sincere light in her own.
+Hartley could scarcely believe that her surrender was true, it was
+so swift and complete.
+
+"Promise me," he said feelingly, "on your word and honour."
+
+"On my word and honour," repeated Vivienne, softly.
+
+At the door he turned and gazed at her happily, but yet as one who
+scarcely trusts the foundations of his joy.
+
+"To-morrow," he said, with a forefinger of reminder uplifted.
+
+"To-morrow," she repeated with a smile of truth and candour.
+
+In an hour and forty minutes Hartley stepped off the train at
+Floralhurst. A brisk walk of ten minutes brought him to the gate of a
+handsome two-story cottage set upon a wide and well-tended lawn.
+Halfway to the house he was met by a woman with jet-black braided hair
+and flowing white summer gown, who half strangled him without apparent
+cause.
+
+When they stepped into the hall she said:
+
+"Mamma's here. The auto is coming for her in half an hour. She came
+to dinner, but there's no dinner."
+
+"I've something to tell you," said Hartley. "I thought to break it to
+you gently, but since your mother is here we may as well out with it."
+
+He stooped and whispered something at her ear.
+
+His wife screamed. Her mother came running into the hall. The
+dark-haired woman screamed again--the joyful scream of a well-beloved
+and petted woman.
+
+"Oh, mamma!" she cried ecstatically, "what do you think? Vivienne is
+coming to cook for us! She is the one that stayed with the
+Montgomerys a whole year. And now, Billy, dear," she concluded, "you
+must go right down into the kitchen and discharge Heloise. She has
+been drunk again the whole day long."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW
+
+
+The season of irresponsibility is at hand. Come, let us twine round
+our brows wreaths of poison ivy (that is for idiocy), and wander hand
+in hand with sociology in the summer fields.
+
+Likely as not the world is flat. The wise men have tried to prove
+that it is round, with indifferent success. They pointed out to us a
+ship going to sea, and bade us observe that, at length, the convexity
+of the earth hid from our view all but the vessel's topmast. But we
+picked up a telescope and looked, and saw the decks and hull again.
+Then the wise men said: "Oh, pshaw! anyhow, the variation of the
+intersection of the equator and the ecliptic proves it." We could not
+see this through our telescope, so we remained silent. But it stands
+to reason that, if the world were round, the queues of Chinamen
+would stand straight up from their heads instead of hanging down their
+backs, as travellers assure us they do.
+
+Another hot-weather corroboration of the flat theory is the fact that
+all of life, as we know it, moves in little, unavailing circles.
+More justly than to anything else, it can be likened to the game
+of baseball. Crack! we hit the ball, and away we go. If we earn a
+run (in life we call it success) we get back to the home plate and
+sit upon a bench. If we are thrown out, we walk back to the home
+plate--and sit upon a bench.
+
+The circumnavigators of the alleged globe may have sailed the rim of a
+watery circle back to the same port again. The truly great return at
+the high tide of their attainments to the simplicity of a child. The
+billionaire sits down at his mahogany to his bowl of bread and milk.
+When you reach the end of your career, just take down the sign "Goal"
+and look at the other side of it. You will find "Beginning Point"
+there. It has been reversed while you were going around the track.
+
+But this is humour, and must be stopped. Let us get back to the
+serious questions that arise whenever Sociology turns summer boarder.
+You are invited to consider the scene of the story--wild, Atlantic
+waves, thundering against a wooded and rock-bound shore--in the
+Greater City of New York.
+
+The town of Fishampton, on the south shore of Long Island, is noted
+for its clam fritters and the summer residence of the Van Plushvelts.
+
+The Van Plushvelts have a hundred million dollars, and their name is a
+household word with tradesmen and photographers.
+
+On the fifteenth of June the Van Plushvelts boarded up the front door
+of their city house, carefully deposited their cat on the sidewalk,
+instructed the caretaker not to allow it to eat any of the ivy on the
+walls, and whizzed away in a 40-horse-power to Fishampton to stray
+alone in the shade--Amaryllis not being in their class. If you are a
+subscriber to the _Toadies' Magazine_, you have often--You say you are
+not? Well, you buy it at a news-stand, thinking that the newsdealer
+is not wise to you. But he knows about it all. HE knows--HE knows!
+I say that you have often seen in the _Toadies' Magazine_ pictures of
+the Van Plushvelts' summer home; so it will not be described here.
+Our business is with young Haywood Van Plushvelt, sixteen years old,
+heir to the century of millions, darling of the financial gods and
+great grandson of Peter Van Plushvelt, former owner of a particularly
+fine cabbage patch that has been ruined by an intrusive lot of
+downtown skyscrapers.
+
+One afternoon young Haywood Van Plushvelt strolled out between the
+granite gate posts of "Dolce far Niente"--that's what they called
+the place; and it was an improvement on dolce Far Rockaway, I can
+tell you.
+
+Haywood walked down into the village. He was human, after all, and
+his prospective millions weighed upon him. Wealth had wreaked upon
+him its direfullest. He was the product of private tutors. Even under
+his first hobby-horse had tan bark been strewn. He had been born with
+a gold spoon, lobster fork and fish-set in his mouth. For which I
+hope, later, to submit justification, I must ask your consideration of
+his haberdashery and tailoring.
+
+Young Fortunatus was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a
+neat, white straw hat, neat low-cut tan shoes, of the well-known
+"immaculate" trade mark, a neat, narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried
+a slender, neat, bamboo cane.
+
+Down Persimmon Street (there's never tree north of Hagerstown, Md.)
+came from the village "Smoky" Dodson, fifteen and a half, worst boy in
+Fishampton. "Smoky" was dressed in a ragged red sweater, wrecked and
+weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and trousers of the
+"serviceable" brand. Dust, clinging to the moisture induced by free
+exercise, darkened wide areas of his face. "Smoky" carried a baseball
+bat, and a league ball that advertised itself in the rotundity of his
+trousers pocket. Haywood stopped and passed the time of day.
+
+"Going to play ball?" he asked.
+
+"Smoky's" eyes and countenance confronted him with a frank
+blue-and-freckled scrutiny.
+
+"Me?" he said, with deadly mildness; "sure not. Can't you see I've
+got a divin' suit on? I'm goin' up in a submarine balloon to catch
+butterflies with a two-inch auger.
+
+"Excuse me," said Haywood, with the insulting politeness of his
+caste, "for mistaking you for a gentleman. I might have known
+better."
+
+"How might you have known better if you thought I was one?" said
+"Smoky," unconsciously a logician.
+
+"By your appearance," said Haywood. "No gentleman is dirty, ragged
+and a liar."
+
+"Smoky" hooted once like a ferry-boat, spat on his hand, got a firm
+grip on his baseball bat and then dropped it against the fence.
+
+"Say," said he, "I knows you. You're the pup that belongs in that
+swell private summer sanitarium for city-guys over there. I seen you
+come out of the gate. You can't bluff nobody because you're rich.
+And because you got on swell clothes. Arabella! Yah!"
+
+"Ragamuffin!" said Haywood.
+
+"Smoky" picked up a fence-rail splinter and laid it on his shoulder.
+
+"Dare you to knock it off," he challenged.
+
+"I wouldn't soil my hands with you," said the aristocrat.
+
+"'Fraid," said "Smoky" concisely. "Youse city-ducks ain't got the I
+sand. I kin lick you with one-hand."
+
+"I don't wish to have any trouble with you," said Haywood. "I asked
+you a civil question; and you replied, like a--like a--a cad."
+
+"Wot's a cad?" asked "Smoky."
+
+"A cad is a disagreeable person," answered Haywood, "who lacks manners
+and doesn't know his place. They sometimes play baseball."
+
+"I can tell you what a mollycoddle is," said "Smoky." "It's a monkey
+dressed up by its mother and sent out to pick daisies on the lawn."
+
+"When you have the honour to refer to the members of my family," said
+Haywood, with some dim ideas of a code in his mind, "you'd better
+leave the ladies out of your remarks."
+
+"Ho! ladies!" mocked the rude one. "I say ladies! I know what them
+rich women in the city does. They, drink cocktails and swear and give
+parties to gorillas. The papers say so."
+
+Then Haywood knew that it must be. He took off his coat, folded it
+neatly and laid it on the roadside grass, placed his hat upon it and
+began to unknot his blue silk tie.
+
+"Hadn't yer better ring fer yer maid, Arabella?" taunted "Smoky."
+"Wot yer going to do--go to bed?"
+
+"I'm going to give you a good trouncing," said the hero. He did not
+hesitate, although the enemy was far beneath him socially. He
+remembered that his father once thrashed a cabman, and the papers gave
+it two columns, first page. And the _Toadies' Magazine_ had a special
+article on Upper Cuts by the Upper Classes, and ran new pictures of
+the Van Plushvelt country seat, at Fishampton.
+
+"Wot's trouncing?" asked "Smoky," suspiciously. "I don't want your
+old clothes. I'm no--oh, you mean to scrap! My, my! I won't do a
+thing to mamma's pet. Criminy! I'd hate to be a hand-laundered thing
+like you.
+
+"Smoky" waited with some awkwardness for his adversary to prepare for
+battle. His own decks were always clear for action. When he should
+spit upon the palm of his terrible right it was equivalent to "You may
+fire now, Gridley."
+
+The hated patrician advanced, with his shirt sleeves neatly rolled up.
+"Smoky" waited, in an attitude of ease, expecting the affair to be
+conducted according to Fishampton's rules of war. These allowed
+combat to be prefaced by stigma, recrimination, epithet, abuse and
+insult gradually increasing in emphasis and degree. After a round of
+these "you're anothers" would come the chip knocked from the shoulder,
+or the advance across the "dare" line drawn with a toe on the ground.
+Next light taps given and taken, these also increasing in force until
+finally the blood was up and fists going at their best.
+
+But Haywood did not know Fishampton's rules. Noblesse oblige kept a
+faint smile on his face as he walked slowly up to "Smoky" and said:
+
+"Going to play ball?"
+
+"Smoky" quickly understood this to be a putting of the previous
+question, giving him the chance to make practical apology by answering
+it with civility and relevance.
+
+"Listen this time," said he. "I'm goin' skatin' on the river. Don't
+you see me automobile with Chinese lanterns on it standin' and waitin'
+for me?"
+
+Haywood knocked him down.
+
+"Smoky" felt wronged. To thus deprive him of preliminary wrangle and
+objurgation was to send an armoured knight full tilt against a
+crashing lance without permitting him first to caracole around the
+list to the flourish of trumpets. But he scrambled up and fell upon
+his foe, head, feet and fists.
+
+The fight lasted one round of an hour and ten minutes. It was
+lengthened until it was more like a war or a family feud than a fight.
+Haywood had learned some of the science of boxing and wrestling from
+his tutors, but these he discarded for the more instinctive methods of
+battle handed down by the cave-dwelling Van Plushvelts.
+
+So, when he found himself, during the melee, seated upon the kicking
+and roaring "Smoky's" chest, he improved the opportunity by vigorously
+kneading handfuls of sand and soil into his adversary's ears, eyes
+and mouth, and when "Smoky" got the proper leg hold and "turned" him,
+he fastened both hands in the Plushvelt hair and pounded the Plushvelt
+head against the lap of mother earth. Of course, the strife was not
+incessantly active. There were seasons when one sat upon the other,
+holding him down, while each blew like a grampus, spat out the more
+inconveniently large sections of gravel and earth and strove to subdue
+the spirit of his opponent with a frightful and soul-paralyzing glare.
+
+At last, it seemed that in the language of the ring, their efforts
+lacked steam. They broke away, and each disappeared in a cloud as he
+brushed away the dust of the conflict. As soon as his breath
+permitted, Haywood walked close to "Smoky" and said:
+
+"Going to play ball?"
+
+"Smoky" looked pensively at the sky, at his bat lying on the ground,
+and at the "leaguer" rounding his pocket.
+
+"Sure," he said, offhandedly. "The 'Yellowjackets' plays the 'Long
+Islands.' I'm cap'n of the 'Long Islands.'"
+
+"I guess I didn't mean to say you were ragged," said Haywood. "But
+you are dirty, you know."
+
+"Sure," said "Smoky." "Yer get that way knockin' around. Say, I
+don't believe them New York papers about ladies drinkin' and havin'
+monkeys dinin' at the table with 'em. I guess they're lies, like they
+print about people eatin' out of silver plates, and ownin' dogs that
+cost $100."
+
+"Certainly," said Haywood. "What do you play on your team?"
+
+"Ketcher. Ever play any?"
+
+"Never in my life," said Haywood. "I've never known any fellows
+except one or two of my cousins."
+
+"Jer like to learn? We're goin' to have a practice-game before the
+match. Wanter come along? I'll put yer in left-field, and yer won't
+be long ketchin' on."
+
+"I'd like it bully," said Haywood. "I've always wanted to play
+baseball."
+
+The ladies' maids of New York and the families of Western mine owners
+with social ambitions will remember well the sensation that was
+created by the report that the young multi-millionaire, Haywood Van
+Plushvelt, was playing ball with the village youths of Fishampton. It
+was conceded that the millennium of democracy had come. Reporters and
+photographers swarmed to the island. The papers printed half-page
+pictures of him as short-stop stopping a hot grounder. The _Toadies'
+Magazine_ got out a Bat and Ball number that covered the subject
+historically, beginning with the vampire bat and ending with the
+Patriarchs' ball--illustrated with interior views of the Van
+Plushvelt country seat. Ministers, educators and sociologists
+everywhere hailed the event as the tocsin call that proclaimed the
+universal brotherhood of man.
+
+One afternoon I was reclining under the trees near the shore at
+Fishampton in the esteemed company of an eminent, bald-headed young
+sociologist. By way of note it may be inserted that all sociologists
+are more or less bald, and exactly thirty-two. Look 'em over.
+
+The sociologist was citing the Van Plushvelt case as the most
+important "uplift" symptom of a generation, and as an excuse for his
+own existence.
+
+Immediately before us were the village baseball grounds. And now came
+the sportive youth of Fishampton and distributed themselves, shouting,
+about the diamond.
+
+"There," said the sociologist, pointing, "there is young Van
+Plushvelt."
+
+I raised myself (so far a cosycophant with Mary Ann) and gazed.
+
+Young Van Plushvelt sat upon the ground. He was dressed in a ragged
+red sweater, wrecked and weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and
+trousers of the "serviceable" brand. Dust clinging to the moisture
+induced by free exercise, darkened wide areas of his face.
+
+"That is he," repeated the sociologist. If he had said "him" I could
+have been less vindictive.
+
+On a bench, with an air, sat the young millionaire's chum.
+
+He was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a neat white straw
+hat, neat low-cut tan shoes, linen of the well-known "immaculate"
+trade mark, a neat, narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried a slender,
+neat bamboo cane.
+
+I laughed loudly and vulgarly.
+
+"What you want to do," said I to the sociologist, "is to establish a
+reformatory for the Logical Vicious Circle. Or else I've got wheels.
+It looks to me as if things are running round and round in circles
+instead of getting anywhere."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked the man of progress.
+
+"Why, look what he has done to 'Smoky'," I replied.
+
+"You will always be a fool," said my friend, the sociologist,
+getting up and walking away.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF
+
+
+It looked like a good thing: but wait till I tell you. We were down
+South, in Alabama--Bill Driscoll and myself--when this kidnapping
+idea struck us. It was, as Bill afterward expressed it, "during a
+moment of temporary mental apparition"; but we didn't find that out
+till later.
+
+There was a town down there, as flat as a flannel-cake, and called
+Summit, of course. It contained inhabitants of as undeleterious and
+self-satisfied a class of peasantry as ever clustered around a
+Maypole.
+
+Bill and me had a joint capital of about six hundred dollars, and
+we needed just two thousand dollars more to pull off a fraudulent
+town-lot scheme in Western Illinois with. We talked it over on the
+front steps of the hotel. Philoprogenitiveness, says we, is strong
+in semi-rural communities; therefore and for other reasons, a
+kidnapping project ought to do better there than in the radius of
+newspapers that send reporters out in plain clothes to stir up talk
+about such things. We knew that Summit couldn't get after us with
+anything stronger than constables and maybe some lackadaisical
+bloodhounds and a diatribe or two in the _Weekly Farmers' Budget_.
+So, it looked good.
+
+We selected for our victim the only child of a prominent citizen named
+Ebenezer Dorset. The father was respectable and tight, a mortgage
+fancier and a stern, upright collection-plate passer and forecloser.
+The kid was a boy of ten, with bas-relief freckles, and hair the
+colour of the cover of the magazine you buy at the news-stand when you
+want to catch a train. Bill and me figured that Ebenezer would melt
+down for a ransom of two thousand dollars to a cent. But wait till I
+tell you.
+
+About two miles from Summit was a little mountain, covered with a
+dense cedar brake. On the rear elevation of this mountain was a cave.
+There we stored provisions. One evening after sundown, we drove in a
+buggy past old Dorset's house. The kid was in the street, throwing
+rocks at a kitten on the opposite fence.
+
+"Hey, little boy!" says Bill, "would you like to have a bag of candy
+and a nice ride?"
+
+The boy catches Bill neatly in the eye with a piece of brick.
+
+"That will cost the old man an extra five hundred dollars," says Bill,
+climbing over the wheel.
+
+That boy put up a fight like a welter-weight cinnamon bear; but, at
+last, we got him down in the bottom of the buggy and drove away. We
+took him up to the cave and I hitched the horse in the cedar brake.
+After dark I drove the buggy to the little village, three miles away,
+where we had hired it, and walked back to the mountain.
+
+Bill was pasting court-plaster over the scratches and bruises on his
+features. There was a fire burning behind the big rock at the entrance
+of the cave, and the boy was watching a pot of boiling coffee, with
+two buzzard tail-feathers stuck in his red hair. He points a stick
+at me when I come up, and says:
+
+"Ha! cursed paleface, do you dare to enter the camp of Red Chief, the
+terror of the plains?
+
+"He's all right now," says Bill, rolling up his trousers and examining
+some bruises on his shins. "We're playing Indian. We're making
+Buffalo Bill's show look like magic-lantern views of Palestine in the
+town hall. I'm Old Hank, the Trapper, Red Chief's captive, and I'm to
+be scalped at daybreak. By Geronimo! that kid can kick hard."
+
+Yes, sir, that boy seemed to be having the time of his life. The fun
+of camping out in a cave had made him forget that he was a captive
+himself. He immediately christened me Snake-eye, the Spy, and
+announced that, when his braves returned from the warpath, I was to be
+broiled at the stake at the rising of the sun.
+
+Then we had supper; and he filled his mouth full of bacon and bread
+and gravy, and began to talk. He made a during-dinner speech
+something like this:
+
+"I like this fine. I never camped out before; but I had a pet 'possum
+once, and I was nine last birthday. I hate to go to school. Rats ate
+up sixteen of Jimmy Talbot's aunt's speckled hen's eggs. Are there
+any real Indians in these woods? I want some more gravy. Does the
+trees moving make the wind blow? We had five puppies. What makes your
+nose so red, Hank? My father has lots of money. Are the stars hot? I
+whipped Ed Walker twice, Saturday. I don't like girls. You dassent
+catch toads unless with a string. Do oxen make any noise? Why are
+oranges round? Have you got beds to sleep on in this cave? Amos Murray
+has got six toes. A parrot can talk, but a monkey or a fish can't.
+How many does it take to make twelve?"
+
+Every few minutes he would remember that he was a pesky redskin, and
+pick up his stick rifle and tiptoe to the mouth of the cave to rubber
+for the scouts of the hated paleface. Now and then he would let out a
+war-whoop that made Old Hank the Trapper shiver. That boy had Bill
+terrorized from the start.
+
+"Red Chief," says I to the kid, "would you like to go home?"
+
+"Aw, what for?" says he. "I don't have any fun at home. I hate to
+go to school. I like to camp out. You won't take me back home again,
+Snake-eye, will you?"
+
+"Not right away," says I. "We'll stay here in the cave a while."
+
+"All right!" says he. "That'll be fine. I never had such fun in all
+my life."
+
+We went to bed about eleven o'clock. We spread down some wide
+blankets and quilts and put Red Chief between us. We weren't afraid
+he'd run away. He kept us awake for three hours, jumping up and
+reaching for his rifle and screeching: "Hist! pard," in mine and
+Bill's ears, as the fancied crackle of a twig or the rustle of a leaf
+revealed to his young imagination the stealthy approach of the outlaw
+band. At last, I fell into a troubled sleep, and dreamed that I had
+been kidnapped and chained to a tree by a ferocious pirate with red
+hair.
+
+Just at daybreak, I was awakened by a series of awful screams from
+Bill. They weren't yells, or howls, or shouts, or whoops, or yawps,
+such as you'd expect from a manly set of vocal organs--they were
+simply indecent, terrifying, humiliating screams, such as women emit
+when they see ghosts or caterpillars. It's an awful thing to hear a
+strong, desperate, fat man scream incontinently in a cave at daybreak.
+
+I jumped up to see what the matter was. Red Chief was sitting on
+Bill's chest, with one hand twined in Bill's hair. In the other he
+had the sharp case-knife we used for slicing bacon; and he was
+industriously and realistically trying to take Bill's scalp, according
+to the sentence that had been pronounced upon him the evening before.
+
+I got the knife away from the kid and made him lie down again. But,
+from that moment, Bill's spirit was broken. He laid down on his side
+of the bed, but he never closed an eye again in sleep as long as that
+boy was with us. I dozed off for a while, but along toward sun-up I
+remembered that Red Chief had said I was to be burned at the stake
+at the rising of the sun. I wasn't nervous or afraid; but I sat up
+and lit my pipe and leaned against a rock.
+
+"What you getting up so soon for, Sam?" asked Bill.
+
+"Me?" says I. "Oh, I got a kind of a pain in my shoulder. I thought
+sitting up would rest it."
+
+"You're a liar!" says Bill. "You're afraid. You was to be burned at
+sunrise, and you was afraid he'd do it. And he would, too, if he
+could find a match. Ain't it awful, Sam? Do you think anybody will pay
+out money to get a little imp like that back home?"
+
+"Sure," said I. "A rowdy kid like that is just the kind that parents
+dote on. Now, you and the Chief get up and cook breakfast, while I go
+up on the top of this mountain and reconnoitre."
+
+I went up on the peak of the little mountain and ran my eye over the
+contiguous vicinity. Over toward Summit I expected to see the sturdy
+yeomanry of the village armed with scythes and pitchforks beating the
+countryside for the dastardly kidnappers. But what I saw was a
+peaceful landscape dotted with one man ploughing with a dun mule.
+Nobody was dragging the creek; no couriers dashed hither and yon,
+bringing tidings of no news to the distracted parents. There was a
+sylvan attitude of somnolent sleepiness pervading that section of the
+external outward surface of Alabama that lay exposed to my view.
+"Perhaps," says I to myself, "it has not yet been discovered that
+the wolves have borne away the tender lambkin from the fold. Heaven
+help the wolves!" says I, and I went down the mountain to breakfast.
+
+When I got to the cave I found Bill backed up against the side of it,
+breathing hard, and the boy threatening to smash him with a rock half
+as big as a cocoanut.
+
+"He put a red-hot boiled potato down my back," explained Bill, "and
+then mashed it with his foot; and I boxed his ears. Have you got a gun
+about you, Sam?"
+
+I took the rock away from the boy and kind of patched up the argument.
+"I'll fix you," says the kid to Bill. "No man ever yet struck the Red
+Chief but what he got paid for it. You better beware!"
+
+After breakfast the kid takes a piece of leather with strings wrapped
+around it out of his pocket and goes outside the cave unwinding it.
+
+"What's he up to now?" says Bill, anxiously. "You don't think he'll
+run away, do you, Sam?"
+
+"No fear of it," says I. "He don't seem to be much of a home body.
+But we've got to fix up some plan about the ransom. There don't seem
+to be much excitement around Summit on account of his disappearance;
+but maybe they haven't realized yet that he's gone. His folks may
+think he's spending the night with Aunt Jane or one of the neighbours.
+Anyhow, he'll be missed to-day. To-night we must get a message to his
+father demanding the two thousand dollars for his return."
+
+Just then we heard a kind Of war-whoop, such as David might have
+emitted when he knocked out the champion Goliath. It was a sling that
+Red Chief had pulled out of his pocket, and he was whirling it around
+his head.
+
+I dodged, and heard a heavy thud and a kind of a sigh from Bill, like
+a horse gives out when you take his saddle off. A niggerhead rock the
+size of an egg had caught Bill just behind his left ear. He loosened
+himself all over and fell in the fire across the frying pan of hot
+water for washing the dishes. I dragged him out and poured cold water
+on his head for half an hour.
+
+By and by, Bill sits up and feels behind his ear and says: "Sam, do
+you know who my favourite Biblical character is?"
+
+"Take it easy," says I. "You'll come to your senses presently."
+
+"King Herod," says he. "You won't go away and leave me here alone,
+will you, Sam?"
+
+I went out and caught that boy and shook him until his freckles
+rattled.
+
+"If you don't behave," says I, "I'll take you straight home. Now, are
+you going to be good, or not?"
+
+"I was only funning," says he sullenly. "I didn't mean to hurt Old
+Hank. But what did he hit me for? I'll behave, Snake-eye, if you
+won't send me home, and if you'll let me play the Black Scout to-day."
+
+"I don't know the game," says I. "That's for you and Mr. Bill to
+decide. He's your playmate for the day. I'm going away for a while,
+on business. Now, you come in and make friends with him and say you
+are sorry for hurting him, or home you go, at once."
+
+I made him and Bill shake hands, and then I took Bill aside and told
+him I was going to Poplar Cove, a little village three miles from the
+cave, and find out what I could about how the kidnapping had been
+regarded in Summit. Also, I thought it best to send a peremptory
+letter to old man Dorset that day, demanding the ransom and dictating
+how it should be paid.
+
+"You know, Sam," says Bill, "I've stood by you without batting an
+eye in earthquakes, fire and flood--in poker games, dynamite
+outrages, police raids, train robberies and cyclones. I never lost my
+nerve yet till we kidnapped that two-legged skyrocket of a kid. He's
+got me going. You won't leave me long with him, will you, Sam?"
+
+"I'll be back some time this afternoon," says I. "You must keep the
+boy amused and quiet till I return. And now we'll write the letter to
+old Dorset."
+
+Bill and I got paper and pencil and worked on the letter while Red
+Chief, with a blanket wrapped around him, strutted up and down,
+guarding the mouth of the cave. Bill begged me tearfully to make the
+ransom fifteen hundred dollars instead of two thousand. "I ain't
+attempting," says he, "to decry the celebrated moral aspect of
+parental affection, but we're dealing with humans, and it ain't human
+for anybody to give up two thousand dollars for that forty-pound chunk
+of freckled wildcat. I'm willing to take a chance at fifteen hundred
+dollars. You can charge the difference up to me."
+
+So, to relieve Bill, I acceded, and we collaborated a letter that ran
+this way:
+
+ _Ebenezer Dorset, Esq.:_
+
+ We have your boy concealed in a place far from Summit. It is useless
+ for you or the most skilful detectives to attempt to find him.
+ Absolutely, the only terms on which you can have him restored to you
+ are these: We demand fifteen hundred dollars in large bills for his
+ return; the money to be left at midnight to-night at the same spot
+ and in the same box as your reply--as hereinafter described. If
+ you agree to these terms, send your answer in writing by a solitary
+ messenger to-night at half-past eight o'clock. After crossing Owl
+ Creek, on the road to Poplar Cove, there are three large trees about
+ a hundred yards apart, close to the fence of the wheat field on the
+ right-hand side. At the bottom of the fence-post, opposite the
+ third tree, will be found a small pasteboard box.
+
+ The messenger will place the answer in this box and return
+ immediately to Summit.
+
+ If you attempt any treachery or fail to comply with our demand as
+ stated, you will never see your boy again.
+
+ If you pay the money as demanded, he will be returned to you safe
+ and well within three hours. These terms are final, and if you do
+ not accede to them no further communication will be attempted.
+
+ TWO DESPERATE MEN.
+
+I addressed this letter to Dorset, and put it in my pocket. As I was
+about to start, the kid comes up to me and says:
+
+"Aw, Snake-eye, you said I could play the Black Scout while you was
+gone."
+
+"Play it, of course," says I. "Mr. Bill will play with you. What
+kind of a game is it?"
+
+"I'm the Black Scout," says Red Chief, "and I have to ride to the
+stockade to warn the settlers that the Indians are coming. I'm tired
+of playing Indian myself. I want to be the Black Scout."
+
+"All right," says I. "It sounds harmless to me. I guess Mr. Bill will
+help you foil the pesky savages."
+
+"What am I to do?" asks Bill, looking at the kid suspiciously.
+
+"You are the hoss," says Black Scout. "Get down on your hands and
+knees. How can I ride to the stockade without a hoss?"
+
+"You'd better keep him interested," said I, "till we get the scheme
+going. Loosen up."
+
+Bill gets down on his all fours, and a look comes in his eye like a
+rabbit's when you catch it in a trap.
+
+"How far is it to the stockade, kid?" he asks, in a husky manner of
+voice.
+
+"Ninety miles," says the Black Scout. "And you have to hump yourself
+to get there on time. Whoa, now!"
+
+The Black Scout jumps on Bill's back and digs his heels in his side.
+
+"For Heaven's sake," says Bill, "hurry back, Sam, as soon as you can.
+I wish we hadn't made the ransom more than a thousand. Say, you quit
+kicking me or I'll get up and warm you good."
+
+I walked over to Poplar Cove and sat around the postoffice and
+store, talking with the chawbacons that came in to trade. One
+whiskerando says that he hears Summit is all upset on account of Elder
+Ebenezer Dorset's boy having been lost or stolen. That was all I
+wanted to know. I bought some smoking tobacco, referred casually to
+the price of black-eyed peas, posted my letter surreptitiously and
+came away. The postmaster said the mail-carrier would come by in an
+hour to take the mail on to Summit.
+
+When I got back to the cave Bill and the boy were not to be found. I
+explored the vicinity of the cave, and risked a yodel or two, but
+there was no response.
+
+So I lighted my pipe and sat down on a mossy bank to await
+developments.
+
+In about half an hour I heard the bushes rustle, and Bill wabbled out
+into the little glade in front of the cave. Behind him was the kid,
+stepping softly like a scout, with a broad grin on his face. Bill
+stopped, took off his hat and wiped his face with a red handkerchief.
+The kid stopped about eight feet behind him.
+
+"Sam," says Bill, "I suppose you'll think I'm a renegade, but I
+couldn't help it. I'm a grown person with masculine proclivities and
+habits of self-defense, but there is a time when all systems of
+egotism and predominance fail. The boy is gone. I have sent him
+home. All is off. There was martyrs in old times," goes on Bill,
+"that suffered death rather than give up the particular graft they
+enjoyed. None of 'em ever was subjugated to such supernatural
+tortures as I have been. I tried to be faithful to our articles of
+depredation; but there came a limit."
+
+"What's the trouble, Bill?" I asks him.
+
+"I was rode," says Bill, "the ninety miles to the stockade, not
+barring an inch. Then, when the settlers was rescued, I was given
+oats. Sand ain't a palatable substitute. And then, for an hour I
+had to try to explain to him why there was nothin' in holes, how
+a road can run both ways and what makes the grass green. I tell
+you, Sam, a human can only stand so much. I takes him by the neck
+of his clothes and drags him down the mountain. On the way he
+kicks my legs black-and-blue from the knees down; and I've got to
+have two or three bites on my thumb and hand cauterized.
+
+"But he's gone"--continues Bill--"gone home. I showed him the
+road to Summit and kicked him about eight feet nearer there at one
+kick. I'm sorry we lose the ransom; but it was either that or Bill
+Driscoll to the madhouse."
+
+Bill is puffing and blowing, but there is a look of ineffable peace
+and growing content on his rose-pink features.
+
+"Bill," says I, "there isn't any heart disease in your family, is
+there?
+
+"No," says Bill, "nothing chronic except malaria and accidents. Why?"
+
+"Then you might turn around," says I, "and have a took behind you."
+
+Bill turns and sees the boy, and loses his complexion and sits down
+plump on the round and begins to pluck aimlessly at grass and little
+sticks. For an hour I was afraid for his mind. And then I told him
+that my scheme was to put the whole job through immediately and that
+we would get the ransom and be off with it by midnight if old Dorset
+fell in with our proposition. So Bill braced up enough to give the
+kid a weak sort of a smile and a promise to play the Russian in a
+Japanese war with him is soon as he felt a little better.
+
+I had a scheme for collecting that ransom without danger of being
+caught by counterplots that ought to commend itself to professional
+kidnappers. The tree under which the answer was to be left--and the
+money later on--was close to the road fence with big, bare fields on
+all sides. If a gang of constables should be watching for any one to
+come for the note they could see him a long way off crossing the
+fields or in the road. But no, sirree! At half-past eight I was up in
+that tree as well hidden as a tree toad, waiting for the messenger to
+arrive.
+
+Exactly on time, a half-grown boy rides up the road on a bicycle,
+locates the pasteboard box at the foot of the fence-post, slips a
+folded piece of paper into it and pedals away again back toward
+Summit.
+
+I waited an hour and then concluded the thing was square. I slid down
+the tree, got the note, slipped along the fence till I struck the
+woods, and was back at the cave in another half an hour. I opened the
+note, got near the lantern and read it to Bill. It was written with a
+pen in a crabbed hand, and the sum and substance of it was this:
+
+ _Two Desperate Men.
+
+ Gentlemen:_ I received your letter to-day by post, in regard to the
+ ransom you ask for the return of my son. I think you are a little
+ high in your demands, and I hereby make you a counter-proposition,
+ which I am inclined to believe you will accept. You bring Johnny
+ home and pay me two hundred and fifty dollars in cash, and I agree
+ to take him off your hands. You had better come at night, for the
+ neighbours believe he is lost, and I couldn't be responsible for
+ what they would do to anybody they saw bringing him back. Very
+ respectfully,
+
+ EBENEZER DORSET.
+
+"Great pirates of Penzance!" says I; "of all the impudent--"
+
+But I glanced at Bill, and hesitated. He had the most appealing look
+in his eyes I ever saw on the face of a dumb or a talking brute.
+
+"Sam," says he, "what's two hundred and fifty dollars, after all?
+We've got the money. One more night of this kid will send me to a bed
+in Bedlam. Besides being a thorough gentleman, I think Mr. Dorset is
+a spendthrift for making us such a liberal offer. You ain't going
+to let the chance go, are you?"
+
+"Tell you the truth, Bill," says I, "this little he ewe lamb has
+somewhat got on my nerves too. We'll take him home, pay the ransom
+and make our get-away."
+
+We took him home that night. We got him to go by telling him that his
+father had bought a silver-mounted rifle and a pair of moccasins for
+him, and we were going to hunt bears the next day.
+
+It was just twelve o'clock when we knocked at Ebenezer's front door.
+Just at the moment when I should have been abstracting the fifteen
+hundred dollars from the box under the tree, according to the original
+proposition, Bill was counting out two hundred and fifty dollars into
+Dorset's hand.
+
+When the kid found out we were going to leave him at home he started
+up a howl like a calliope and fastened himself as tight as a leech to
+Bill's leg. His father peeled him away gradually, like a porous
+plaster.
+
+"How long can you hold him?" asks Bill.
+
+"I'm not as strong as I used to be," says old Dorset, "but I think I
+can promise you ten minutes."
+
+"Enough," says Bill. "In ten minutes I shall cross the Central,
+Southern and Middle Western States, and be legging it trippingly for
+the Canadian border."
+
+And, as dark as it was, and as fat as Bill was, and as good a runner
+as I am, he was a good mile and a half out of Summit before I could
+catch up with him.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+THE MARRY MONTH OF MAY
+
+
+Prithee, smite the poet in the eye when he would sing to you praises
+of the month of May. It is a month presided over by the spirits of
+mischief and madness. Pixies and flibbertigibbets haunt the budding
+woods: Puck and his train of midgets are busy in town and country.
+
+In May nature holds up at us a chiding finger, bidding us remember
+that we are not gods, but overconceited members of her own great
+family. She reminds us that we are brothers to the chowder-doomed
+clam and the donkey; lineal scions of the pansy and the chimpanzee,
+and but cousins-german to the cooing doves, the quacking ducks and the
+housemaids and policemen in the parks.
+
+In May Cupid shoots blindfolded--millionaires marry stenographers;
+wise professors woo white-aproned gum-chewers behind quick-lunch
+counters; schoolma'ams make big bad boys remain after school; lads
+with ladders steal lightly over lawns where Juliet waits in her
+trellissed window with her telescope packed; young couples out for a
+walk come home married; old chaps put on white spats and promenade
+near the Normal School; even married men, grown unwontedly tender and
+sentimental, whack their spouses on the back and growl: "How goes it,
+old girl:"
+
+This May, who is no goddess, but Circe, masquerading at the dance
+given in honour of the fair debutante, Summer, puts the kibosh on us
+all.
+
+Old Mr. Coulson groaned a little, and then sat up straight in his
+invalid's chair. He had the gout very bad in one foot, a house near
+Gramercy Park, half a million dollars and a daughter. And he had a
+housekeeper, Mrs. Widdup. The fact and the name deserve a sentence
+each. They have it.
+
+When May poked Mr. Coulson he became elder brother to the turtle-dove.
+In the window near which he sat were boxes of jonquils, of hyacinths,
+geraniums and pansies. The breeze brought their odour into the room.
+Immediately there was a well-contested round between the breath of the
+flowers and the able and active effluvium from gout liniment. The
+liniment won easily; but not before the flowers got an uppercut to
+old Mr. Coulson's nose. The deadly work of the implacable, false
+enchantress May was done.
+
+Across the park to the olfactories of Mr. Coulson came other
+unmistakable, characteristic, copyrighted smells of spring that belong
+to the-big-city-above-the-Subway, alone. The smells of hot asphalt,
+underground caverns, gasoline, patchouli, orange peel, sewer gas,
+Albany grabs, Egyptian cigarettes, mortar and the undried ink on
+newspapers. The inblowing air was sweet and mild. Sparrows wrangled
+happily everywhere outdoors. Never trust May.
+
+Mr. Coulson twisted the ends of his white mustache, cursed his foot,
+and pounded a bell on the table by his side.
+
+In came Mrs. Widdup. She was comely to the eye, fair, flustered,
+forty and foxy.
+
+"Higgins is out, sir," she said, with a smile suggestive of vibratory
+massage. "He went to post a letter. Can I do anything for you, sir?"
+
+"It's time for my aconite," said old Mr. Coulson. "Drop it for me.
+The bottle's there. Three drops. In water. D---- that is, confound
+Higgins! There's nobody in this house cares if I die here in this
+chair for want of attention."
+
+Mrs. Widdup sighed deeply.
+
+"Don't be saying that, sir," she said. "There's them that would care
+more than any one knows. Thirteen drops, you said, sir?"
+
+"Three," said old man Coulson.
+
+He took his dose and then Mrs. Widdup's hand. She blushed. Oh, yes,
+it can be done. Just hold your breath and compress the diaphragm.
+
+"Mrs. Widdup," said Mr. Coulson, "the springtime's full upon us."
+
+"Ain't that right?" said Mrs. Widdup. "The air's real warm. And
+there's bock-beer signs on every corner. And the park's all yaller and
+pink and blue with flowers; and I have such shooting pains up my legs
+and body."
+
+"'In the spring,'" quoted Mr. Coulson, curling his mustache, "'a y----
+that is, a man's--fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.'"
+
+"Lawsy, now!" exclaimed Mrs. Widdup; "ain't that right? Seems like
+it's in the air."
+
+"'In the spring,'" continued old Mr. Coulson, "'a livelier iris shines
+upon the burnished dove.'"
+
+"They do be lively, the Irish," sighed Mrs. Widdup pensively.
+
+"Mrs. Widdup," said Mr. Coulson, making a face at a twinge of his gouty
+foot, "this would be a lonesome house without you. I'm an--that is,
+I'm an elderly man--but I'm worth a comfortable lot of money. If half
+a million dollars' worth of Government bonds and the true affection of
+a heart that, though no longer beating with the first ardour of youth,
+can still throb with genuine--"
+
+The loud noise of an overturned chair near the portieres of the
+adjoining room interrupted the venerable and scarcely suspecting
+victim of May.
+
+In stalked Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson, bony, durable, tall,
+high-nosed, frigid, well-bred, thirty-five, in-the-neighbourhood-of-
+Gramercy-Parkish. She put up a lorgnette. Mrs. Widdup hastily
+stooped and arranged the bandages on Mr. Coulson's gouty foot.
+
+"I thought Higgins was with you," said Miss Van Meeker Constantia.
+
+"Higgins went out," explained her father, "and Mrs. Widdup answered
+the bell. That is better now, Mrs. Widdup, thank you. No; there is
+nothing else I require."
+
+The housekeeper retired, pink under the cool, inquiring stare of Miss
+Coulson.
+
+"This spring weather is lovely, isn't it, daughter?" said the old man,
+consciously conscious.
+
+"That's just it," replied Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson, somewhat
+obscurely. "When does Mrs. Widdup start on her vacation, papa?"
+
+"I believe she said a week from to-day," said Mr. Coulson.
+
+Miss Van Meeker Constantia stood for a minute at the window gazing,
+toward the little park, flooded with the mellow afternoon sunlight.
+With the eye of a botanist she viewed the flowers--most potent
+weapons of insidious May. With the cool pulses of a virgin of
+Cologne she withstood the attack of the ethereal mildness. The arrows
+of the pleasant sunshine fell back, frostbitten, from the cold panoply
+of her unthrilled bosom. The odour of the flowers waked no soft
+sentiments in the unexplored recesses of her dormant heart. The chirp
+of the sparrows gave her a pain. She mocked at May.
+
+But although Miss Coulson was proof against the season, she was
+keen enough to estimate its power. She knew that elderly men and
+thick-waisted women jumped as educated fleas in the ridiculous train
+of May, the merry mocker of the months. She had heard of foolish old
+gentlemen marrying their housekeepers before. What a humiliating
+thing, after all, was this feeling called love!
+
+The next morning at 8 o'clock, when the iceman called, the cook told
+him that Miss Coulson wanted to see him in the basement.
+
+"Well, ain't I the Olcott and Depew; not mentioning the first name at
+all?" said the iceman, admiringly, of himself.
+
+As a concession he rolled his sleeves down, dropped his icehooks on a
+syringa and went back. When Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson
+addressed him he took off his hat.
+
+"There is a rear entrance to this basement," said Miss Coulson, "which
+can be reached by driving into the vacant lot next door, where they
+are excavating for a building. I want you to bring in that way within
+two hours 1,000 pounds of ice. You may have to bring another man or
+two to help you. I will show you where I want it placed. I also want
+1,000 pounds a day delivered the same way for the next four days.
+Your company may charge the ice on our regular bill. This is for your
+extra trouble."
+
+Miss Coulson tendered a ten-dollar bill. The iceman bowed, and held
+his hat in his two hands behind him.
+
+"Not if you'll excuse me, lady. It'll be a pleasure to fix things up
+for you any way you please."
+
+Alas for May!
+
+About noon Mr. Coulson knocked two glasses off his table, broke the
+spring of his bell and yelled for Higgins at the same time.
+
+"Bring an axe," commanded Mr. Coulson, sardonically, "or send out
+for a quart of prussic acid, or have a policeman come in and shoot me.
+I'd rather that than be frozen to death."
+
+"It does seem to be getting cool, Sir," said Higgins. "I hadn't
+noticed it before. I'll close the window, Sir."
+
+"Do," said Mr. Coulson. "They call this spring, do they? If it keeps
+up long I'll go back to Palm Beach. House feels like a morgue."
+
+Later Miss Coulson dutifully came in to inquire how the gout was
+progressing.
+
+"'Stantia," said the old man, "how is the weather outdoors?"
+
+"Bright," answered Miss Coulson, "but chilly."
+
+"Feels like the dead of winter to me," said Mr. Coulson.
+
+"An instance," said Constantia, gazing abstractedly out the window,
+"of 'winter lingering in the lap of spring,' though the metaphor is
+not in the most refined taste."
+
+A little later she walked down by the side of the little park and on
+westward to Broadway to accomplish a little shopping.
+
+A little later than that Mrs. Widdup entered the invalid's room.
+
+"Did you ring, Sir?" she asked, dimpling in many places. "I asked
+Higgins to go to the drug store, and I thought I heard your bell."
+
+"I did not," said Mr. Coulson.
+
+"I'm afraid," said Mrs. Widdup, "I interrupted you sir, yesterday when
+you were about to say something."
+
+"How comes it, Mrs. Widdup," said old man Coulson sternly, "that I
+find it so cold in this house?"
+
+"Cold, Sir?" said the housekeeper, "why, now, since you speak of it
+it do seem cold in this room. But, outdoors it's as warm and fine
+as June, sir. And how this weather do seem to make one's heart jump
+out of one's shirt waist, sir. And the ivy all leaved out on the side
+of the house, and the hand-organs playing, and the children dancing on
+the sidewalk--'tis a great time for speaking out what's in the
+heart. You were saying yesterday, sir--"
+
+"Woman!" roared Mr. Coulson; "you are a fool. I pay you to take care
+of this house. I am freezing to death in my own room, and you come in
+and drivel to me about ivy and hand-organs. Get me an overcoat at
+once. See that all doors and windows are closed below. An old, fat,
+irresponsible, one-sided object like you prating about springtime
+and flowers in the middle of winter! When Higgins comes back, tell him
+to bring me a hot rum punch. And now get out!"
+
+But who shall shame the bright face of May? Rogue though she be and
+disturber of sane men's peace, no wise virgins cunning nor cold
+storage shall make her bow her head in the bright galaxy of months.
+
+Oh, yes, the story was not quite finished.
+
+A night passed, and Higgins helped old man Coulson in the morning to
+his chair by the window. The cold of the room was gone. Heavenly
+odours and fragrant mildness entered.
+
+In hurried Mrs. Widdup, and stood by his chair. Mr. Coulson reached
+his bony hand and grasped her plump one.
+
+"Mrs. Widdup," he said, "this house would be no home without you. I
+have half a million dollars. If that and the true affection of a
+heart no longer in its youthful prime, but still not cold, could--"
+
+"I found out what made it cold," said Mrs. Widdup, leanin' against his
+chair. "'Twas ice--tons of it--in the basement and in the furnace
+room, everywhere. I shut off the registers that it was coming through
+into your room, Mr. Coulson, poor soul! And now it's Maytime again."
+
+"A true heart," went on old man Coulson, a little wanderingly, "that
+the springtime has brought to life again, and--but what will my
+daughter say, Mrs. Widdup?"
+
+"Never fear, sir," said Mrs. Widdup, cheerfully. "Miss Coulson, she
+ran away with the iceman last night, sir!"
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+A TECHNICAL ERROR
+
+
+I never cared especially for feuds, believing them to be even more
+overrated products of our country than grapefruit, scrapple, or
+honeymoons. Nevertheless, if I may be allowed, I will tell you of an
+Indian Territory feud of which I was press-agent, camp-follower, and
+inaccessory during the fact.
+
+I was on a visit to Sam Durkee's ranch, where I had a great time
+falling off unmanicured ponies and waving my bare hand at the lower
+jaws of wolves about two miles away. Sam was a hardened person of
+about twenty-five, with a reputation for going home in the dark with
+perfect equanimity, though often with reluctance.
+
+Over in the Creek Nation was a family bearing the name of Tatum. I
+was told that the Durkees and Tatums had been feuding for years.
+Several of each family had bitten the grass, and it was expected that
+more Nebuchadnezzars would follow. A younger generation of each
+family was growing up, and the grass was keeping pace with them. But I
+gathered that they had fought fairly; that they had not lain in
+cornfields and aimed at the division of their enemies' suspenders in
+the back--partly, perhaps, because there were no cornfields, and
+nobody wore more than one suspender. Nor had any woman or child of
+either house ever been harmed. In those days--and you will find it
+so yet--their women were safe.
+
+Sam Durkee had a girl. (If it were an all-fiction magazine that I
+expect to sell this story to, I should say, "Mr. Durkee rejoiced in a
+fiancee.") Her name was Ella Baynes. They appeared to be devoted to
+each other, and to have perfect confidence in each other, as all
+couples do who are and have or aren't and haven't. She was tolerably
+pretty, with a heavy mass of brown hair that helped her along. He
+introduced me to her, which seemed not to lessen her preference for
+him; so I reasoned that they were surely soul-mates.
+
+Miss Baynes lived in Kingfisher, twenty miles from the ranch. Sam
+lived on a gallop between the two places.
+
+One day there came to Kingfisher a courageous young man, rather small,
+with smooth face and regular features. He made many inquiries about
+the business of the town, and especially of the inhabitants
+cognominally. He said he was from Muscogee, and he looked it, with
+his yellow shoes and crocheted four-in-hand. I met him once when I
+rode in for the mail. He said his name was Beverly Travers, which
+seemed rather improbable.
+
+There were active times on the ranch, just then, and Sam was too busy
+to go to town often. As an incompetent and generally worthless guest,
+it devolved upon me to ride in for little things such as post cards,
+barrels of flour, baking-powder, smoking-tobacco, and--letters from
+Ella.
+
+One day, when I was messenger for half a gross of cigarette papers
+and a couple of wagon tires, I saw the alleged Beverly Travers in a
+yellow-wheeled buggy with Ella Baynes, driving about town as
+ostentatiously as the black, waxy mud would permit. I knew that
+this information would bring no balm of Gilead to Sam's soul, so I
+refrained from including it in the news of the city that I retailed
+on my return. But on the next afternoon an elongated ex-cowboy of
+the name of Simmons, an old-time pal of Sam's, who kept a feed store
+in Kingfisher, rode out to the ranch and rolled and burned many
+cigarettes before he would talk. When he did make oration, his words
+were these:
+
+"Say, Sam, there's been a description of a galoot miscallin' himself
+Bevel-edged Travels impairing the atmospheric air of Kingfisher for
+the past two weeks. You know who he was? He was not otherwise than
+Ben Tatum, from the Creek Nation, son of old Gopher Tatum that your
+Uncle Newt shot last February. You know what he done this morning?
+He killed your brother Lester--shot him in the co't-house yard."
+
+I wondered if Sam had heard. He pulled a twig from a mesquite bush,
+chewed it gravely, and said:
+
+"He did, did he? He killed Lester?"
+
+"The same," said Simmons. "And he did more. He run away with your
+girl, the same as to say Miss Ella Baynes. I thought you might like
+to know, so I rode out to impart the information."
+
+"I am much obliged, Jim," said Sam, taking the chewed twig from his
+mouth. "Yes, I'm glad you rode Out. Yes, I'm right glad."
+
+"Well, I'll be ridin' back, I reckon. That boy I left in the feed
+store don't know hay from oats. He shot Lester in the back."
+
+"Shot him in the back?"
+
+"Yes, while he was hitchin' his hoss."
+
+"I'm much obliged, Jim."
+
+"I kind of thought you'd like to know as soon as you could."
+
+"Come in and have some coffee before you ride back, Jim?"
+
+"Why, no, I reckon not; I must get back to the store."
+
+"And you say--"
+
+"Yes, Sam. Everybody seen 'em drive away together in a buckboard,
+with a big bundle, like clothes, tied up in the back of it. He was
+drivin' the team he brought over with him from Muscogee. They'll be
+hard to overtake right away."
+
+"And which--"
+
+"I was goin' on to tell you. They left on the Guthrie road; but
+there's no tellin' which forks they'll take--you know that."
+
+"All right, Jim; much obliged."
+
+"You're welcome, Sam."
+
+Simmons rolled a cigarette and stabbed his pony with both heels.
+Twenty yards away he reined up and called back:
+
+"You don't want no--assistance, as you might say?"
+
+"Not any, thanks."
+
+"I didn't think you would. Well, so long!"
+
+Sam took out and opened a bone-handled pocket-knife and scraped a
+dried piece of mud from his left boot. I thought at first he was
+going to swear a vendetta on the blade of it, or recite "The Gipsy's
+Curse." The few feuds I had ever seen or read about usually opened
+that way. This one seemed to be presented with a new treatment.
+Thus offered on the stage, it would have been hissed off, and one of
+Belasco's thrilling melodramas demanded instead.
+
+"I wonder," said Sam, with a profoundly thoughtful expression, "if the
+cook has any cold beans left over!"
+
+He called Wash, the Negro cook, and finding that he had some, ordered
+him to heat up the pot and make some strong coffee. Then we went into
+Sam's private room, where he slept, and kept his armoury, dogs, and the
+saddles of his favourite mounts. He took three or four six-shooters
+out of a bookcase and began to look them over, whistling "The Cowboy's
+Lament" abstractedly. Afterward he ordered the two best horses on the
+ranch saddled and tied to the hitching-post.
+
+Now, in the feud business, in all sections of the country, I have
+observed that in one particular there is a delicate but strict
+etiquette belonging. You must not mention the word or refer to the
+subject in the presence of a feudist. It would be more reprehensible
+than commenting upon the mole on the chin of your rich aunt. I found,
+later on, that there is another unwritten rule, but I think that
+belongs solely to the West.
+
+It yet lacked two hours to supper-time; but in twenty minutes Sam and
+I were plunging deep into the reheated beans, hot coffee, and cold
+beef.
+
+"Nothing like a good meal before a long ride," said Sam. "Eat hearty."
+
+I had a sudden suspicion.
+
+"Why did you have two horses saddled?" I asked.
+
+"One, two--one, two," said Sam. "You can count, can't you?"
+
+His mathematics carried with it a momentary qualm and a lesson. The
+thought had not occurred to him that the thought could possibly occur
+to me not to ride at his side on that red road to revenge and justice.
+It was the higher calculus. I was booked for the trail. I began to
+eat more beans.
+
+In an hour we set forth at a steady gallop eastward. Our horses were
+Kentucky-bred, strengthened by the mesquite grass of the west. Ben
+Tatum's steeds may have been swifter, and he had a good lead; but if
+he had heard the punctual thuds of the hoofs of those trailers of
+ours, born in the heart of feudland, he might have felt that
+retribution was creeping up on the hoof-prints of his dapper nags.
+
+I knew that Ben Tatum's card to play was flight--flight until he
+came within the safer territory of his own henchmen and supporters.
+He knew that the man pursuing him would follow the trail to any end
+where it might lead.
+
+During the ride Sam talked of the prospect for rain, of the price of
+beef, and of the musical glasses. You would have thought he had never
+had a brother or a sweetheart or an enemy on earth. There are some
+subjects too big even for the words in the "Unabridged." Knowing
+this phase of the feud code, but not having practised it sufficiently,
+I overdid the thing by telling some slightly funny anecdotes. Sam
+laughed at exactly the right place--laughed with his mouth. When I
+caught sight of his mouth, I wished I had been blessed with enough
+sense of humour to have suppressed those anecdotes.
+
+Our first sight of them we had in Guthrie. Tired and hungry, we
+stumbled, unwashed, into a little yellow-pine hotel and sat at a
+table. In the opposite corner we saw the fugitives. They were bent
+upon their meal, but looked around at times uneasily.
+
+The girl was dressed in brown--one of these smooth, half-shiny,
+silky-looking affairs with lace collar and cuffs, and what I believe
+they call an accordion-plaited skirt. She wore a thick brown veil down
+to her nose, and a broad-brimmed straw hat with some kind of feathers
+adorning it. The man wore plain, dark clothes, and his hair was
+trimmed very short. He was such a man as you might see anywhere.
+
+There they were--the murderer and the woman he had stolen. There we
+were--the rightful avenger, according to the code, and the
+supernumerary who writes these words.
+
+For one time, at least, in the heart of the supernumerary there rose
+the killing instinct. For one moment he joined the force of
+combatants--orally.
+
+"What are you waiting for, Sam?" I said in a whisper. "Let him have
+it now!"
+
+Sam gave a melancholy sigh.
+
+"You don't understand; but _he_ does," he said. "_He_ knows. Mr.
+Tenderfoot, there's a rule out here among white men in the Nation that
+you can't shoot a man when he's with a woman. I never knew it to be
+broke yet. You _can't_ do it. You've got to get him in a gang of men or
+by himself. That's why. He knows it, too. We all know. So, that's
+Mr. Ben Tatum! One of the 'pretty men'! I'll cut him out of the herd
+before they leave the hotel, and regulate his account!"
+
+After supper the flying pair disappeared quickly. Although Sam haunted
+lobby and stairway and halls half the night, in some mysterious way
+the fugitives eluded him; and in the morning the veiled lady in the
+brown dress with the accordion-plaited skirt and the dapper young man
+with the close-clipped hair, and the buckboard with the prancing nags,
+were gone.
+
+
+It is a monotonous story, that of the ride; so it shall be
+curtailed. Once again we overtook them on a road. We were about
+fifty yards behind. They turned in the buckboard and looked at us;
+then drove on without whipping up their horses. Their safety no
+longer lay in speed. Ben Tatum knew. He knew that the only rock of
+safety left to him was the code. There is no doubt that, had he
+been alone, the matter would have been settled quickly with Sam
+Durkee in the usual way; but he had something at his side that
+kept still the trigger-finger of both. It seemed likely that he
+was no coward.
+
+So, you may perceive that woman, on occasions, may postpone instead of
+precipitating conflict between man and man. But not willingly or
+consciously. She is oblivious of codes.
+
+Five miles farther, we came upon the future great Western city of
+Chandler. The horses of pursuers and pursued were starved and weary.
+There was one hotel that offered danger to man and entertainment to
+beast; so the four of us met again in the dining room at the ringing
+of a bell so resonant and large that it had cracked the welkin long
+ago. The dining room was not as large as the one at Guthrie.
+
+Just as we were eating apple pie--how Ben Davises and tragedy
+impinge upon each other!--I noticed Sam looking with keen
+intentness at our quarry where they were seated at a table across the
+room. The girl still wore the brown dress with lace collar and cuffs,
+and the veil drawn down to her nose. The man bent over his plate,
+with his close cropped head held low.
+
+"There's a code," I heard Sam say, either to me or to himself, "that
+won't let you shoot a man in the company of a woman; but, by thunder,
+there ain't one to keep you from killing a woman in the company of a
+man!"
+
+And, quicker than my mind could follow his argument, he whipped a
+Colt's automatic from under his left arm and pumped six bullets into
+the body that the brown dress covered--the brown dress with the lace
+collar and cuffs and the accordion-plaited skirt.
+
+The young person in the dark sack suit, from whose head and from whose
+life a woman's glory had been clipped, laid her head on her arms
+stretched upon the table; while people came running to raise Ben Tatum
+from the floor in his feminine masquerade that had given Sam the
+opportunity to set aside, technically, the obligations of the code.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE
+
+
+Few young couples in the Big-City-of-Bluff began their married
+existence with greater promise of happiness than did Mr. and Mrs.
+Claude Turpin. They felt no especial animosity toward each other;
+they were comfortably established in a handsome apartment house that
+had a name and accommodations like those of a sleeping-car; they were
+living as expensively as the couple on the next floor above who had
+twice their income; and their marriage had occurred on a wager, a
+ferry-boat and first acquaintance, thus securing a sensational
+newspaper notice with their names attached to pictures of the Queen of
+Roumania and M. Santos-Dumont.
+
+Turpin's income was $200 per month. On pay day, after calculating the
+amounts due for rent, instalments on furniture and piano, gas, and
+bills owed to the florist, confectioner, milliner, tailor, wine
+merchant and cab company, the Turpins would find that they still had
+$200 left to spend. How to do this is one of the secrets of
+metropolitan life.
+
+The domestic life of the Turpins was a beautiful picture to see. But
+you couldn't gaze upon it as you could at an oleograph of "Don't Wake
+Grandma," or "Brooklyn by Moonlight."
+
+You had to blink when looked at it; and you heard a fizzing sound just
+like the machine with a "scope" at the end of it. Yes; there wasn't
+much repose about the picture of the Turpins' domestic life. It was
+something like "Spearing Salmon in the Columbia River," or "Japanese
+Artillery in Action."
+
+Every day was just like another; as the days are in New York. In the
+morning Turpin would take bromo-seltzer, his pocket change from under
+the clock, his hat, no breakfast and his departure for the office. At
+noon Mrs. Turpin would get out of bed and humour, put on a kimono,
+airs, and the water to boil for coffee.
+
+Turpin lunched downtown. He came home at 6 to dress for dinner. They
+always dined out. They strayed from the chop-house to chop-sueydom,
+from terrace to table d'hote, from rathskeller to roadhouse, from cafe
+to casino, from Maria's to the Martha Washington. Such is domestic
+life in the great city. Your vine is the mistletoe; your fig tree
+bears dates. Your household gods are Mercury and John Howard Payne.
+For the wedding march you now hear only "Come with the Gypsy Bride."
+You rarely dine at the same place twice in succession. You tire of
+the food; and, besides, you want to give them time for the question of
+that souvenir silver sugar bowl to blow over.
+
+The Turpins were therefore happy. They made many warm and delightful
+friends, some of whom they remembered the next day. Their home life
+was an ideal one, according to the rules and regulations of the Book
+of Bluff.
+
+There came a time when it dawned upon Turpin that his wife was getting
+away with too much money. If you belong to the near-swell class in the
+Big City, and your income is $200 per month, and you find at the end
+of the month, after looking over the bills for current expenses, that
+you, yourself, have spent $150, you very naturally wonder what has
+become of the other $50. So you suspect your wife. And perhaps you
+give her a hint that something needs explanation.
+
+"I say, Vivien," said Turpin, one afternoon when they were enjoying in
+rapt silence the peace and quiet of their cozy apartment, "you've been
+creating a hiatus big enough for a dog to crawl through in this
+month's honorarium. You haven't been paying your dressmaker
+anything on account, have you?"
+
+There was a moment's silence. No sounds could be heard except the
+breathing of the fox terrier, and the subdued, monotonous sizzling of
+Vivien's fulvous locks against the insensate curling irons. Claude
+Turpin, sitting upon a pillow that he had thoughtfully placed upon the
+convolutions of the apartment sofa, narrowly watched the riante,
+lovely face of his wife.
+
+"Claudie, dear," said she, touching her finger to her ruby tongue and
+testing the unresponsive curling irons, "you do me an injustice. Mme.
+Toinette has not seen a cent of mine since the day you paid your
+tailor ten dollars on account."
+
+Turpin's suspicions were allayed for the time. But one day soon there
+came an anonymous letter to him that read:
+
+
+ "Watch your wife. She is blowing in your money secretly. I was
+ a sufferer just as you are. The place is No. 345 Blank Street.
+ A word to the wise, etc.
+ A MAN WHO KNOWS"
+
+
+Turpin took this letter to the captain of police of the precinct that
+he lived in.
+
+"My precinct is as clean as a hound's tooth," said the captain. "The
+lid's shut down as close there as it is over the eye of a Williamsburg
+girl when she's kissed at a party. But if you think there's anything
+queer at the address, I'll go there with ye."
+
+On the next afternoon at 3, Turpin and the captain crept softly up the
+stairs of No. 345 Blank Street. A dozen plain-clothes men, dressed in
+full police uniforms, so as to allay suspicion, waited in the hall
+below.
+
+At the top of the stairs was a door, which was found to be locked.
+The captain took a key from his pocket and unlocked it. The two men
+entered.
+
+They found themselves in a large room, occupied by twenty or twenty-
+five elegantly clothed ladies. Racing charts hung against the walls,
+a ticker clicked in one corner; with a telephone receiver to his ear a
+man was calling out the various positions of the horses in a very
+exciting race. The occupants of the room looked up at the intruders;
+but, as if reassured by the sight of the captain's uniform, they
+reverted their attention to the man at the telephone.
+
+"You see," said the captain to Turpin, "the value of an anonymous
+letter! No high-minded and self-respecting gentleman should
+consider one worthy of notice. Is your wife among this assembly, Mr.
+Turpin?"
+
+"She is not," said Turpin.
+
+"And if she was," continued the captain, "would she be within the
+reach of the tongue of slander? These ladies constitute a Browning
+Society. They meet to discuss the meaning of the great poet. The
+telephone is connected with Boston, whence the parent society
+transmits frequently its interpretations of the poems. Be ashamed of
+yer suspicions, Mr. Turpin."
+
+"Go soak your shield," said Turpin. "Vivien knows how to take care of
+herself in a pool-room. She's not dropping anything on the ponies.
+There must be something queer going on here."
+
+"Nothing but Browning," said the captain. "Hear that?"
+
+"Thanatopsis by a nose," drawled the man at the telephone.
+
+"That's not Browning; that's Longfellow," said Turpin, who sometimes
+read books.
+
+"Back to the pasture!" exclaimed the captain. "Longfellow made the
+pacing-to-wagon record of 7.53 'way back in 1868."
+
+"I believe there's something queer about this joint," repeated Turpin.
+
+"I don't see it," said the captain.
+
+"I know it looks like a pool-room, all right," persisted Turpin, "but
+that's all a blind. Vivien has been dropping a lot of coin somewhere.
+I believe there's some under-handed work going on here."
+
+A number of racing sheets were tacked close together, covering a large
+space on one of the walls. Turpin, suspicious, tore several of them
+down. A door, previously hidden, was revealed. Turpin placed an
+ear to the crack and listened intently. He heard the soft hum of many
+voices, low and guarded laughter, and a sharp, metallic clicking and
+scraping as if from a multitude of tiny but busy objects.
+
+"My God! It is as I feared!" whispered Turpin to himself. "Summon
+your men at once!" he called to the captain. "She is in there, I
+know."
+
+At the blowing of the captain's whistle the uniformed plain-clothes
+men rushed up the stairs into the pool-room. When they saw the
+betting paraphernalia distributed around they halted, surprised and
+puzzled to know why they had been summoned.
+
+But the captain pointed to the locked door and bade them break it
+down. In a few moments they demolished it with the axes they carried.
+Into the other room sprang Claude Turpin, with the captain at his
+heels.
+
+The scene was one that lingered long in Turpin's mind. Nearly a score
+of women--women expensively and fashionably clothed, many beautiful
+and of refined appearance--had been seated at little marble-topped
+tables. When the police burst open the door they shrieked and ran
+here and there like gayly plumed birds that had been disturbed in a
+tropical grove. Some became hysterical; one or two fainted; several
+knelt at the feet of the officers and besought them for mercy on
+account of their families and social position.
+
+A man who had been seated behind a desk had seized a roll of currency
+as large as the ankle of a Paradise Roof Gardens chorus girl and
+jumped out of the window. Half a dozen attendants huddled at one end
+of the room, breathless from fear.
+
+Upon the tables remained the damning and incontrovertible evidences
+of the guilt of the habituees of that sinister room--dish after dish
+heaped high with ice cream, and surrounded by stacks of empty ones,
+scraped to the last spoonful.
+
+"Ladies," said the captain to his weeping circle of prisoners, "I'll
+not hold any of yez. Some of yez I recognize as having fine houses and
+good standing in the community, with hard-working husbands and childer
+at home. But I'll read ye a bit of a lecture before ye go. In the
+next room there's a 20-to-1 shot just dropped in under the wire three
+lengths ahead of the field. Is this the way ye waste your husbands'
+money instead of helping earn it? Home wid yez! The lid's on the
+ice-cream freezer in this precinct."
+
+Claude Turpin's wife was among the patrons of the raided room. He led
+her to their apartment in stem silence. There she wept so
+remorsefully and besought his forgiveness so pleadingly that he forgot
+his just anger, and soon he gathered his penitent golden-haired Vivien
+in his arms and forgave her.
+
+"Darling," she murmured, half sobbingly, as the moonlight drifted
+through the open window, glorifying her sweet, upturned face, "I know
+I done wrong. I will never touch ice cream again. I forgot you were
+not a millionaire. I used to go there every day. But to-day I felt
+some strange, sad presentiment of evil, and I was not myself. I ate
+only eleven saucers."
+
+"Say no more," said Claude, gently as he fondly caressed her waving
+curls.
+
+"And you are sure that you fully forgive me?" asked Vivien, gazing at
+him entreatingly with dewy eyes of heavenly blue.
+
+"Almost sure, little one," answered Claude, stooping and lightly
+touching her snowy forehead with his lips. "I'll let you know
+later on. I've got a month's salary down on Vanilla to win the
+three-year-old steeplechase to-morrow; and if the ice-cream hunch
+is to the good you are It again--see?"
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+THE WHIRLIGIG OF LIFE
+
+
+Justice-of-the-Peace Benaja Widdup sat in the door of his office
+smoking his elder-stem pipe. Half-way to the zenith the Cumberland
+range rose blue-gray in the afternoon haze. A speckled hen swaggered
+down the main street of the "settlement," cackling foolishly.
+
+Up the road came a sound of creaking axles, and then a slow cloud of
+dust, and then a bull-cart bearing Ransie Bilbro and his wife. The
+cart stopped at the Justice's door, and the two climbed down. Ransie
+was a narrow six feet of sallow brown skin and yellow hair. The
+imperturbability of the mountains hung upon him like a suit of armour.
+The woman was calicoed, angled, snuff-brushed, and weary with unknown
+desires. Through it all gleamed a faint protest of cheated youth
+unconscious of its loss.
+
+The Justice of the Peace slipped his feet into his shoes, for the sake
+of dignity, and moved to let them enter.
+
+"We-all," said the woman, in a voice like the wind blowing through pine
+boughs, "wants a divo'ce." She looked at Ransie to see if he noted any
+flaw or ambiguity or evasion or partiality or self-partisanship in her
+statement of their business.
+
+"A divo'ce," repeated Ransie, with a solemn nod. "We-all can't git
+along together nohow. It's lonesome enough fur to live in the
+mount'ins when a man and a woman keers fur one another. But when
+she's a-spittin' like a wildcat or a-sullenin' like a hoot-owl in the
+cabin, a man ain't got no call to live with her."
+
+"When he's a no-'count varmint," said the woman, "without any especial
+warmth, a-traipsin' along of scalawags and moonshiners and a-layin' on
+his back pizen 'ith co'n whiskey, and a-pesterin' folks with a pack o'
+hungry, triflin' houn's to feed!"
+
+"When she keeps a-throwin' skillet lids," came Ransie's antiphony,
+"and slings b'ilin' water on the best coon-dog in the Cumberlands, and
+sets herself agin' cookin' a man's victuals, and keeps him awake o'
+nights accusin' him of a sight of doin's!"
+
+"When he's al'ays a-fightin' the revenues, and gits a hard name in the
+mount'ins fur a mean man, who's gwine to be able fur to sleep o'
+nights?"
+
+The Justice of the Peace stirred deliberately to his duties. He
+placed his one chair and a wooden stool for his petitioners. He
+opened his book of statutes on the table and scanned the index.
+Presently he wiped his spectacles and shifted his inkstand.
+
+"The law and the statutes," said he, "air silent on the subjeck of
+divo'ce as fur as the jurisdiction of this co't air concerned. But,
+accordin' to equity and the Constitution and the golden rule, it's a
+bad barg'in that can't run both ways. If a justice of the peace can
+marry a couple, it's plain that he is bound to be able to divo'ce 'em.
+This here office will issue a decree of divo'ce and abide by the
+decision of the Supreme Co't to hold it good."
+
+Ransie Bilbro drew a small tobacco-bag from his trousers pocket. Out
+of this he shook upon the table a five-dollar note. "Sold a b'arskin
+and two foxes fur that," he remarked. "It's all the money we got."
+
+"The regular price of a divo'ce in this co't," said the Justice, "air
+five dollars." He stuffed the bill into the pocket of his homespun
+vest with a deceptive air of indifference. With much bodily toil
+and mental travail he wrote the decree upon half a sheet of foolscap,
+and then copied it upon the other. Ransie Bilbro and his wife
+listened to his reading of the document that was to give them freedom:
+
+"Know all men by these presents that Ransie Bilbro and his wife,
+Ariela Bilbro, this day personally appeared before me and promises
+that hereinafter they will neither love, honour, nor obey each other,
+neither for better nor worse, being of sound mind and body, and accept
+summons for divorce according to the peace and dignity of the State.
+Herein fail not, so help you God. Benaja Widdup, justice of the peace
+in and for the county of Piedmont, State of Tennessee."
+
+The Justice was about to hand one of the documents to Ransie. The
+voice of Ariela delayed the transfer. Both men looked at her. Their
+dull masculinity was confronted by something sudden and unexpected in
+the woman.
+
+"Judge, don't you give him that air paper yit. 'Tain't all settled,
+nohow. I got to have my rights first. I got to have my ali-money.
+'Tain't no kind of a way to do fur a man to divo'ce his wife 'thout
+her havin' a cent fur to do with. I'm a-layin' off to be a-goin' up
+to brother Ed's up on Hogback Mount'in. I'm bound fur to hev a pa'r
+of shoes and some snuff and things besides. Ef Rance kin affo'd a
+divo'ce, let him pay me ali-money."
+
+Ransie Bilbro was stricken to dumb perplexity. There had been no
+previous hint of alimony. Women were always bringing up startling and
+unlooked-for issues.
+
+Justice Benaja Widdup felt that the point demanded judicial decision.
+The authorities were also silent on the subject of alimony. But the
+woman's feet were bare. The trail to Hogback Mountain was steep and
+flinty.
+
+"Ariela Bilbro," he asked, in official tones, "how much did you 'low
+would be good and sufficient ali-money in the case befo' the co't."
+
+"I 'lowed," she answered, "fur the shoes and all, to say five dollars.
+That ain't much fur ali-money, but I reckon that'll git me to up
+brother Ed's."
+
+"The amount," said the Justice, "air not onreasonable. Ransie Bilbro,
+you air ordered by the co't to pay the plaintiff the sum of five
+dollars befo' the decree of divo'ce air issued."
+
+"I hain't no mo' money," breathed Ransie, heavily. "I done paid you
+all I had."
+
+"Otherwise," said the Justice, looking severely over his spectacles,
+"you air in contempt of co't."
+
+"I reckon if you gimme till to-morrow," pleaded the husband, "I mout
+be able to rake or scrape it up somewhars. I never looked for to be
+a-payin' no ali-money."
+
+"The case air adjourned," said Benaja Widdup, "till to-morrow, when
+you-all will present yo'selves and obey the order of the co't.
+Followin' of which the decrees of divo'ce will be delivered." He sat
+down in the door and began to loosen a shoestring.
+
+"We mout as well go down to Uncle Ziah's," decided Ransie, "and spend
+the night." He climbed into the cart on one side, and Ariela climbed
+in on the other. Obeying the flap of his rope, the little red bull
+slowly came around on a tack, and the cart crawled away in the nimbus
+arising from its wheels.
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup smoked his elder-stem pipe. Late
+in the afternoon he got his weekly paper, and read it until the
+twilight dimmed its lines. Then he lit the tallow candle on his
+table, and read until the moon rose, marking the time for supper. He
+lived in the double log cabin on the slope near the girdled poplar.
+Going home to supper he crossed a little branch darkened by a laurel
+thicket. The dark figure of a man stepped from the laurels and
+pointed a rifle at his breast. His hat was pulled down low, and
+something covered most of his face.
+
+"I want yo' money," said the figure, "'thout any talk. I'm gettin'
+nervous, and my finger's a-wabblin' on this here trigger."
+
+"I've only got f-f-five dollars," said the Justice, producing it
+from his vest pocket.
+
+"Roll it up," came the order, "and stick it in the end of this here
+gun-bar'l."
+
+The bill was crisp and new. Even fingers that were clumsy and
+trembling found little difficulty in making a spill of it and
+inserting it (this with less ease) into the muzzle of the rifle.
+
+"Now I reckon you kin be goin' along," said the robber.
+
+The Justice lingered not on his way.
+
+
+The next day came the little red bull, drawing the cart to the
+office door. Justice Benaja Widdup had his shoes on, for he was
+expecting the visit. In his presence Ransie Bilbro handed to his
+wife a five-dollar bill. The official's eye sharply viewed it.
+It seemed to curl up as though it had been rolled and inserted into
+the end of a gun-barrel. But the Justice refrained from comment.
+It is true that other bills might be inclined to curl. He handed
+each one a decree of divorce. Each stood awkwardly silent, slowly
+folding the guarantee of freedom. The woman cast a shy glance
+full of constraint at Ransie.
+
+"I reckon you'll be goin' back up to the cabin," she said, along 'ith
+the bull-cart. There's bread in the tin box settin' on the shelf. I
+put the bacon in the b'ilin'-pot to keep the hounds from gittin' it.
+Don't forget to wind the clock to-night."
+
+"You air a-goin' to your brother Ed's?" asked Ransie, with fine
+unconcern.
+
+"I was 'lowin' to get along up thar afore night. I ain't sayin' as
+they'll pester theyselves any to make me welcome, but I hain't nowhar
+else fur to go. It's a right smart ways, and I reckon I better be
+goin'. I'll be a-sayin' good-bye, Ranse--that is, if you keer fur to
+say so."
+
+"I don't know as anybody's a hound dog," said Ransie, in a martyr's
+voice, "fur to not want to say good-bye--'less you air so anxious to
+git away that you don't want me to say it."
+
+Ariela was silent. She folded the five-dollar bill and her decree
+carefully, and placed them in the bosom of her dress. Benaja Widdup
+watched the money disappear with mournful eyes behind his spectacles.
+
+And then with his next words he achieved rank (as his thoughts ran)
+with either the great crowd of the world's sympathizers or the little
+crowd of its great financiers.
+
+"Be kind o' lonesome in the old cabin to-night, Ranse," he said.
+
+Ransie Bilbro stared out at the Cumberlands, clear blue now in the
+sunlight. He did not look at Ariela.
+
+"I 'low it might be lonesome," he said; "but when folks gits mad and
+wants a divo'ce, you can't make folks stay."
+
+"There's others wanted a divo'ce," said Ariela, speaking to the wooden
+stool. "Besides, nobody don't want nobody to stay."
+
+"Nobody never said they didn't."
+
+"Nobody never said they did. I reckon I better start on now to
+brother Ed's."
+
+"Nobody can't wind that old clock."
+
+"Want me to go back along 'ith you in the cart and wind it fur you,
+Ranse?"
+
+The mountaineer's countenance was proof against emotion. But he
+reached out a big hand and enclosed Ariela's thin brown one. Her soul
+peeped out once through her impassive face, hallowing it.
+
+"Them hounds shan't pester you no more," said Ransie. "I reckon I
+been mean and low down. You wind that clock, Ariela."
+
+"My heart hit's in that cabin, Ranse," she whispered, "along 'ith you.
+I ai'nt a-goin' to git mad no more. Le's be startin', Ranse, so's we
+kin git home by sundown."
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup interposed as they started for the
+door, forgetting his presence.
+
+"In the name of the State of Tennessee," he said, "I forbid you-all to
+be a-defyin' of its laws and statutes. This co't is mo' than willin'
+and full of joy to see the clouds of discord and misunderstandin'
+rollin' away from two lovin' hearts, but it air the duty of the co't
+to p'eserve the morals and integrity of the State. The co't reminds
+you that you air no longer man and wife, but air divo'ced by regular
+decree, and as such air not entitled to the benefits and 'purtenances
+of the mattermonal estate."
+
+Ariela caught Ransie's arm. Did those words mean that she must lose
+him now when they had just learned the lesson of life?
+
+"But the co't air prepared," went on the Justice, "fur to remove the
+disabilities set up by the decree of divo'ce. The co't air on hand to
+perform the solemn ceremony of marri'ge, thus fixin' things up and
+enablin' the parties in the case to resume the honour'ble and
+elevatin' state of mattermony which they desires. The fee fur
+performin' said ceremony will be, in this case, to wit, five dollars."
+
+Ariela caught the gleam of promise in his words. Swiftly her hand went
+to her bosom. Freely as an alighting dove the bill fluttered to the
+Justice's table. Her sallow cheek coloured as she stood hand in hand
+with Ransie and listened to the reuniting words.
+
+Ransie helped her into the cart, and climbed in beside her. The
+little red bull turned once more, and they set out, hand-clasped, for
+the mountains.
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup sat in his door and took off his
+shoes. Once again he fingered the bill tucked down in his vest
+pocket. Once again he smoked his elder-stem pipe. Once again the
+speckled hen swaggered down the main street of the "settlement,"
+cackling foolishly.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+A SACRIFICE HIT
+
+
+The editor of the _Hearthstone Magazine_ has his own ideas about the
+selection of manuscript for his publication. His theory is no secret;
+in fact, he will expound it to you willingly sitting at his mahogany
+desk, smiling benignantly and tapping his knee gently with his
+gold-rimmed eye-glasses.
+
+"The _Hearthstone_," he will say, "does not employ a staff of
+readers. We obtain opinions of the manuscripts submitted to us
+directly from types of the various classes of our readers."
+
+That is the editor's theory; and this is the way he carries it out:
+
+When a batch of MSS. is received the editor stuffs every one of his
+pockets full of them and distributes them as he goes about during the
+day. The office employees, the hall porter, the janitor, the elevator
+man, messenger boys, the waiters at the cafe where the editor has
+luncheon, the man at the news-stand where he buys his evening paper,
+the grocer and milkman, the guard on the 5.30 uptown elevated train,
+the ticket-chopper at Sixty ----th street, the cook and maid at his
+home--these are the readers who pass upon MSS. sent in to the
+_Hearthstone Magazine_. If his pockets are not entirely emptied by
+the time he reaches the bosom of his family the remaining ones are
+handed over to his wife to read after the baby goes to sleep. A few
+days later the editor gathers in the MSS. during his regular rounds
+and considers the verdict of his assorted readers.
+
+This system of making up a magazine has been very successful; and the
+circulation, paced by the advertising rates, is making a wonderful
+record of speed.
+
+The _Hearthstone_ Company also publishes books, and its imprint is to
+be found on several successful works--all recommended, says the
+editor, by the _Hearthstone's_ army of volunteer readers. Now and
+then (according to talkative members of the editorial staff) the
+_Hearthstone_ has allowed manuscripts to slip through its fingers on
+the advice of its heterogeneous readers, that afterward proved to be
+famous sellers when brought out by other houses.
+
+For instance (the gossips say), "The Rise and Fall of Silas Latham"
+was unfavourably passed upon by the elevator-man; the office-boy
+unanimously rejected "The Boss"; "In the Bishop's Carriage" was
+contemptuously looked upon by the street-car conductor; "The
+Deliverance" was turned down by a clerk in the subscription department
+whose wife's mother had just begun a two-months' visit at his home;
+"The Queen's Quair" came back from the janitor with the comment: "So
+is the book."
+
+But nevertheless the _Hearthstone_ adheres to its theory and system,
+and it will never lack volunteer readers; for each one of the widely
+scattered staff, from the young lady stenographer in the editorial
+office to the man who shovels in coal (whose adverse decision lost to
+the _Hearthstone_ Company the manuscript of "The Under World"), has
+expectations of becoming editor of the magazine some day.
+
+This method of the _Hearthstone_ was well known to Allen Slayton when
+he wrote his novelette entitled "Love Is All." Slayton had hung about
+the editorial offices of all the magazines so persistently that he was
+acquainted with the inner workings of every one in Gotham.
+
+He knew not only that the editor of the Hearthstone handed his MSS.
+around among different types of people for reading, but that the
+stories of sentimental love-interest went to Miss Puffkin, the
+editor's stenographer. Another of the editor's peculiar customs was to
+conceal invariably the name of the writer from his readers of MSS. so
+that a glittering name might not influence the sincerity of their
+reports.
+
+Slayton made "Love Is All" the effort of his life. He gave it six
+months of the best work of his heart and brain. It was a pure
+love-story, fine, elevated, romantic, passionate--a prose poem that
+set the divine blessing of love (I am transposing from the manuscript)
+high above all earthly gifts and honours, and listed it in the
+catalogue of heaven's choicest rewards. Slayton's literary ambition
+was intense. He would have sacrificed all other worldly possessions
+to have gained fame in his chosen art. He would almost have cut off
+his right hand, or have offered himself to the knife of the
+appendicitis fancier to have realized his dream of seeing one of his
+efforts published in the _Hearthstone_.
+
+Slayton finished "Love Is All," and took it to the _Hearthstone_ in
+person. The office of the magazine was in a large, conglomerate
+building, presided under by a janitor.
+
+As the writer stepped inside the door on his way to the elevator a
+potato masher flew through the hall, wrecking Slayton's hat, and
+smashing the glass of the door. Closely following in the wake of the
+utensil flew the janitor, a bulky, unwholesome man, suspenderless and
+sordid, panic-stricken and breathless. A frowsy, fat woman with
+flying hair followed the missile. The janitor's foot slipped on the
+tiled floor, he fell in a heap with an exclamation of despair. The
+woman pounced upon him and seized his hair. The man bellowed lustily.
+
+Her vengeance wreaked, the virago rose and stalked triumphant as
+Minerva, back to some cryptic domestic retreat at the rear. The
+janitor got to his feet, blown and humiliated.
+
+"This is married life," he said to Slayton, with a certain bruised
+humour. "That's the girl I used to lay awake of nights thinking
+about. Sorry about your hat, mister. Say, don't snitch to the tenants
+about this, will yer? I don't want to lose me job."
+
+Slayton took the elevator at the end of the hall and went up to the
+offices of the _Hearthstone_. He left the MS. of "Love Is All" with
+the editor, who agreed to give him an answer as to its availability
+at the end of a week.
+
+Slayton formulated his great winning scheme on his way down. It
+struck him with one brilliant flash, and he could not refrain from
+admiring his own genius in conceiving the idea. That very night he
+set about carrying it into execution.
+
+Miss Puffkin, the _Hearthstone_ stenographer, boarded in the same house
+with the author. She was an oldish, thin, exclusive, languishing,
+sentimental maid; and Slayton had been introduced to her some time
+before.
+
+The writer's daring and self-sacrificing project was this: He knew
+that the editor of the _Hearthstone_ relied strongly upon Miss
+Puffkin's judgment in the manuscript of romantic and sentimental
+fiction. Her taste represented the immense average of mediocre women
+who devour novels and stories of that type. The central idea and
+keynote of "Love Is All" was love at first sight--the enrapturing,
+irresistible, soul-thrilling feeling that compels a man or a woman
+to recognize his or her spirit-mate as soon as heart speaks to heart.
+Suppose he should impress this divine truth upon Miss Puffkin
+personally!--would she not surely indorse her new and rapturous
+sensations by recommending highly to the editor of the _Hearthstone_
+the novelette "Love Is All"?
+
+Slayton thought so. And that night he took Miss Puffkin to the
+theatre. The next night he made vehement love to her in the dim
+parlour of the boarding-house. He quoted freely from "Love Is All";
+and he wound up with Miss Puffkin's head on his shoulder, and visions
+of literary fame dancing in his head.
+
+But Slayton did not stop at love-making. This, he said to himself,
+was the turning point of his life; and, like a true sportsman, he
+"went the limit." On Thursday night he and Miss Puffkin walked over
+to the Big Church in the Middle of the Block and were married.
+
+Brave Slayton! Chateaubriand died in a garret, Byron courted a widow,
+Keats starved to death, Poe mixed his drinks, De Quincey hit the pipe,
+Ade lived in Chicago, James kept on doing it, Dickens wore white
+socks, De Maupassant wore a strait-jacket, Tom Watson became a
+Populist, Jeremiah wept, all these authors did these things for the
+sake of literature, but thou didst cap them all; thou marriedst a wife
+for to carve for thyself a niche in the temple of fame!
+
+On Friday morning Mrs. Slayton said she would go over to the
+_Hearthstone_ office, hand in one or two manuscripts that the editor
+had given to her to read, and resign her position as stenographer.
+
+"Was there anything--er--that--er--you particularly fancied
+in the stories you are going to turn in?" asked Slayton with a
+thumping heart.
+
+"There was one--a novelette, that I liked so much," said his wife. "I
+haven't read anything in years that I thought was half as nice and
+true to life."
+
+That afternoon Slayton hurried down to the _Hearthstone_ office. He
+felt that his reward was close at hand. With a novelette in the
+_Hearthstone_, literary reputation would soon be his.
+
+The office boy met him at the railing in the outer office. It was not
+for unsuccessful authors to hold personal colloquy with the editor
+except at rare intervals.
+
+Slayton, hugging himself internally, was nursing in his heart the
+exquisite hope of being able to crush the office boy with his
+forthcoming success.
+
+He inquired concerning his novelette. The office boy went into the
+sacred precincts and brought forth a large envelope, thick with more
+than the bulk of a thousand checks.
+
+"The boss told me to tell you he's sorry," said the boy, "but your
+manuscript ain't available for the magazine."
+
+Slayton stood, dazed. "Can you tell me," he stammered, "whether or
+no Miss Puff--that is my--I mean Miss Puffkin--handed in a novelette
+this morning that she had been asked to read?"
+
+"Sure she did," answered the office boy wisely. "I heard the old man
+say that Miss Puffkin said it was a daisy. The name of it was,
+'Married for the Mazuma, or a Working Girl's Triumph.'"
+
+"Say, you!" said the office boy confidentially, "your name's Slayton,
+ain't it? I guess I mixed cases on you without meanin' to do it. The
+boss give me some manuscript to hand around the other day and I got
+the ones for Miss Puffkin and the janitor mixed. I guess it's all
+right, though."
+
+And then Slayton looked closer and saw on the cover of his manuscript,
+under the title "Love Is All," the janitor's comment scribbled with a
+piece of charcoal:
+
+"The ---- you say!"
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+THE ROADS WE TAKE
+
+
+Twenty miles west of Tucson, the "Sunset Express" stopped at a tank to
+take on water. Besides the aqueous addition the engine of that famous
+flyer acquired some other things that were not good for it.
+
+While the fireman was lowering the feeding hose, Bob Tidball, "Shark"
+Dodson and a quarter-bred Creek Indian called John Big Dog climbed on
+the engine and showed the engineer three round orifices in pieces of
+ordnance that they carried. These orifices so impressed the engineer
+with their possibilities that he raised both hands in a gesture such
+as accompanies the ejaculation "Do tell!"
+
+At the crisp command of Shark Dodson, who was leader of the attacking
+force the engineer descended to the ground and uncoupled the engine
+and tender. Then John Big Dog, perched upon the coal, sportively held
+two guns upon the engine driver and the fireman, and suggested that
+they run the engine fifty yards away and there await further orders.
+
+Shark Dodson and Bob Tidball, scorning to put such low-grade ore as
+the passengers through the mill, struck out for the rich pocket of the
+express car. They found the messenger serene in the belief that the
+"Sunset Express" was taking on nothing more stimulating and dangerous
+than aqua pura. While Bob was knocking this idea out of his head with
+the butt-end of his six-shooter Shark Dodson was already dosing the
+express-car safe with dynamite.
+
+The safe exploded to the tune of $30,000, all gold and currency. The
+passengers thrust their heads casually out of the windows to look for
+the thunder-cloud. The conductor jerked at the bell-rope, which
+sagged down loose and unresisting, at his tug. Shark Dodson and Bob
+Tidball, with their booty in a stout canvas bag, tumbled out of the
+express car and ran awkwardly in their high-heeled boots to the
+engine.
+
+The engineer, sullenly angry but wise, ran the engine, according to
+orders, rapidly away from the inert train. But before this was
+accomplished the express messenger, recovered from Bob Tidball's
+persuader to neutrality, jumped out of his car with a Winchester rifle
+and took a trick in the game. Mr. John Big Dog, sitting on the coal
+tender, unwittingly made a wrong lead by giving an imitation of a
+target, and the messenger trumped him. With a ball exactly between
+his shoulder blades the Creek chevalier of industry rolled off to
+the ground, thus increasing the share of his comrades in the loot by
+one-sixth each.
+
+Two miles from the tank the engineer was ordered to stop.
+
+The robbers waved a defiant adieu and plunged down the steep slope
+into the thick woods that lined the track. Five minutes of crashing
+through a thicket of chaparral brought them to open woods, where three
+horses were tied to low-hanging branches. One was waiting for John
+Big Dog, who would never ride by night or day again. This animal the
+robbers divested of saddle and bridle and set free. They mounted the
+other two with the bag across one pommel, and rode fast and with
+discretion through the forest and up a primeval, lonely gorge. Here
+the animal that bore Bob Tidball slipped on a mossy boulder and broke
+a foreleg. They shot him through the head at once and sat down to
+hold a council of flight. Made secure for the present by the tortuous
+trail they had travelled, the question of time was no longer so big.
+Many miles and hours lay between them and the spryest posse that could
+follow. Shark Dodson's horse, with trailing rope and dropped bridle,
+panted and cropped thankfully of the grass along the stream in the
+gorge. Bob Tidball opened the sack, drew out double handfuls of the
+neat packages of currency and the one sack of gold and chuckled with
+the glee of a child.
+
+"Say, you old double-decked pirate," he called joyfully to Dodson,
+"you said we could do it--you got a head for financing that knocks
+the horns off of anything in Arizona."
+
+"What are we going to do about a hoss for you, Bob? We ain't got long
+to wait here. They'll be on our trail before daylight in the
+mornin'."
+
+"Oh, I guess that cayuse of yourn'll carry double for a while,"
+answered the sanguine Bob. "We'll annex the first animal we come
+across. By jingoes, we made a haul, didn't we? Accordin' to the
+marks on this money there's $30,000--$15,000 apiece!"
+
+"It's short of what I expected," said Shark Dodson, kicking softly at
+the packages with the toe of his boot. And then he looked pensively at
+the wet sides of his tired horse.
+
+"Old Bolivar's mighty nigh played out," he said, slowly. "I wish that
+sorrel of yours hadn't got hurt."
+
+"So do I," said Bob, heartily, "but it can't be helped. Bolivar's got
+plenty of bottom--he'll get us both far enough to get fresh mounts.
+Dang it, Shark, I can't help thinkin' how funny it is that an
+Easterner like you can come out here and give us Western fellows cards
+and spades in the desperado business. What part of the East was you
+from, anyway?"
+
+"New York State," said Shark Dodson, sitting down on a boulder and
+chewing a twig. "I was born on a farm in Ulster County. I ran away
+from home when I was seventeen. It was an accident my coming West. I
+was walkin' along the road with my clothes in a bundle, makin' for New
+York City. I had an idea of goin' there and makin' lots of money. I
+always felt like I could do it. I came to a place one evenin' where
+the road forked and I didn't know which fork to take. I studied about
+it for half an hour, and then I took the left-hand. That night I run
+into the camp of a Wild West show that was travellin' among the little
+towns, and I went West with it. I've often wondered if I wouldn't
+have turned out different if I'd took the other road."
+
+"Oh, I reckon you'd have ended up about the same," said Bob Tidball,
+cheerfully philosophical. "It ain't the roads we take; it's what's
+inside of us that makes us turn out the way we do."
+
+Shark Dodson got up and leaned against a tree.
+
+"I'd a good deal rather that sorrel of yourn hadn't hurt himself,
+Bob," he said again, almost pathetically.
+
+"Same here," agreed Bob; "he was sure a first-rate kind of a crowbait.
+But Bolivar, he'll pull us through all right. Reckon we'd better be
+movin' on, hadn't we, Shark? I'll bag this boodle ag'in and we'll hit
+the trail for higher timber."
+
+Bob Tidball replaced the spoil in the bag and tied the mouth of it
+tightly with a cord. When he looked up the most prominent object that
+he saw was the muzzle of Shark Dodson's .45 held upon him without a
+waver.
+
+"Stop your funnin'," said Bob, with a grin. "We got to be hittin' the
+breeze."
+
+"Set still," said Shark. "You ain't goin' to hit no breeze, Bob. I
+hate to tell you, but there ain't any chance for but one of us.
+Bolivar, he's plenty tired, and he can't carry double."
+
+"We been pards, me and you, Shark Dodson, for three year," Bob said
+quietly. "We've risked our lives together time and again. I've
+always give you a square deal, and I thought you was a man. I've
+heard some queer stories about you shootin' one or two men in a
+peculiar way, but I never believed 'em. Now if you're just havin' a
+little fun with me, Shark, put your gun up, and we'll get on Bolivar
+and vamose. If you mean to shoot--shoot, you blackhearted son of a
+tarantula!"
+
+Shark Dodson's face bore a deeply sorrowful look. "You don't know how
+bad I feel," he sighed, "about that sorrel of yourn breakin' his leg,
+Bob."
+
+The expression on Dodson's face changed in an instant to one of cold
+ferocity mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed
+itself for a moment like an evil face in the window of a reputable
+house.
+
+Truly Bob Tidball was never to "hit the breeze" again. The deadly .45
+of the false friend cracked and filled the gorge with a roar that the
+walls hurled back with indignant echoes. And Bolivar, unconscious
+accomplice, swiftly bore away the last of the holders-up of the
+"Sunset Express," not put to the stress of "carrying double."
+
+But as "Shark" Dodson galloped away the woods seemed to fade from his
+view; the revolver in his right hand turned to the curved arm of a
+mahogany chair; his saddle was strangely upholstered, and he opened
+his eyes and saw his feet, not in stirrups, but resting quietly on the
+edge of a quartered-oak desk.
+
+
+I am telling you that Dodson, of the firm of Dodson & Decker, Wall
+Street brokers, opened his eyes. Peabody, the confidential clerk, was
+standing by his chair, hesitating to speak. There was a confused hum
+of wheels below, and the sedative buzz of an electric fan.
+
+"Ahem! Peabody," said Dodson, blinking. "I must have fallen asleep.
+I had a most remarkable dream. What is it, Peabody?"
+
+"Mr. Williams, sir, of Tracy & Williams, is outside. He has come to
+settle his deal in X. Y. Z. The market caught him short, sir, if you
+remember."
+
+"Yes, I remember. What is X. Y. Z. quoted at to-day, Peabody?"
+
+"One eighty-five, sir."
+
+"Then that's his price."
+
+"Excuse me," said Peabody, rather nervously "for speaking of it, but
+I've been talking to Williams. He's an old friend of yours, Mr.
+Dodson, and you practically have a corner in X. Y. Z. I thought you
+might--that is, I thought you might not remember that he sold you
+the stock at 98. If he settles at the market price it will take every
+cent he has in the world and his home too to deliver the shares."
+
+The expression on Dodson's face changed in an instant to one of cold
+ferocity mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed
+itself for a moment like an evil face in the window of a reputable
+house.
+
+"He will settle at one eighty-five," said Dodson. "Bolivar cannot
+carry double."
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+A BLACKJACK BARGAINER
+
+
+The most disreputable thing in Yancey Goree's law office was Goree
+himself, sprawled in his creaky old arm-chair. The rickety little
+office, built of red brick, was set flush with the street--the main
+street of the town of Bethel.
+
+Bethel rested upon the foot-hills of the Blue Ridge. Above it the
+mountains were piled to the sky. Far below it the turbid Catawba
+gleamed yellow along its disconsolate valley.
+
+The June day was at its sultriest hour. Bethel dozed in the tepid
+shade. Trade was not. It was so still that Goree, reclining in his
+chair, distinctly heard the clicking of the chips in the grand-jury
+room, where the "court-house gang" was playing poker. From the open
+back door of the office a well-worn path meandered across the grassy
+lot to the court-house. The treading out of that path had cost Goree
+all he ever had--first inheritance of a few thousand dollars, next
+the old family home, and, latterly the last shreds of his self-respect
+and manhood. The "gang" had cleaned him out. The broken gambler had
+turned drunkard and parasite; he had lived to see this day come when
+the men who had stripped him denied him a seat at the game. His word
+was no longer to be taken. The daily bouts at cards had arranged
+itself accordingly, and to him was assigned the ignoble part of the
+onlooker. The sheriff, the county clerk, a sportive deputy, a gay
+attorney, and a chalk-faced man hailing "from the valley," sat at
+table, and the sheared one was thus tacitly advised to go and grow
+more wool.
+
+Soon wearying of his ostracism, Goree had departed for his office,
+muttering to himself as he unsteadily traversed the unlucky pathway.
+After a drink of corn whiskey from a demijohn under the table, he had
+flung himself into the chair, staring, in a sort of maudlin apathy,
+out at the mountains immersed in the summer haze. The little white
+patch he saw away up on the side of Blackjack was Laurel, the village
+near which he had been born and bred. There, also, was the birthplace
+of the feud between the Gorees and the Coltranes. Now no direct heir
+of the Gorees survived except this plucked and singed bird of
+misfortune. To the Coltranes, also, but one male supporter was left
+--Colonel Abner Coltrane, a man of substance and standing, a member
+of the State Legislature, and a contemporary with Goree's father. The
+feud had been a typical one of the region; it had left a red record of
+hate, wrong and slaughter.
+
+But Yancey Goree was not thinking of feuds. His befuddled brain was
+hopelessly attacking the problem of the future maintenance of himself
+and his favourite follies. Of late, old friends of the family had
+seen to it that he had whereof to eat and a place to sleep--but whiskey
+they would not buy for him, and he must have whiskey. His law business
+was extinct; no case had been intrusted to him in two years. He had
+been a borrower and a sponge, and it seemed that if he fell no lower
+it would be from lack of opportunity. One more chance--he was saying
+to himself--if he had one more stake at the game, he thought he could
+win; but he had nothing left to sell, and his credit was more than
+exhausted.
+
+He could not help smiling, even in his misery, as he thought of the
+man to whom, six months before, he had sold the old Goree homestead.
+There had come from "back yan'" in the mountains two of the strangest
+creatures, a man named Pike Garvey and his wife. "Back yan'," with a
+wave of the hand toward the hills, was understood among the
+mountaineers to designate the remotest fastnesses, the unplumbed
+gorges, the haunts of lawbreakers, the wolf's den, and the boudoir of
+the bear. In the cabin far up on Blackjack's shoulder, in the wildest
+part of these retreats, this odd couple had lived for twenty years.
+They had neither dog nor children to mitigate the heavy silence of the
+hills. Pike Garvey was little known in the settlements, but all who
+had dealt with him pronounced him "crazy as a loon." He acknowledged
+no occupation save that of a squirrel hunter, but he "moonshined"
+occasionally by way of diversion. Once the "revenues" had dragged him
+from his lair, fighting silently and desperately like a terrier, and
+he had been sent to state's prison for two years. Released, he popped
+back into his hole like an angry weasel.
+
+Fortune, passing over many anxious wooers, made a freakish flight into
+Blackjack's bosky pockets to smile upon Pike and his faithful partner.
+
+One day a party of spectacled, knickerbockered, and altogether absurd
+prospectors invaded the vicinity of the Garvey's cabin. Pike lifted
+his squirrel rifle off the hooks and took a shot at them at long range
+on the chance of their being revenues. Happily he missed, and the
+unconscious agents of good luck drew nearer, disclosing their
+innocence of anything resembling law or justice. Later on, they
+offered the Garveys an enormous quantity of ready, green, crisp money
+for their thirty-acre patch of cleared land, mentioning, as an excuse
+for such a mad action, some irrelevant and inadequate nonsense about a
+bed of mica underlying the said property.
+
+When the Garveys became possessed of so many dollars that they
+faltered in computing them, the deficiencies of life on Blackjack
+began to grow prominent. Pike began to talk of new shoes, a hogshead
+of tobacco to set in the corner, a new lock to his rifle; and, leading
+Martella to a certain spot on the mountain-side, he pointed out to her
+how a small cannon--doubtless a thing not beyond the scope of their
+fortune in price--might be planted so as to command and defend the
+sole accessible trail to the cabin, to the confusion of revenues and
+meddling strangers forever.
+
+But Adam reckoned without his Eve. These things represented to him
+the applied power of wealth, but there slumbered in his dingy cabin an
+ambition that soared far above his primitive wants. Somewhere in Mrs.
+Garvey's bosom still survived a spot of femininity unstarved by twenty
+years of Blackjack. For so long a time the sounds in her ears had
+been the scaly-barks dropping in the woods at noon, and the wolves
+singing among the rocks at night, and it was enough to have purged her
+of vanities. She had grown fat and sad and yellow and dull. But when
+the means came, she felt a rekindled desire to assume the perquisites
+of her sex--to sit at tea tables; to buy futile things; to whitewash
+the hideous veracity of life with a little form and ceremony. So she
+coldly vetoed Pike's proposed system of fortifications, and
+announced that they would descend upon the world, and gyrate socially.
+
+And thus, at length, it was decided, and the thing done. The village
+of Laurel was their compromise between Mrs. Garvey's preference for
+one of the large valley towns and Pike's hankering for primeval
+solitudes. Laurel yielded a halting round of feeble social
+distractions comportable with Martella's ambitions, and was not
+entirely without recommendation to Pike, its contiguity to the
+mountains presenting advantages for sudden retreat in case fashionable
+society should make it advisable.
+
+Their descent upon Laurel had been coincident with Yancey Goree's
+feverish desire to convert property into cash, and they bought the old
+Goree homestead, paying four thousand dollars ready money into the
+spendthrift's shaking hands.
+
+Thus it happened that while the disreputable last of the Gorees
+sprawled in his disreputable office, at the end of his row, spurned by
+the cronies whom he had gorged, strangers dwelt in the halls of his
+fathers.
+
+A cloud of dust was rolling, slowly up the parched street, with
+something travelling in the midst of it. A little breeze wafted the
+cloud to one side, and a new, brightly painted carryall, drawn by a
+slothful gray horse, became visible. The vehicle deflected from the
+middle of the street as it neared Goree's office, and stopped in the
+gutter directly in front of his door.
+
+On the front seat sat a gaunt, tall man, dressed in black broadcloth,
+his rigid hands incarcerated in yellow kid gloves. On the back seat
+was a lady who triumphed over the June heat. Her stout form was
+armoured in a skin-tight silk dress of the description known as
+"changeable," being a gorgeous combination of shifting hues. She sat
+erect, waving a much-ornamented fan, with her eyes fixed stonily far
+down the street. However Martella Garvey's heart might be rejoicing
+at the pleasures of her new life, Blackjack had done his work with her
+exterior. He had carved her countenance to the image of emptiness and
+inanity; had imbued her with the stolidity of his crags, and the
+reserve of his hushed interiors. She always seemed to hear, whatever
+her surroundings were, the scaly-barks falling and pattering down the
+mountain-side. She could always hear the awful silence of Blackjack
+sounding through the stillest of nights.
+
+Goree watched this solemn equipage, as it drove to his door, with only
+faint interest; but when the lank driver wrapped the reins about his
+whip, awkwardly descended, and stepped into the office, he rose
+unsteadily to receive him, recognizing Pike Garvey, the new, the
+transformed, the recently civilized.
+
+The mountaineer took the chair Goree offered him. They who cast doubts
+upon Garvey's soundness of mind had a strong witness in the man's
+countenance. His face was too long, a dull saffron in hue, and
+immobile as a statue's. Pale-blue, unwinking round eyes without
+lashes added to the singularity of his gruesome visage. Goree was at a
+loss to account for the visit.
+
+"Everything all right at Laurel, Mr. Garvey?" he inquired.
+
+"Everything all right, sir, and mighty pleased is Missis Garvey and me
+with the property. Missis Garvey likes yo' old place, and she likes
+the neighbourhood. Society is what she 'lows she wants, and she is
+gettin' of it. The Rogerses, the Hapgoods, the Pratts and the Troys
+hev been to see Missis Garvey, and she hev et meals to most of thar
+houses. The best folks hev axed her to differ'nt kinds of doin's. I
+cyan't say, Mr. Goree, that sech things suits me--fur me, give me
+them thar." Garvey's huge, yellow-gloved hand flourished in the
+direction of the mountains. "That's whar I b'long, 'mongst the wild
+honey bees and the b'ars. But that ain't what I come fur to say, Mr.
+Goree. Thar's somethin' you got what me and Missis Garvey wants to
+buy."
+
+"Buy!" echoed Goree. "From me?" Then he laughed harshly. "I reckon
+you are mistaken about that. I reckon you are mistaken about that. I
+sold out to you, as you yourself expressed it, 'lock, stock and
+barrel.' There isn't even a ramrod left to sell."
+
+"You've got it; and we 'uns want it. 'Take the money,' says Missis
+Garvey, 'and buy it fa'r and squar'.'"
+
+Goree shook his head. "The cupboard's bare," he said.
+
+"We've riz," pursued the mountaineer, undeflected from his object, "a
+heap. We was pore as possums, and now we could hev folks to dinner
+every day. We been recognized, Missis Garvey says, by the best
+society. But there's somethin' we need we ain't got. She says it
+ought to been put in the 'ventory ov the sale, but it tain't thar.
+'Take the money, then,' says she, 'and buy it fa'r and squar'."'
+
+"Out with it," said Goree, his racked nerves growing impatient.
+
+Garvey threw his slouch hat upon the table, and leaned forward, fixing
+his unblinking eyes upon Goree's.
+
+"There's a old feud," he said distinctly and slowly, "'tween you 'uns
+and the Coltranes."
+
+Goree frowned ominously. To speak of his feud to a feudist is a
+serious breach of the mountain etiquette. The man from "back yan'"
+knew it as well as the lawyer did.
+
+"Na offense," he went on "but purely in the way of business. Missis
+Garvey hev studied all about feuds. Most of the quality folks in the
+mountains hev 'em. The Settles and the Goforths, the Rankins and the
+Boyds, the Silers and the Galloways, hev all been cyarin' on feuds
+f'om twenty to a hundred year. The last man to drap was when yo'
+uncle, Jedge Paisley Goree, 'journed co't and shot Len Coltrane f'om
+the bench. Missis Garvey and me, we come f'om the po' white trash.
+Nobody wouldn't pick a feud with we 'uns, no mo'n with a fam'ly of
+tree-toads. Quality people everywhar, says Missis Garvey, has feuds.
+We 'uns ain't quality, but we're buyin' into it as fur as we can.
+'Take the money, then,' says Missis Garvey, 'and buy Mr. Goree's feud,
+fa'r and squar'.'"
+
+The squirrel hunter straightened a leg half across the room, drew a
+roll of bills from his pocket, and threw them on the table.
+
+"Thar's two hundred dollars, Mr. Goree; what you would call a fa'r
+price for a feud that's been 'lowed to run down like yourn hev.
+Thar's only you left to cyar' on yo' side of it, and you'd make mighty
+po' killin'. I'll take it off yo' hands, and it'll set me and Missis
+Garvey up among the quality. Thar's the money."
+
+The little roll of currency on the table slowly untwisted itself,
+writhing and jumping as its folds relaxed. In the silence that
+followed Garvey's last speech the rattling of the poker chips in the
+court-house could be plainly heard. Goree knew that the sheriff had
+just won a pot, for the subdued whoop with which he always greeted
+a victory floated across the square upon the crinkly heat waves.
+Beads of moisture stood on Goree's brow. Stooping, he drew the
+wicker-covered demijohn from under the table, and filled a tumbler
+from it.
+
+"A little corn liquor, Mr. Garvey? Of course you are joking about--
+what you spoke of? Opens quite a new market, doesn't it? Feuds.
+Prime, two-fifty to three. Feuds, slightly damaged--two hundred, I
+believe you said, Mr. Garvey?"
+
+Goree laughed self-consciously.
+
+The mountaineer took the glass Goree handed him, and drank the whisky
+without a tremor of the lids of his staring eyes. The lawyer
+applauded the feat by a look of envious admiration. He poured his own
+drink, and took it like a drunkard, by gulps, and with shudders at the
+smell and taste.
+
+"Two hundred," repeated Garvey. "Thar's the money."
+
+A sudden passion flared up in Goree's brain. He struck the table with
+his fist. One of the bills flipped over and touched his hand. He
+flinched as if something had stung him.
+
+"Do you come to me," he shouted, "seriously with such a ridiculous,
+insulting, darned-fool proposition?"
+
+"It's fa'r and squar'," said the squirrel hunter, but he reached out
+his hand as if to take back the money; and then Goree knew that his
+own flurry of rage had not been from pride or resentment, but from
+anger at himself, knowing that he would set foot in the deeper depths
+that were being opened to him. He turned in an instant from an
+outraged gentleman to an anxious chafferer recommending his goods.
+
+"Don't be in a hurry, Garvey," he said, his face crimson and his
+speech thick. "I accept your p-p-proposition, though it's dirt cheap
+at two hundred. A t-trade's all right when both p-purchaser and
+b-buyer are s-satisfied. Shall I w-wrap it up for you, Mr. Garvey?"
+
+Garvey rose, and shook out his broadcloth. "Missis Garvey will be
+pleased. You air out of it, and it stands Coltrane and Garvey. Just
+a scrap ov writin', Mr. Goree, you bein' a lawyer, to show we traded."
+
+Goree seized a sheet of paper and a pen. The money was clutched in
+his moist hand. Everything else suddenly seemed to grow trivial and
+light.
+
+"Bill of sale, by all means. 'Right, title, and interest in and to'
+. . . 'forever warrant and--' No, Garvey, we'll have to leave out that
+'defend,'" said Goree with a loud laugh. "You'll have to defend this
+title yourself."
+
+The mountaineer received the amazing screed that the lawyer handed
+him, folded it with immense labour, and laced it carefully in his
+pocket.
+
+Goree was standing near the window. "Step here," he said, raising his
+finger, "and I'll show you your recently purchased enemy. There he
+goes, down the other side of the street."
+
+The mountaineer crooked his long frame to look through the window in
+the direction indicated by the other. Colonel Abner Coltrane, an
+erect, portly gentleman of about fifty, wearing the inevitable long,
+double-breasted frock coat of the Southern lawmaker, and an old high
+silk hat, was passing on the opposite sidewalk. As Garvey looked,
+Goree glanced at his face. If there be such a thing as a yellow wolf,
+here was its counterpart. Garvey snarled as his unhuman eyes followed
+the moving figure, disclosing long, amber-coloured fangs.
+
+"Is that him? Why, that's the man who sent me to the pen'tentiary
+once!"
+
+"He used to be district attorney," said Goree carelessly. "And, by
+the way, he's a first-class shot."
+
+"I kin hit a squirrel's eye at a hundred yard," said Garvey. "So that
+thar's Coltrane! I made a better trade than I was thinkin'. I'll
+take keer ov this feud, Mr. Goree, better'n you ever did!"
+
+He moved toward the door, but lingered there, betraying a slight
+perplexity.
+
+"Anything else to-day?" inquired Goree with frothy sarcasm. "Any
+family traditions, ancestral ghosts, or skeletons in the closet?
+Prices as low as the lowest."
+
+"Thar was another thing," replied the unmoved squirrel hunter, "that
+Missis Garvey was thinkin' of. 'Tain't so much in my line as t'other,
+but she wanted partic'lar that I should inquire, and ef you was
+willin', 'pay fur it,' she says, 'fa'r and squar'.' Thar's a buryin'
+groun', as you know, Mr. Goree, in the yard of yo' old place, under
+the cedars. Them that lies thar is yo' folks what was killed by the
+Coltranes. The monyments has the names on 'em. Missis Garvey says a
+fam'ly buryin' groun' is a sho' sign of quality. She says ef we git
+the feud, thar's somethin' else ought to go with it. The names on
+them monyments is 'Goree,' but they can be changed to ourn by--"
+
+"Go! Go!" screamed Goree, his face turning purple. He stretched out
+both hands toward the mountaineer, his fingers hooked and shaking.
+"Go, you ghoul! Even a Ch-Chinaman protects the g-graves of his
+ancestors--go!"
+
+The squirrel hunter slouched out of the door to his carryall. While
+he was climbing over the wheel Goree was collecting, with feverish
+celerity, the money that had fallen from his hand to the floor. As
+the vehicle slowly turned about, the sheep, with a coat of newly
+grown wool, was hurrying, in indecent haste, along the path to the
+court-house.
+
+At three o'clock in the morning they brought him back to his office,
+shorn and unconscious. The sheriff, the sportive deputy, the county
+clerk, and the gay attorney carried him, the chalk-faced man "from the
+valley" acting as escort.
+
+"On the table," said one of them, and they deposited him there among
+the litter of his unprofitable books and papers.
+
+"Yance thinks a lot of a pair of deuces when he's liquored up," sighed
+the sheriff reflectively.
+
+"Too much," said the gay attorney. "A man has no business to play
+poker who drinks as much as he does. I wonder how much he dropped
+to-night."
+
+"Close to two hundred. What I wonder is whar he got it. Yance ain't
+had a cent fur over a month, I know."
+
+"Struck a client, maybe. Well, let's get home before daylight. He'll
+be all right when he wakes up, except for a sort of beehive about the
+cranium."
+
+The gang slipped away through the early morning twilight. The next
+eye to gaze upon the miserable Goree was the orb of day. He peered
+through the uncurtained window, first deluging the sleeper in a flood
+of faint gold, but soon pouring upon the mottled red of his flesh a
+searching, white, summer heat. Goree stirred, half unconsciously,
+among the table's debris, and turned his face from the window. His
+movement dislodged a heavy law book, which crashed upon the floor.
+Opening his eyes, he saw, bending over him, a man in a black frock
+coat. Looking higher, he discovered a well-worn silk hat, and beneath
+it the kindly, smooth face of Colonel Abner Coltrane.
+
+A little uncertain of the outcome, the colonel waited for the other to
+make some sign of recognition. Not in twenty years had male members
+of these two families faced each other in peace. Goree's eyelids
+puckered as he strained his blurred sight toward this visitor, and
+then he smiled serenely.
+
+"Have you brought Stella and Lucy over to play?" he said calmly.
+
+"Do you know me, Yancey?" asked Coltrane.
+
+"Of course I do. You brought me a whip with a whistle in the end."
+
+So he had--twenty-four years ago; when Yancey's father was his best
+friend.
+
+Goree's eyes wandered about the room. The colonel understood. "Lie
+still, and I'll bring you some," said he. There was a pump in the yard
+at the rear, and Goree closed his eyes, listening with rapture to the
+click of its handle, and the bubbling of the falling stream. Coltrane
+brought a pitcher of the cool water, and held it for him to drink.
+Presently Goree sat up--a most forlorn object, his summer suit of flax
+soiled and crumpled, his discreditable head tousled and unsteady. He
+tried to wave one of his hands toward the colonel.
+
+"Ex-excuse--everything, will you?" he said. "I must have drunk too
+much whiskey last night, and gone to bed on the table." His brows
+knitted into a puzzled frown.
+
+"Out with the boys awhile?" asked Coltrane kindly.
+
+"No, I went nowhere. I haven't had a dollar to spend in the last two
+months. Struck the demijohn too often, I reckon, as usual."
+
+Colonel Coltrane touched him on the shoulder.
+
+"A little while ago, Yancey," he began, "you asked me if I had brought
+Stella and Lucy over to play. You weren't quite awake then, and must
+have been dreaming you were a boy again. You are awake now, and I
+want you to listen to me. I have come from Stella and Lucy to their
+old playmate, and to my old friend's son. They know that I am going
+to bring you home with me, and you will find them as ready with a
+welcome as they were in the old days. I want you to come to my house
+and stay until you are yourself again, and as much longer as you will.
+We heard of your being down in the world, and in the midst of
+temptation, and we agreed that you should come over and play at our
+house once more. Will you come, my boy? Will you drop our old family
+trouble and come with me?"
+
+"Trouble!" said Goree, opening his eyes wide. "There was never any
+trouble between us that I know of. I'm sure we've always been the
+best friends. But, good Lord, Colonel, how could I go to your home as
+I am--a drunken wretch, a miserable, degraded spendthrift and
+gambler--"
+
+He lurched from the table into his armchair, and began to weep maudlin
+tears, mingled with genuine drops of remorse and shame. Coltrane
+talked to him persistently and reasonably, reminding him of the
+simple mountain pleasures of which he had once been so fond, and
+insisting upon the genuineness of the invitation.
+
+Finally he landed Goree by telling him he was counting upon his help
+in the engineering and transportation of a large amount of felled
+timber from a high mountain-side to a waterway. He knew that Goree
+had once invented a device for this purpose--a series of slides and
+chutes upon which he had justly prided himself. In an instant the
+poor fellow, delighted at the idea of his being of use to any one, had
+paper spread upon the table, and was drawing rapid but pitifully shaky
+lines in demonstration of what he could and would do.
+
+The man was sickened of the husks; his prodigal heart was turning
+again toward the mountains. His mind was yet strangely clogged, and
+his thoughts and memories were returning to his brain one by one, like
+carrier pigeons over a stormy sea. But Coltrane was satisfied with
+the progress he had made.
+
+Bethel received the surprise of its existence that afternoon when a
+Coltrane and a Goree rode amicably together through the town. Side by
+side they rode, out from the dusty streets and gaping townspeople,
+down across the creek bridge, and up toward the mountain. The
+prodigal had brushed and washed and combed himself to a more decent
+figure, but he was unsteady in the saddle, and he seemed to be deep in
+the contemplation of some vexing problem. Coltrane left him in his
+mood, relying upon the influence of changed surroundings to restore
+his equilibrium.
+
+Once Goree was seized with a shaking fit, and almost came to a
+collapse. He had to dismount and rest at the side of the road. The
+colonel, foreseeing such a condition, had provided a small flask of
+whisky for the journey but when it was offered to him Goree refused it
+almost with violence, declaring he would never touch it again. By and
+by he was recovered, and went quietly enough for a mile or two. Then
+he pulled up his horse suddenly, and said:
+
+"I lost two hundred dollars last night, playing poker. Now, where did
+I get that money?"
+
+"Take it easy, Yancey. The mountain air will soon clear it up. We'll
+go fishing, first thing, at the Pinnacle Falls. The trout are jumping
+there like bullfrogs. We'll take Stella and Lucy along, and have a
+picnic on Eagle Rock. Have you forgotten how a hickory-cured-ham
+sandwich tastes, Yancey, to a hungry fisherman?"
+
+Evidently the colonel did not believe the story of his lost wealth; so
+Goree retired again into brooding silence.
+
+By late Afternoon they had travelled ten of the twelve miles between
+Bethel and Laurel. Half a mile this side of Laurel lay the old Goree
+place; a mile or two beyond the village lived the Coltranes. The road
+was now steep and laborious, but the compensations were many. The
+tilted aisles of the forest were opulent with leaf and bird and bloom.
+The tonic air put to shame the pharmacopaeia. The glades were dark
+with mossy shade, and bright with shy rivulets winking from the ferns
+and laurels. On the lower side they viewed, framed in the near
+foliage, exquisite sketches of the far valley swooning in its opal
+haze.
+
+Coltrane was pleased to see that his companion was yielding to the
+spell of the hills and woods. For now they had but to skirt the base
+of Painter's Cliff; to cross Elder Branch and mount the hill beyond,
+and Goree would have to face the squandered home of his fathers. Every
+rock he passed, every tree, every foot of the rocky way, was familiar
+to him. Though he had forgotten the woods, they thrilled him like the
+music of "Home, Sweet Home."
+
+They rounded the cliff, descended into Elder Branch, and paused there
+to let the horses drink and splash in the swift water. On the right
+was a rail fence that cornered there, and followed the road and
+stream. Inclosed by it was the old apple orchard of the home place;
+the house was yet concealed by the brow of the steep hill. Inside and
+along the fence, pokeberries, elders, sassafras, and sumac grew high
+and dense. At a rustle of their branches, both Goree and Coltrane
+glanced up, and saw a long, yellow, wolfish face above the fence,
+staring at them with pale, unwinking eyes. The head quickly
+disappeared; there was a violent swaying of the bushes, and an
+ungainly figure ran up through the apple orchard in the direction of
+the house, zig-zagging among the trees.
+
+"That's Garvey," said Coltrane; "the man you sold out to. There's no
+doubt but he's considerably cracked. I had to send him up for
+moonshining once, several years ago, in spite of the fact that I
+believed him irresponsible. Why, what's the matter, Yancey?"
+
+Goree was wiping his forehead, and his face had lost its colour. "Do
+I look queer, too?" he asked, trying to smile. "I'm just remembering
+a few more things." Some of the alcohol had evaporated from his brain.
+"I recollect now where I got that two hundred dollars."
+
+"Don't think of it," said Coltrane cheerfully. "Later on we'll figure
+it all out together."
+
+They rode out of the branch, and when they reached the foot of the
+hill Goree stopped again.
+
+"Did you ever suspect I was a very vain kind of fellow, Colonel?" he
+asked. "Sort of foolish proud about appearances?"
+
+The colonel's eyes refused to wander to the soiled, sagging suit of
+flax and the faded slouch hat.
+
+"It seems to me," he replied, mystified, but humouring him, "I
+remember a young buck about twenty, with the tightest coat, the
+sleekest hair, and the prancingest saddle horse in the Blue Ridge."
+
+"Right you are," said Goree eagerly. "And it's in me yet, though it
+don't show. Oh, I'm as vain as a turkey gobbler, and as proud as
+Lucifer. I'm going to ask you to indulge this weakness of mine in a
+little matter."
+
+"Speak out, Yancey. We'll create you Duke of Laurel and Baron of Blue
+Ridge, if you choose; and you shall have a feather out of Stella's
+peacock's tail to wear in your hat."
+
+"I'm in earnest. In a few minutes we'll pass the house up there on
+the hill where I was born, and where my people have lived for nearly a
+century. Strangers live there now--and look at me! I am about to
+show myself to them ragged and poverty-stricken, a wastrel and a
+beggar. Colonel Coltrane, I'm ashamed to do it. I want you to let me
+wear your coat and hat until we are out of sight beyond. I know you
+think it a foolish pride, but I want to make as good a showing as I
+can when I pass the old place."
+
+"Now, what does this mean?" said Coltrane to himself, as he
+compared his companion's sane looks and quiet demeanour with his
+strange request. But he was already unbuttoning the coat, assenting
+readily, as if the fancy were in no wise to be considered strange.
+
+The coat and hat fitted Goree well. He buttoned the former about him
+with a look of satisfaction and dignity. He and Coltrane were nearly
+the same size--rather tall, portly, and erect. Twenty-five years
+were between them, but in appearance they might have been brothers.
+Goree looked older than his age; his face was puffy and lined; the
+colonel had the smooth, fresh complexion of a temperate liver. He put
+on Goree's disreputable old flax coat and faded slouch hat.
+
+"Now," said Goree, taking up the reins, "I'm all right. I want you to
+ride about ten feet in the rear as we go by, Colonel, so that they can
+get a good look at me. They'll see I'm no back number yet, by any
+means. I guess I'll show up pretty well to them once more, anyhow.
+Let's ride on."
+
+He set out up the hill at a smart trot, the colonel following, as he
+had been requested.
+
+Goree sat straight in the saddle, with head erect, but his eyes were
+turned to the right, sharply scanning every shrub and fence and
+hiding-place in the old homestead yard. Once he muttered to himself,
+"Will the crazy fool try it, or did I dream half of it?"
+
+It was when he came opposite the little family burying ground that he
+saw what he had been looking for--a puff of white smoke, coming from
+the thick cedars in one corner. He toppled so slowly to the left that
+Coltrane had time to urge his horse to that side, and catch him with
+one arm.
+
+The squirrel hunter had not overpraised his aim. He had sent the
+bullet where he intended, and where Goree had expected that it would
+pass--through the breast of Colonel Abner Coltrane's black frock
+coat.
+
+Goree leaned heavily against Coltrane, but he did not fall. The
+horses kept pace, side by side, and the Colonel's arm kept him steady.
+The little white houses of Laurel shone through the trees, half a mile
+away. Goree reached out one hand and groped until it rested upon
+Coltrane's fingers, which held his bridle.
+
+"Good friend," he said, and that was all.
+
+Thus did Yancey Goree, as he rode past his old home, make, considering
+all things, the best showing that was in his power.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+THE SONG AND THE SERGEANT
+
+
+Half a dozen people supping at a table in one of the upper-Broadway
+all-night restaurants were making too much noise. Three times the
+manager walked past them with a politely warning glance; but their
+argument had waxed too warm to be quelled by a manager's gaze. It was
+midnight, and the restaurant was filled with patrons from the theatres
+of that district. Some among the dispersed audiences must have
+recognized among the quarrelsome sextet the faces of the players
+belonging to the Carroll Comedy Company.
+
+Four of the six made up the company. Another was the author of the
+comedietta, "A Gay Coquette," which the quartette of players had been
+presenting with fair success at several vaudeville houses in the city.
+The sixth at the table was a person inconsequent in the realm of art,
+but one at whose bidding many lobsters had perished.
+
+Loudly the six maintained their clamorous debate. No one of the Party
+was silent except when answers were stormed from him by the excited
+ones. That was the comedian of "A Gay Coquette." He was a young man
+with a face even too melancholy for his profession.
+
+The oral warfare of four immoderate tongues was directed at Miss
+Clarice Carroll, the twinkling star of the small aggregation.
+Excepting the downcast comedian, all members of the party united in
+casting upon her with vehemence the blame of some momentous
+misfortune. Fifty times they told her: "It is your fault, Clarice--it
+is you alone who spoilt the scene. It is only of late that you have
+acted this way. At this rate the sketch will have to be taken off."
+
+Miss Carroll was a match for any four. Gallic ancestry gave her a
+vivacity that could easily mount to fury. Her large eyes flashed a
+scorching denial at her accusers. Her slender, eloquent arms
+constantly menaced the tableware. Her high, clear soprano voice rose
+to what would have been a scream had it not possessed so pure a
+musical quality. She hurled back at the attacking four their
+denunciations in tones sweet, but of too great carrying power for a
+Broadway restaurant.
+
+Finally they exhausted her patience both as a woman and an artist.
+She sprang up like a panther, managed to smash half a dozen plates and
+glasses with one royal sweep of her arm, and defied her critics. They
+rose and wrangled more loudly. The comedian sighed and looked a
+trifle sadder and disinterested. The manager came tripping and
+suggested peace. He was told to go to the popular synonym for war so
+promptly that the affair might have happened at The Hague.
+
+Thus was the manager angered. He made a sign with his hand and a
+waiter slipped out of the door. In twenty minutes the party of six
+was in a police station facing a grizzled and philosophical desk
+sergeant.
+
+"Disorderly conduct in a restaurant," said the policeman who had
+brought the party in.
+
+The author of "A Gay Coquette" stepped to the front. He wore
+nose-glasses and evening clothes, even if his shoes had been tans
+before they met the patent-leather-polish bottle.
+
+"Mr. Sergeant," said he, out of his throat, like Actor Irving, "I
+would like to protest against this arrest. The company of actors who
+are performing in a little play that I have written, in company with a
+friend and myself were having a little supper. We became deeply
+interested in the discussion as to which one of the cast is
+responsible for a scene in the sketch that lately has fallen so flat
+that the piece is about to become a failure. We may have been rather
+noisy and intolerant of interruption by the restaurant people; but the
+matter was of considerable importance to all of us. You see that we
+are sober and are not the kind of people who desire to raise
+disturbances. I hope that the case will not be pressed and that we may
+be allowed to go."
+
+"Who makes the charge?" asked the sergeant.
+
+"Me," said a white-aproned voice in the rear. "De restaurant sent me
+to. De gang was raisin' a rough-house and breakin' dishes."
+
+"The dishes were paid for," said the playwright. "They were not broken
+purposely. In her anger, because we remonstrated with her for
+spoiling the scene, Miss--"
+
+"It's not true, sergeant," cried the clear voice of Miss Clarice
+Carroll. In a long coat of tan silk and a red-plumed hat, she
+bounded before the desk.
+
+"It's not my fault," she cried indignantly. "How dare they say such
+a thing! I've played the title role ever since it was staged, and if
+you want to know who made it a success, ask the public--that's all."
+
+"What Miss Carroll says is true in part," said the author. "For five
+months the comedietta was a drawing-card in the best houses. But
+during the last two weeks it has lost favour. There is one scene in
+it in which Miss Carroll made a big hit. Now she hardly gets a hand
+out of it. She spoils it by acting it entirely different from her old
+way."
+
+"It is not my fault," reiterated the actress.
+
+"There are only two of you on in the scene," argued the playwright
+hotly, "you and Delmars, here--"
+
+"Then it's his fault," declared Miss Carroll, with a lightning glance
+of scorn from her dark eyes. The comedian caught it, and gazed with
+increased melancholy at the panels of the sergeant's desk.
+
+The night was a dull one in that particular police station.
+
+The sergeant's long-blunted curiosity awoke a little.
+
+"I've heard you," he said to the author. And then he addressed the
+thin-faced and ascetic-looking lady of the company who played "Aunt
+Turnip-top" in the little comedy.
+
+"Who do you think spoils the scene you are fussing about?" he asked.
+
+"I'm no knocker," said that lady, "and everybody knows it. So, when I
+say that Clarice falls down every time in that scene I'm judging her
+art and not herself. She was great in it once. She does it something
+fierce now. It'll dope the show if she keeps it up."
+
+The sergeant looked at the comedian.
+
+"You and the lady have this scene together, I understand. I suppose
+there's no use asking you which one of you queers it?"
+
+The comedian avoided the direct rays from the two fixed stars of Miss
+Carroll's eyes.
+
+"I don't know," he said, looking down at his patent-leather toes.
+
+"Are you one of the actors?" asked the sergeant of a dwarfish youth
+with a middle-aged face.
+
+"Why, say!" replied the last Thespian witness, "you don't notice any
+tin spear in my hands, do you? You haven't heard me shout: 'See, the
+Emperor comes!' since I've been in here, have you? I guess I'm on the
+stage long enough for 'em not to start a panic by mistaking me for a
+thin curl of smoke rising above the footlights."
+
+"In your opinion, if you've got one," said the sergeant, "is the frost
+that gathers on the scene in question the work of the lady or the
+gentleman who takes part in it?"
+
+The middle-aged youth looked pained.
+
+"I regret to say," he answered, "that Miss Carroll seems to have
+lost her grip on that scene. She's all right in the rest of the
+play, but--but I tell you, sergeant, she can do it--she has done
+it equal to any of 'em--and she can do it again."
+
+Miss Carroll ran forward, glowing and palpitating.
+
+"Thank you, Jimmy, for the first good word I've had in many a day,"
+she cried. And then she turned her eager face toward the desk.
+
+"I'll show you, sergeant, whether I am to blame. I'll show them
+whether I can do that scene. Come, Mr. Delmars; let us begin. You
+will let us, won't you, sergeant?"
+
+"How long will it take?" asked the sergeant, dubiously.
+
+"Eight minutes," said the playwright. "The entire play consumes but
+thirty."
+
+"You may go ahead," said the sergeant. "Most of you seem to side
+against the little lady. Maybe she had a right to crack up a saucer
+or two in that restaurant. We'll see how she does the turn before we
+take that up."
+
+The matron of the police station had been standing near, listening to
+the singular argument. She came nigher and stood near the sergeant's
+chair. Two or three of the reserves strolled in, big and yawning.
+
+"Before beginning the scene," said the playwright, "and assuming that
+you have not seen a production of 'A Gay Coquette,' I will make a
+brief but necessary explanation. It is a musical-farce-comedy--
+burlesque-comedietta. As the title implies, Miss Carroll's role is
+that of a gay, rollicking, mischievous, heartless coquette. She
+sustains that character throughout the entire comedy part of the
+production. And I have designed the extravaganza features so that she
+may preserve and present the same coquettish idea.
+
+"Now, the scene in which we take exception to Miss Carroll's acting is
+called the 'gorilla dance.' She is costumed to represent a wood nymph,
+and there is a great song-and-dance scene with a gorilla--played by
+Mr. Delmars, the comedian. A tropical-forest stage is set.
+
+"That used to get four and five recalls. The main thing was the
+acting and the dance--it was the funniest thing in New York for five
+months. Delmars's song, 'I'll Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home,' while he
+and Miss Carroll were cutting hide-and-seek capers among the tropical
+plants, was a winner."
+
+"What's the trouble with the scene now?" asked the sergeant.
+
+"Miss Carroll spoils it right in the middle of it," said the
+playwright wrathfully.
+
+With a wide gesture of her ever-moving arms the actress waved back the
+little group of spectators, leaving a space in front of the desk for
+the scene of her vindication or fall. Then she whipped off her long
+tan cloak and tossed it across the arm of the policeman who still
+stood officially among them.
+
+Miss Carroll had gone to supper well cloaked, but in the costume of
+the tropic wood nymph. A skirt of fern leaves touched her knee; she
+was like a humming-bird--green and golden and purple.
+
+And then she danced a fluttering, fantastic dance, so agile and light
+and mazy in her steps that the other three members of the Carroll
+Comedy Company broke into applause at the art of it.
+
+And at the proper time Delmars leaped out at her side, mimicking
+the uncouth, hideous bounds of the gorilla so funnily that the
+grizzled sergeant himself gave a short laugh like the closing of a
+padlock. They danced together the gorilla dance, and won a hand from
+all.
+
+Then began the most fantastic part of the scene--the wooing of the
+nymph by the gorilla. It was a kind of dance itself--eccentric and
+prankish, with the nymph in coquettish and seductive retreat, followed
+by the gorilla as he sang "I'll Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home."
+
+The song was a lyric of merit. The words were non-sense, as befitted
+the play, but the music was worthy of something better. Delmars
+struck into it in a rich tenor that owned a quality that shamed the
+flippant words.
+
+During one verse of the song the wood nymph performed the grotesque
+evolutions designed for the scene. At the middle of the second verse
+she stood still, with a strange look on her face, seeming to gaze
+dreamily into the depths of the scenic forest. The gorilla's last
+leap had brought him to her feet, and there he knelt, holding her
+hand, until he had finished the haunting-lyric that was set in the
+absurd comedy like a diamond in a piece of putty.
+
+When Delmars ceased Miss Carroll started, and covered a sudden flow of
+tears with both hands.
+
+"There!" cried the playwright, gesticulating with violence; "there
+you have it, sergeant. For two weeks she has spoiled that scene in
+just that manner at every performance. I have begged her to consider
+that it is not Ophelia or Juliet that she is playing. Do you wonder
+now at our impatience? Tears for the gorilla song! The play is lost!"
+
+Out of her bewitchment, whatever it was, the wood nymph flared
+suddenly, and pointed a desperate finger at Delmars.
+
+"It is you--you who have done this," she cried wildly. "You never
+sang that song that way until lately. It is your doing."
+
+"I give it up," said the sergeant.
+
+And then the gray-haired matron of the police station came forward
+from behind the sergeant's chair.
+
+"Must an old woman teach you all?" she said. She went up to Miss
+Carroll and took her hand.
+
+"The man's wearing his heart out for you, my dear. Couldn't you tell
+it the first note you heard him sing? All of his monkey flip-flops
+wouldn't have kept it from me. Must you be deaf as well as blind?
+That's why you couldn't act your part, child. Do you love him or must
+he be a gorilla for the rest of his days?"
+
+Miss Carroll whirled around and caught Delmars with a lightning glance
+of her eye. He came toward her, melancholy.
+
+"Did you hear, Mr. Delmars?" she asked, with a catching breath.
+
+"I did," said the comedian. "It is true. I didn't think there was
+any use. I tried to let you know with the song."
+
+"Silly!" said the matron; "why didn't you speak?"
+
+"No, no," cried the wood nymph, "his way was the best. I didn't know,
+but--it was just what I wanted, Bobby."
+
+She sprang like a green grasshopper; and the comedian opened his arms,
+and--smiled.
+
+"Get out of this," roared the desk sergeant to the waiting waiter from
+the restaurant. "There's nothing doing here for you."
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+ONE DOLLAR'S WORTH
+
+
+The judge of the United States court of the district lying along the
+Rio Grande border found the following letter one morning in his mail:
+
+
+ JUDGE:
+ When you sent me up for four years you made a talk.
+ Among other hard things, you called me a rattlesnake.
+ Maybe I am one--anyhow, you hear me rattling now.
+ One year after I got to the pen, my daughter died of--
+ well, they said it was poverty and the disgrace together.
+ You've got a daughter, Judge, and I'm going to make
+ you know how it feels to lose one. And I'm going to
+ bite that district attorney that spoke against me. I'm
+ free now, and I guess I've turned to rattlesnake all right.
+ I feel like one. I don't say much, but this is my rattle.
+ Look out when I strike.
+ Yours respectfully,
+ RATTLESNAKE.
+
+
+Judge Derwent threw the letter carelessly aside. It was nothing new
+to receive such epistles from desperate men whom he had been called
+upon to judge. He felt no alarm. Later on he showed the letter to
+Littlefield, the young district attorney, for Littlefield's name was
+included in the threat, and the judge was punctilious in matters
+between himself and his fellow men.
+
+Littlefield honoured the rattle of the writer, as far as it concerned
+himself, with a smile of contempt; but he frowned a little over the
+reference to the Judge's daughter, for he and Nancy Derwent were to be
+married in the fall.
+
+Littlefield went to the clerk of the court and looked over the records
+with him. They decided that the letter might have been sent by Mexico
+Sam, a half-breed border desperado who had been imprisoned for
+manslaughter four years before. Then official duties crowded the
+matter from his mind, and the rattle of the revengeful serpent was
+forgotten.
+
+Court was in session at Brownsville. Most of the cases to be tried
+were charges of smuggling, counterfeiting, post-office robberies, and
+violations of Federal laws along the border. One case was that of a
+young Mexican, Rafael Ortiz, who had been rounded up by a clever
+deputy marshal in the act of passing a counterfeit silver dollar. He
+had been suspected of many such deviations from rectitude, but this
+was the first time that anything provable had been fixed upon him.
+Ortiz languished cozily in jail, smoking brown cigarettes and waiting
+for trial. Kilpatrick, the deputy, brought the counterfeit dollar and
+handed it to the district attorney in his office in the court-house.
+The deputy and a reputable druggist were prepared to swear that Ortiz
+paid for a bottle of medicine with it. The coin was a poor
+counterfeit, soft, dull-looking, and made principally of lead. It was
+the day before the morning on which the docket would reach the case of
+Ortiz, and the district attorney was preparing himself for trial.
+
+"Not much need of having in high-priced experts to prove the coin's
+queer, is there, Kil?" smiled Littlefield, as he thumped the dollar
+down upon the table, where it fell with no more ring than would have
+come from a lump of putty.
+
+"I guess the Greaser's as good as behind the bars," said the deputy,
+easing up his holsters. "You've got him dead. If it had been just
+one time, these Mexicans can't tell good money from bad; but this
+little yaller rascal belongs to a gang of counterfeiters, I know.
+This is the first time I've been able to catch him doing the trick.
+He's got a girl down there in them Mexican jacals on the river bank.
+I seen her one day when I was watching him. She's as pretty as a red
+heifer in a flower bed."
+
+Littlefield shoved the counterfeit dollar into his pocket, and slipped
+his memoranda of the case into an envelope. Just then a bright,
+winsome face, as frank and jolly as a boy's, appeared in the doorway,
+and in walked Nancy Derwent.
+
+"Oh, Bob, didn't court adjourn at twelve to-day until to-morrow?" she
+asked of Littlefield.
+
+"It did," said the district attorney, "and I'm very glad of it. I've
+got a lot of rulings to look up, and--"
+
+"Now, that's just like you. I wonder you and father don't turn
+to law books or rulings or something! I want you to take me out
+plover-shooting this afternoon. Long Prairie is just alive with them.
+Don't say no, please! I want to try my new twelve-bore hammerless.
+I've sent to the livery stable to engage Fly and Bess for the
+buckboard; they stand fire so nicely. I was sure you would go."
+
+They were to be married in the fall. The glamour was at its
+height. The plovers won the day--or, rather, the afternoon--over
+the calf-bound authorities. Littlefield began to put his papers
+away.
+
+There was a knock at the door. Kilpatrick answered it. A beautiful,
+dark-eyed girl with a skin tinged with the faintest lemon colour
+walked into the room. A black shawl was thrown over her head and
+wound once around her neck.
+
+She began to talk in Spanish, a voluble, mournful stream of melancholy
+music. Littlefield did not understand Spanish. The deputy did, and
+he translated her talk by portions, at intervals holding up his hand
+to check the flow of her words.
+
+"She came to see you, Mr. Littlefield. Her name's Joya Trevinas. She
+wants to see you about--well, she's mixed up with that Rafael Ortiz.
+She's his--she's his girl. She says he's innocent. She says she
+made the money and got him to pass it. Don't you believe her, Mr.
+Littlefield. That's the way with these Mexican girls; they'll lie,
+steal, or kill for a fellow when they get stuck on him. Never trust a
+woman that's in love!"
+
+"Mr. Kilpatrick!"
+
+Nancy Derwent's indignant exclamation caused the deputy to flounder
+for a moment in attempting to explain that he had misquoted his own
+sentiments, and then he went on with the translation:
+
+"She says she's willing to take his place in the jail if you'll let
+him out. She says she was down sick with the fever, and the doctor
+said she'd die if she didn't have medicine. That's why he passed the
+lead dollar on the drug store. She says it saved her life. This
+Rafael seems to be her honey, all right; there's a lot of stuff in her
+talk about love and such things that you don't want to hear."
+
+It was an old story to the district attorney.
+
+"Tell her," said he, "that I can do nothing. The case comes up in the
+morning, and he will have to make his fight before the court."
+
+Nancy Derwent was not so hardened. She was looking with sympathetic
+interest at Joya Trevinas and at Littlefield alternately. The deputy
+repeated the district attorney's words to the girl. She spoke a
+sentence or two in a low voice, pulled her shawl closely about her
+face, and left the room.
+
+"What did she say then?" asked the district attorney.
+
+"Nothing special," said the deputy. "She said: 'If the life of the
+one'--let's see how it went--'_Si la vida de ella a quien tu amas_
+--if the life of the girl you love is ever in danger, remember Rafael
+Ortiz.'"
+
+Kilpatrick strolled out through the corridor in the direction of the
+marshal's office.
+
+"Can't you do anything for them, Bob?" asked Nancy. "It's such a
+little thing--just one counterfeit dollar--to ruin the happiness
+of two lives! She was in danger of death, and he did it to save her.
+Doesn't the law know the feeling of pity?"
+
+"It hasn't a place in jurisprudence, Nan," said Littlefield,
+"especially _in re_ the district attorney's duty. I'll promise you
+that the prosecution will not be vindictive; but the man is as good as
+convicted when the case is called. Witnesses will swear to his passing
+the bad dollar which I have in my pocket at this moment as 'Exhibit
+A.' There are no Mexicans on the jury, and it will vote Mr. Greaser
+guilty without leaving the box."
+
+
+The plover-shooting was fine that afternoon, and in the excitement of
+the sport the case of Rafael and the grief of Joya Trevinas was
+forgotten. The district attorney and Nancy Derwent drove out from
+the town three miles along a smooth, grassy road, and then struck
+across a rolling prairie toward a heavy line of timber on Piedra
+Creek. Beyond this creek lay Long Prairie, the favourite haunt of the
+plover. As they were nearing the creek they heard the galloping of a
+horse to their right, and saw a man with black hair and a swarthy face
+riding toward the woods at a tangent, as if he had come up behind
+them.
+
+"I've seen that fellow somewhere," said Littlefield, who had a memory
+for faces, "but I can't exactly place him. Some ranchman, I suppose,
+taking a short cut home."
+
+They spent an hour on Long Prairie, shooting from the buckboard.
+Nancy Derwent, an active, outdoor Western girl, was pleased with her
+twelve-bore. She had bagged within two brace of her companion's
+score.
+
+They started homeward at a gentle trot. When within a hundred yards
+of Piedra Creek a man rode out of the timber directly toward them.
+
+"It looks like the man we saw coming over," remarked Miss Derwent.
+
+As the distance between them lessened, the district attorney suddenly
+pulled up his team sharply, with his eyes fixed upon the advancing
+horseman. That individual had drawn a Winchester from its scabbard
+on his saddle and thrown it over his arm.
+
+"Now I know you, Mexico Sam!" muttered Littlefield to himself. "It
+was you who shook your rattles in that gentle epistle."
+
+Mexico Sam did not leave things long in doubt. He had a nice eye in
+all matters relating to firearms, so when he was within good rifle
+range, but outside of danger from No. 8 shot, he threw up his
+Winchester and opened fire upon the occupants of the buckboard.
+
+The first shot cracked the back of the seat within the two-inch space
+between the shoulders of Littlefield and Miss Derwent. The next went
+through the dashboard and Littlefield's trouser leg.
+
+The district attorney hustled Nancy out of the buck-board to the
+ground. She was a little pale, but asked no questions. She had the
+frontier instinct that accepts conditions in an emergency without
+superfluous argument. They kept their guns in hand, and Littlefield
+hastily gathered some handfuls of cartridges from the pasteboard box
+on the seat and crowded them into his pockets.
+
+"Keep behind the horses, Nan," he commanded. "That fellow is a ruffian
+I sent to prison once. He's trying to get even. He knows our shot
+won't hurt him at that distance."
+
+"All right, Bob," said Nancy steadily. "I'm not afraid. But you come
+close, too. Whoa, Bess; stand still, now!"
+
+She stroked Bess's mane. Littlefield stood with his gun ready,
+praying that the desperado would come within range.
+
+But Mexico Sam was playing his vendetta along safe lines. He was
+a bird of different feather from the plover. His accurate eye drew
+an imaginary line of circumference around the area of danger from
+bird-shot, and upon this line lie rode. His horse wheeled to the
+right, and as his victims rounded to the safe side of their equine
+breast-work he sent a ball through the district attorney's hat. Once
+he miscalculated in making a detour, and over-stepped his margin.
+Littlefield's gun flashed, and Mexico Sam ducked his head to the
+harmless patter of the shot. A few of them stung his horse, which
+pranced promptly back to the safety line.
+
+The desperado fired again. A little cry came from Nancy Derwent.
+Littlefield whirled, with blazing eyes, and saw the blood trickling
+down her cheek.
+
+"I'm not hurt, Bob--only a splinter struck me. I think he hit one
+of the wheel-spokes."
+
+"Lord!" groaned Littlefield. "If I only had a charge of buckshot!"
+
+The ruffian got his horse still, and took careful aim. Fly gave a
+snort and fell in the harness, struck in the neck. Bess, now
+disabused of the idea that plover were being fired at, broke her
+traces and galloped wildly away. Mexican Sam sent a ball neatly
+through the fulness of Nancy Derwent's shooting jacket.
+
+"Lie down--lie down!" snapped Littlefield. "Close to the horse--flat
+on the ground--so." He almost threw her upon the grass against the
+back of the recumbent Fly. Oddly enough, at that moment the words
+of the Mexican girl returned to his mind:
+
+"If the life of the girl you love is ever in danger, remember Rafael
+Ortiz."
+
+Littlefield uttered an exclamation.
+
+"Open fire on him, Nan, across the horse's back. Fire as fast as you
+can! You can't hurt him, but keep him dodging shot for one minute
+while I try to work a little scheme."
+
+Nancy gave a quick glance at Littlefield, and saw him take out his
+pocket-knife and open it. Then she turned her face to obey orders,
+keeping up a rapid fire at the enemy.
+
+Mexico Sam waited patiently until this innocuous fusillade ceased.
+He had plenty of time, and he did not care to risk the chance of a
+bird-shot in his eye when it could be avoided by a little caution.
+He pulled his heavy Stetson low down over his face until the shots
+ceased. Then he drew a little nearer, and fired with careful aim at
+what he could see of his victims above the fallen horse.
+
+Neither of them moved. He urged his horse a few steps nearer. He
+saw the district attorney rise to one knee and deliberately level
+his shotgun. He pulled his hat down and awaited the harmless rattle
+of the tiny pellets.
+
+The shotgun blazed with a heavy report. Mexico Sam sighed, turned
+limp all over, and slowly fell from his horse--a dead rattlesnake.
+
+
+At ten o'clock the next morning court opened, and the case of the
+United States versus Rafael Ortiz was called. The district attorney,
+with his arm in a sling, rose and addressed the court.
+
+"May it please your honour," he said, "I desire to enter a _nolle
+pros._ in this case. Even though the defendant should be guilty,
+there is not sufficient evidence in the hands of the government to
+secure a conviction. The piece of counterfeit coin upon the
+identity of which the case was built is not now available as
+evidence. I ask, therefore, that the case be stricken off."
+
+At the noon recess Kilpatrick strolled into the district attorney's
+office.
+
+"I've just been down to take a squint at old Mexico Sam," said the
+deputy. "They've got him laid out. Old Mexico was a tough outfit, I
+reckon. The boys was wonderin' down there what you shot him with.
+Some said it must have been nails. I never see a gun carry anything
+to make holes like he had."
+
+"I shot him," said the district attorney, "with Exhibit A of your
+counterfeiting case. Lucky thing for me--and somebody else--that
+it was as bad money as it was! It sliced up into slugs very nicely.
+Say, Kil, can't you go down to the jacals and find where that Mexican
+girl lives? Miss Derwent wants to know."
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+A NEWSPAPER STORY
+
+
+At 8 A. M. it lay on Giuseppi's news-stand, still damp from the
+presses. Giuseppi, with the cunning of his ilk, philandered on the
+opposite corner, leaving his patrons to help themselves, no doubt on
+a theory related to the hypothesis of the watched pot.
+
+This particular newspaper was, according to its custom and design, an
+educator, a guide, a monitor, a champion and a household counsellor
+and _vade mecum_.
+
+From its many excellencies might be selected three editorials. One
+was in simple and chaste but illuminating language directed to
+parents and teachers, deprecating corporal punishment for children.
+
+Another was an accusive and significant warning addressed to a
+notorious labour leader who was on the point of instigating his
+clients to a troublesome strike.
+
+The third was an eloquent demand that the police force be sustained
+and aided in everything that tended to increase its efficiency as
+public guardians and servants.
+
+Besides these more important chidings and requisitions upon the store
+of good citizenship was a wise prescription or form of procedure laid
+out by the editor of the heart-to-heart column in the specific case
+of a young man who had complained of the obduracy of his lady love,
+teaching him how he might win her.
+
+Again, there was, on the beauty page, a complete answer to a young
+lady inquirer who desired admonition toward the securing of bright
+eyes, rosy cheeks and a beautiful countenance.
+
+One other item requiring special cognizance was a brief "personal,"
+running thus:
+
+
+ DEAR JACK:--Forgive me. You were right. Meet me corner Madison and
+ ----th at 8.30 this morning. We leave at noon. PENITENT.
+
+
+At 8 o'clock a young man with a haggard look and the feverish gleam of
+unrest in his eye dropped a penny and picked up the top paper as he
+passed Giuseppi's stand. A sleepless night had left him a late riser.
+There was an office to be reached by nine, and a shave and a hasty cup
+of coffee to be crowded into the interval.
+
+He visited his barber shop and then hurried on his way. He pocketed
+his paper, meditating a belated perusal of it at the luncheon hour.
+At the next corner it fell from his pocket, carrying with it his pair
+of new gloves. Three blocks he walked, missed the gloves and turned
+back fuming.
+
+Just on the half-hour he reached the corner where lay the gloves and
+the paper. But he strangely ignored that which he had come to seek.
+He was holding two little hands as tightly as ever he could and
+looking into two penitent brown eyes, while joy rioted in his heart.
+
+"Dear Jack," she said, "I knew you would be here on time."
+
+"I wonder what she means by that," he was saying to himself; "but it's
+all right, it's all right."
+
+A big wind puffed out of the west, picked up the paper from the
+sidewalk, opened it out and sent it flying and whirling down a side
+street. Up that street was driving a skittish bay to a spider-wheel
+buggy, the young man who had written to the heart-to-heart editor for
+a recipe that he might win her for whom he sighed.
+
+The wind, with a prankish flurry, flapped the flying newspaper against
+the face of the skittish bay. There was a lengthened streak of bay
+mingled with the red of running gear that stretched itself out for
+four blocks. Then a water-hydrant played its part in the cosmogony,
+the buggy became matchwood as foreordained, and the driver rested very
+quietly where he had been flung on the asphalt in front of a certain
+brownstone mansion.
+
+They came out and had him inside very promptly. And there was one who
+made herself a pillow for his head, and cared for no curious eyes,
+bending over and saying, "Oh, it was you; it was you all the time,
+Bobby! Couldn't you see it? And if you die, why, so must I, and--"
+
+But in all this wind we must hurry to keep in touch with our paper.
+
+Policeman O'Brine arrested it as a character dangerous to traffic.
+Straightening its dishevelled leaves with his big, slow fingers, he
+stood a few feet from the family entrance of the Shandon Bells Cafe.
+One headline he spelled out ponderously: "The Papers to the Front in a
+Move to Help the Police."
+
+But, whisht! The voice of Danny, the head bartender, through the
+crack of the door: "Here's a nip for ye, Mike, ould man."
+
+Behind the widespread, amicable columns of the press Policeman O'Brine
+receives swiftly his nip of the real stuff. He moves away, stalwart,
+refreshed, fortified, to his duties. Might not the editor man view
+with pride the early, the spiritual, the literal fruit that had
+blessed his labours.
+
+Policeman O'Brine folded the paper and poked it playfully under the
+arm of a small boy that was passing. That boy was named Johnny, and he
+took the paper home with him. His sister was named Gladys, and she
+had written to the beauty editor of the paper asking for the
+practicable touchstone of beauty. That was weeks ago, and she had
+ceased to look for an answer. Gladys was a pale girl, with dull eyes
+and a discontented expression. She was dressing to go up to the
+avenue to get some braid. Beneath her skirt she pinned two leaves of
+the paper Johnny had brought. When she walked the rustling sound was
+an exact imitation of the real thing.
+
+On the street she met the Brown girl from the flat below and stopped
+to talk. The Brown girl turned green. Only silk at $5 a yard could
+make the sound that she heard when Gladys moved. The Brown girl,
+consumed by jealousy, said something spiteful and went her way, with
+pinched lips.
+
+Gladys proceeded toward the avenue. Her eyes now sparkled like
+jagerfonteins. A rosy bloom visited her cheeks; a triumphant, subtle,
+vivifying, smile transfigured her face. She was beautiful. Could the
+beauty editor have seen her then! There was something in her answer
+in the paper, I believe, about cultivating kind feelings toward others
+in order to make plain features attractive.
+
+The labour leader against whom the paper's solemn and weighty
+editorial injunction was laid was the father of Gladys and Johnny. He
+picked up the remains of the journal from which Gladys had ravished a
+cosmetic of silken sounds. The editorial did not come under his eye,
+but instead it was greeted by one of those ingenious and specious
+puzzle problems that enthrall alike the simpleton and the sage.
+
+The labour leader tore off half of the page, provided himself with
+table, pencil and paper and glued himself to his puzzle.
+
+Three hours later, after waiting vainly for him at the appointed
+place, other more conservative leaders declared and ruled in favour of
+arbitration, and the strike with its attendant dangers was averted.
+Subsequent editions of the paper referred, in coloured inks, to the
+clarion tone of its successful denunciation of the labour leader's
+intended designs.
+
+The remaining leaves of the active journal also went loyally to the
+proving of its potency.
+
+When Johnny returned from school he sought a secluded spot and removed
+the missing columns from the inside of his clothing, where they had
+been artfully distributed so as to successfully defend such areas as
+are generally attacked during scholastic castigations. Johnny
+attended a private school and had had trouble with his teacher. As
+has been said, there was an excellent editorial against corporal
+punishment in that morning's issue, and no doubt it had its effect.
+
+After this can any one doubt the power of the press?
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+TOMMY'S BURGLAR
+
+
+At ten o'clock P. M. Felicia, the maid, left by the basement door with
+the policeman to get a raspberry phosphate around the corner. She
+detested the policeman and objected earnestly to the arrangement.
+She pointed out, not unreasonably, that she might have been allowed to
+fall asleep over one of St. George Rathbone's novels on the third
+floor, but she was overruled. Raspberries and cops were not created
+for nothing.
+
+The burglar got into the house without much difficulty; because we
+must have action and not too much description in a 2,000-word story.
+
+In the dining room he opened the slide of his dark lantern. With a
+brace and centrebit he began to bore into the lock of the silver-closet.
+
+Suddenly a click was heard. The room was flooded with electric light.
+The dark velvet portieres parted to admit a fair-haired boy of eight
+in pink pajamas, bearing a bottle of olive oil in his hand.
+
+"Are you a burglar?" he asked, in a sweet, childish voice.
+
+"Listen to that," exclaimed the man, in a hoarse voice. "Am I a
+burglar? Wot do you suppose I have a three-days' growth of bristly
+beard on my face for, and a cap with flaps? Give me the oil, quick,
+and let me grease the bit, so I won't wake up your mamma, who is lying
+down with a headache, and left you in charge of Felicia who has been
+faithless to her trust."
+
+"Oh, dear," said Tommy, with a sigh. "I thought you would be more
+up-to-date. This oil is for the salad when I bring lunch from the
+pantry for you. And mamma and papa have gone to the Metropolitan to
+hear De Reszke. But that isn't my fault. It only shows how long the
+story has been knocking around among the editors. If the author had
+been wise he'd have changed it to Caruso in the proofs."
+
+"Be quiet," hissed the burglar, under his breath. "If you raise an
+alarm I'll wring your neck like a rabbit's."
+
+"Like a chicken's," corrected Tommy. "You had that wrong. You don't
+wring rabbits' necks."
+
+"Aren't you afraid of me?" asked the burglar.
+
+"You know I'm not," answered Tommy. "Don't you suppose I know fact
+from fiction. If this wasn't a story I'd yell like an Indian when I
+saw you; and you'd probably tumble downstairs and get pinched on the
+sidewalk."
+
+"I see," said the burglar, "that you're on to your job. Go on with
+the performance."
+
+Tommy seated himself in an armchair and drew his toes up under him.
+
+"Why do you go around robbing strangers, Mr. Burglar? Have you no
+friends?"
+
+"I see what you're driving at," said the burglar, with a dark frown.
+"It's the same old story. Your innocence and childish insouciance is
+going to lead me back into an honest life. Every time I crack a crib
+where there's a kid around, it happens."
+
+"Would you mind gazing with wolfish eyes at the plate of cold beef
+that the butler has left on the dining table?" said Tommy. "I'm
+afraid it's growing late."
+
+The burglar accommodated.
+
+"Poor man," said Tommy. "You must be hungry. If you will please stand
+in a listless attitude I will get you something to eat."
+
+The boy brought a roast chicken, a jar of marmalade and a bottle of
+wine from the pantry. The burglar seized a knife and fork sullenly.
+
+"It's only been an hour," he grumbled, "since I had a lobster and a
+pint of musty ale up on Broadway. I wish these story writers would
+let a fellow have a pepsin tablet, anyhow, between feeds."
+
+"My papa writes books," remarked Tommy.
+
+The burglar jumped to his feet quickly.
+
+"You said he had gone to the opera," he hissed, hoarsely and with
+immediate suspicion.
+
+"I ought to have explained," said Tommy. "He didn't buy the tickets."
+The burglar sat again and toyed with the wishbone.
+
+"Why do you burgle houses?" asked the boy, wonderingly.
+
+"Because," replied the burglar, with a sudden flow of tears. "God
+bless my little brown-haired boy Bessie at home."
+
+"Ah," said Tommy, wrinkling his nose, "you got that answer in the
+wrong place. You want to tell your hard-luck story before you pull
+out the child stop."
+
+"Oh, yes," said the burglar, "I forgot. Well, once I lived in
+Milwaukee, and--"
+
+"Take the silver," said Tommy, rising from his chair.
+
+"Hold on," said the burglar. "But I moved away." I could find no
+other employment. For a while I managed to support my wife and
+child by passing confederate money; but, alas! I was forced to give
+that up because it did not belong to the union. I became desperate
+and a burglar."
+
+"Have you ever fallen into the hands of the police?" asked Tommy.
+
+"I said 'burglar,' not 'beggar,'" answered the cracksman.
+
+"After you finish your lunch," said Tommy, "and experience the usual
+change of heart, how shall we wind up the story?"
+
+"Suppose," said the burglar, thoughtfully, "that Tony Pastor turns out
+earlier than usual to-night, and your father gets in from 'Parsifal'
+at 10.30. I am thoroughly repentant because you have made me think of
+my own little boy Bessie, and--"
+
+"Say," said Tommy, "haven't you got that wrong?"
+
+"Not on your coloured crayon drawings by B. Cory Kilvert," said the
+burglar. "It's always a Bessie that I have at home, artlessly
+prattling to the pale-cheeked burglar's bride. As I was saying, your
+father opens the front door just as I am departing with admonitions
+and sandwiches that you have wrapped up for me. Upon recognizing me
+as an old Harvard classmate he starts back in--"
+
+"Not in surprise?" interrupted Tommy, with wide, open eyes.
+
+"He starts back in the doorway," continued the burglar. And then he
+rose to his feet and began to shout "Rah, rah, rah! rah, rah, rah!
+rah, rah, rah!"
+
+"Well," said Tommy, wonderingly, "that's, the first time I ever knew a
+burglar to give a college yell when he was burglarizing a house, even
+in a story."
+
+"That's one on you," said the burglar, with a laugh. "I was practising
+the dramatization. If this is put on the stage that college touch is
+about the only thing that will make it go."
+
+Tommy looked his admiration.
+
+"You're on, all right," he said.
+
+"And there's another mistake you've made," said the burglar. "You
+should have gone some time ago and brought me the $9 gold piece your
+mother gave you on your birthday to take to Bessie."
+
+"But she didn't give it to me to take to Bessie," said Tommy, pouting.
+
+"Come, come!" said the burglar, sternly. "It's not nice of you to
+take advantage because the story contains an ambiguous sentence. You
+know what I mean. It's mighty little I get out of these fictional
+jobs, anyhow. I lose all the loot, and I have to reform every time;
+and all the swag I'm allowed is the blamed little fol-de-rols and
+luck-pieces that you kids hand over. Why, in one story, all I got was
+a kiss from a little girl who came in on me when I was opening a safe.
+And it tasted of molasses candy, too. I've a good notion to tie this
+table cover over your head and keep on into the silver-closet."
+
+"Oh, no, you haven't," said Tommy, wrapping his arms around his knees.
+"Because if you did no editor would buy the story. You know you've
+got to preserve the unities."
+
+"So've you," said the burglar, rather glumly. "Instead of sitting here
+talking impudence and taking the bread out of a poor man's mouth, what
+you'd like to be doing is hiding under the bed and screeching at the
+top of your voice."
+
+"You're right, old man," said Tommy, heartily. "I wonder what they
+make us do it for? I think the S. P. C. C. ought to interfere. I'm
+sure it's neither agreeable nor usual for a kid of my age to butt in
+when a full-grown burglar is at work and offer him a red sled and a
+pair of skates not to awaken his sick mother. And look how they make
+the burglars act! You'd think editors would know--but what's the
+use?"
+
+The burglar wiped his hands on the tablecloth and arose with a yawn.
+
+"Well, let's get through with it," he said. "God bless you, my little
+boy! you have saved a man from committing a crime this night. Bessie
+shall pray for you as soon as I get home and give her her orders. I
+shall never burglarize another house--at least not until the June
+magazines are out. It'll be your little sister's turn then to run in
+on me while I am abstracting the U. S. 4 per cent. from the tea urn
+and buy me off with her coral necklace and a falsetto kiss."
+
+"You haven't got all the kicks coming to you," sighed Tommy, crawling
+out of his chair. "Think of the sleep I'm losing. But it's tough on
+both of us, old man. I wish you could get out of the story and really
+rob somebody. Maybe you'll have the chance if they dramatize us."
+
+"Never!" said the burglar, gloomily. "Between the box office and my
+better impulses that your leading juveniles are supposed to awaken
+and the magazines that pay on publication, I guess I'll always be
+broke."
+
+"I'm sorry," said Tommy, sympathetically. "But I can't help myself
+any more than you can. It's one of the canons of household fiction
+that no burglar shall be successful. The burglar must be foiled by
+a kid like me, or by a young lady heroine, or at the last moment by
+his old pal, Red Mike, who recognizes the house as one in which he
+used to be the coachman. You have got the worst end of it in any kind
+of a story."
+
+"Well, I suppose I must be clearing out now," said the burglar, taking
+up his lantern and bracebit.
+
+"You have to take the rest of this chicken and the bottle of wine with
+you for Bessie and her mother," said Tommy, calmly.
+
+"But confound it," exclaimed the burglar, in an annoyed tone, "they
+don't want it. I've got five cases of Chateau de Beychsvelle at home
+that was bottled in 1853. That claret of yours is corked. And you
+couldn't get either of them to look at a chicken unless it was stewed
+in champagne. You know, after I get out of the story I don't have so
+many limitations. I make a turn now and then."
+
+"Yes, but you must take them," said Tommy, loading his arms with the
+bundles.
+
+"Bless you, young master!" recited the burglar, obedient. "Second-Story
+Saul will never forget you. And now hurry and let me out, kid. Our
+2,000 words must be nearly up."
+
+Tommy led the way through the hall toward the front door. Suddenly
+the burglar stopped and called to him softly: "Ain't there a cop out
+there in front somewhere sparking the girl?"
+
+"Yes," said Tommy, "but what--"
+
+"I'm afraid he'll catch me," said the burglar. "You mustn't forget
+that this is fiction."
+
+"Great head!" said Tommy, turning. "Come out by the back door."
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+A CHAPARRAL CHRISTMAS GIFT
+
+
+The original cause of the trouble was about twenty years in growing.
+
+At the end of that time it was worth it.
+
+Had you lived anywhere within fifty miles of Sundown Ranch you would
+have heard of it. It possessed a quantity of jet-black hair, a pair
+of extremely frank, deep-brown eyes and a laugh that rippled across
+the prairie like the sound of a hidden brook. The name of it was
+Rosita McMullen; and she was the daughter of old man McMullen of the
+Sundown Sheep Ranch.
+
+There came riding on red roan steeds--or, to be more explicit, on a
+paint and a flea-bitten sorrel--two wooers. One was Madison Lane,
+and the other was the Frio Kid. But at that time they did not call him
+the Frio Kid, for he had not earned the honours of special
+nomenclature. His name was simply Johnny McRoy.
+
+It must not be supposed that these two were the sum of the agreeable
+Rosita's admirers. The bronchos of a dozen others champed their bits
+at the long hitching rack of the Sundown Ranch. Many were the
+sheeps'-eyes that were cast in those savannas that did not belong to
+the flocks of Dan McMullen. But of all the cavaliers, Madison Lane
+and Johnny McRoy galloped far ahead, wherefore they are to be
+chronicled.
+
+Madison Lane, a young cattleman from the Nueces country, won the race.
+He and Rosita were married one Christmas day. Armed, hilarious,
+vociferous, magnanimous, the cowmen and the sheepmen, laying aside
+their hereditary hatred, joined forces to celebrate the occasion.
+
+Sundown Ranch was sonorous with the cracking of jokes and sixshooters,
+the shine of buckles and bright eyes, the outspoken congratulations of
+the herders of kine.
+
+But while the wedding feast was at its liveliest there descended upon
+it Johnny McRoy, bitten by jealousy, like one possessed.
+
+"I'll give you a Christmas present," he yelled, shrilly, at the door,
+with his .45 in his hand. Even then he had some reputation as an
+offhand shot.
+
+His first bullet cut a neat underbit in Madison Lane's right ear. The
+barrel of his gun moved an inch. The next shot would have been the
+bride's had not Carson, a sheepman, possessed a mind with triggers
+somewhat well oiled and in repair. The guns of the wedding party had
+been hung, in their belts, upon nails in the wall when they sat at
+table, as a concession to good taste. But Carson, with great
+promptness, hurled his plate of roast venison and frijoles at McRoy,
+spoiling his aim. The second bullet, then, only shattered the white
+petals of a Spanish dagger flower suspended two feet above Rosita's
+head.
+
+The guests spurned their chairs and jumped for their weapons. It was
+considered an improper act to shoot the bride and groom at a wedding.
+In about six seconds there were twenty or so bullets due to be
+whizzing in the direction of Mr. McRoy.
+
+"I'll shoot better next time," yelled Johnny; "and there'll be a next
+time." He backed rapidly out the door.
+
+Carson, the sheepman, spurred on to attempt further exploits by the
+success of his plate-throwing, was first to reach the door. McRoy's
+bullet from the darkness laid him low.
+
+The cattlemen then swept out upon him, calling for vengeance, for,
+while the slaughter of a sheepman has not always lacked condonement,
+it was a decided misdemeanour in this instance. Carson was
+innocent; he was no accomplice at the matrimonial proceedings; nor had
+any one heard him quote the line "Christmas comes but once a year" to
+the guests.
+
+But the sortie failed in its vengeance. McRoy was on his horse and
+away, shouting back curses and threats as he galloped into the
+concealing chaparral.
+
+That night was the birthnight of the Frio Kid. He became the "bad
+man" of that portion of the State. The rejection of his suit by Miss
+McMullen turned him to a dangerous man. When officers went after him
+for the shooting of Carson, he killed two of them, and entered upon
+the life of an outlaw. He became a marvellous shot with either hand.
+He would turn up in towns and settlements, raise a quarrel at the
+slightest opportunity, pick off his man and laugh at the officers
+of the law. He was so cool, so deadly, so rapid, so inhumanly
+blood-thirsty that none but faint attempts were ever made to capture
+him. When he was at last shot and killed by a little one-armed Mexican
+who was nearly dead himself from fright, the Frio Kid had the deaths
+of eighteen men on his head. About half of these were killed in fair
+duels depending upon the quickness of the draw. The other half were
+men whom he assassinated from absolute wantonness and cruelty.
+
+Many tales are told along the border of his impudent courage and
+daring. But he was not one of the breed of desperadoes who have
+seasons of generosity and even of softness. They say he never had
+mercy on the object of his anger. Yet at this and every Christmastide
+it is well to give each one credit, if it can be done, for whatever
+speck of good he may have possessed. If the Frio Kid ever did a
+kindly act or felt a throb of generosity in his heart it was once at
+such a time and season, and this is the way it happened.
+
+
+One who has been crossed in love should never breathe the odour from
+the blossoms of the ratama tree. It stirs the memory to a dangerous
+degree.
+
+One December in the Frio country there was a ratama tree in full
+bloom, for the winter had been as warm as springtime. That way rode
+the Frio Kid and his satellite and co-murderer, Mexican Frank. The kid
+reined in his mustang, and sat in his saddle, thoughtful and grim,
+with dangerously narrowing eyes. The rich, sweet scent touched him
+somewhere beneath his ice and iron.
+
+"I don't know what I've been thinking about, Mex," he remarked in his
+usual mild drawl, "to have forgot all about a Christmas present I got
+to give. I'm going to ride over to-morrow night and shoot Madison
+Lane in his own house. He got my girl--Rosita would have had me if
+he hadn't cut into the game. I wonder why I happened to overlook it
+up to now?"
+
+"Ah, shucks, Kid," said Mexican, "don't talk foolishness. You know
+you can't get within a mile of Mad Lane's house to-morrow night. I
+see old man Allen day before yesterday, and he says Mad is going to
+have Christmas doings at his house. You remember how you shot up the
+festivities when Mad was married, and about the threats you made?
+Don't you suppose Mad Lane'll kind of keep his eye open for a certain
+Mr. Kid? You plumb make me tired, Kid, with such remarks."
+
+"I'm going," repeated the Frio Kid, without heat, "to go to Madison
+Lane's Christmas doings, and kill him. I ought to have done it a long
+time ago. Why, Mex, just two weeks ago I dreamed me and Rosita was
+married instead of her and him; and we was living in a house, and I
+could see her smiling at me, and--oh! h----l, Mex, he got her; and
+I'll get him--yes, sir, on Christmas Eve he got her, and then's when
+I'll get him."
+
+"There's other ways of committing suicide," advised Mexican. "Why
+don't you go and surrender to the sheriff?"
+
+"I'll get him," said the Kid.
+
+Christmas Eve fell as balmy as April. Perhaps there was a hint of
+far-away frostiness in the air, but it tingles like seltzer, perfumed
+faintly with late prairie blossoms and the mesquite grass.
+
+When night came the five or six rooms of the ranch-house were
+brightly lit. In one room was a Christmas tree, for the Lanes had a
+boy of three, and a dozen or more guests were expected from the nearer
+ranches.
+
+At nightfall Madison Lane called aside Jim Belcher and three other
+cowboys employed on his ranch.
+
+"Now, boys," said Lane, "keep your eyes open. Walk around the house
+and watch the road well. All of you know the 'Frio Kid,' as they call
+him now, and if you see him, open fire on him without asking any
+questions. I'm not afraid of his coming around, but Rosita is. She's
+been afraid he'd come in on us every Christmas since we were married."
+
+The guests had arrived in buckboards and on horseback, and were making
+themselves comfortable inside.
+
+The evening went along pleasantly. The guests enjoyed and praised
+Rosita's excellent supper, and afterward the men scattered in groups
+about the rooms or on the broad "gallery," smoking and chatting.
+
+The Christmas tree, of course, delighted the youngsters, and above all
+were they pleased when Santa Claus himself in magnificent white beard
+and furs appeared and began to distribute the toys.
+
+"It's my papa," announced Billy Sampson, aged six. "I've seen him wear
+'em before."
+
+Berkly, a sheepman, an old friend of Lane, stopped Rosita as she was
+passing by him on the gallery, where he was sitting smoking.
+
+"Well, Mrs. Lane," said he, "I suppose by this Christmas you've
+gotten over being afraid of that fellow McRoy, haven't you? Madison
+and I have talked about it, you know."
+
+"Very nearly," said Rosita, smiling, "but I am still nervous
+sometimes. I shall never forget that awful time when he came so near
+to killing us."
+
+"He's the most cold-hearted villain in the world," said Berkly. "The
+citizens all along the border ought to turn out and hunt him down like
+a wolf."
+
+"He has committed awful crimes," said Rosita, "but--I--don't--know.
+I think there is a spot of good somewhere in everybody. He was not
+always bad--that I know."
+
+Rosita turned into the hallway between the rooms. Santa Claus, in
+muffling whiskers and furs, was just coming through.
+
+"I heard what you said through the window, Mrs. Lane," he said. "I
+was just going down in my pocket for a Christmas present for your
+husband. But I've left one for you, instead. It's in the room to
+your right."
+
+"Oh, thank you, kind Santa Claus," said Rosita, brightly.
+
+Rosita went into the room, while Santa Claus stepped into the cooler
+air of the yard.
+
+She found no one in the room but Madison.
+
+"Where is my present that Santa said he left for me in here?" she
+asked.
+
+"Haven't seen anything in the way of a present," said her husband,
+laughing, "unless he could have meant me."
+
+
+The next day Gabriel Radd, the foreman of the X O Ranch, dropped into
+the post-office at Loma Alta.
+
+"Well, the Frio Kid's got his dose of lead at last," he remarked to
+the postmaster.
+
+"That so? How'd it happen?"
+
+"One of old Sanchez's Mexican sheep herders did it!--think of it!
+the Frio Kid killed by a sheep herder! The Greaser saw him riding
+along past his camp about twelve o'clock last night, and was so
+skeered that he up with a Winchester and let him have it. Funniest
+part of it was that the Kid was dressed all up with white Angora-skin
+whiskers and a regular Santy Claus rig-out from head to foot. Think
+of the Frio Kid playing Santy!"
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+A LITTLE LOCAL COLOUR
+
+
+I mentioned to Rivington that I was in search of characteristic New
+York scenes and incidents--something typical, I told him, without
+necessarily having to spell the first syllable with an "i."
+
+"Oh, for your writing business," said Rivington; "you couldn't have
+applied to a better shop. What I don't know about little old New York
+wouldn't make a sonnet to a sunbonnet. I'll put you right in the
+middle of so much local colour that you won't know whether you are a
+magazine cover or in the erysipelas ward. When do you want to begin?"
+
+Rivington is a young-man-about-town and a New Yorker by birth,
+preference and incommutability.
+
+I told him that I would be glad to accept his escort and guardianship
+so that I might take notes of Manhattan's grand, gloomy and peculiar
+idiosyncrasies, and that the time of so doing would be at his own
+convenience.
+
+"We'll begin this very evening," said Rivington, himself interested,
+like a good fellow. "Dine with me at seven, and then I'll steer you
+up against metropolitan phases so thick you'll have to have a
+kinetoscope to record 'em."
+
+So I dined with Rivington pleasantly at his club, in Forty-eleventh
+street, and then we set forth in pursuit of the elusive tincture of
+affairs.
+
+As we came out of the club there stood two men on the sidewalk near
+the steps in earnest conversation.
+
+"And by what process of ratiocination," said one of them, "do you
+arrive at the conclusion that the division of society into producing
+and non-possessing classes predicates failure when compared with
+competitive systems that are monopolizing in tendency and result
+inimically to industrial evolution?"
+
+"Oh, come off your perch!" said the other man, who wore glasses.
+"Your premises won't come out in the wash. You wind-jammers who apply
+bandy-legged theories to concrete categorical syllogisms send logical
+conclusions skallybootin' into the infinitesimal ragbag. You can't
+pull my leg with an old sophism with whiskers on it. You quote Marx
+and Hyndman and Kautsky--what are they?--shines! Tolstoi?--his
+garret is full of rats. I put it to you over the home-plate that the
+idea of a cooperative commonwealth and an abolishment of competitive
+systems simply takes the rag off the bush and gives me hyperesthesia
+of the roopteetoop! The skookum house for yours!"
+
+I stopped a few yards away and took out my little notebook.
+
+"Oh, come ahead," said Rivington, somewhat nervously; "you don't
+want to listen to that."
+
+"Why, man," I whispered, "this is just what I do want to hear. These
+slang types are among your city's most distinguishing features. Is
+this the Bowery variety? I really must hear more of it."
+
+"If I follow you," said the man who had spoken first, "you do not
+believe it possible to reorganize society on the basis of common
+interest?"
+
+"Shinny on your own side!" said the man with glasses. "You never
+heard any such music from my foghorn. What I said was that I did not
+believe it practicable just now. The guys with wads are not in the
+frame of mind to slack up on the mazuma, and the man with the portable
+tin banqueting canister isn't exactly ready to join the Bible class.
+You can bet your variegated socks that the situation is all
+spifflicated up from the Battery to breakfast! What the country needs
+is for some bully old bloke like Cobden or some wise guy like old Ben
+Franklin to sashay up to the front and biff the nigger's head with
+the baseball. Do you catch my smoke? What?"
+
+Rivington pulled me by the arm impatiently.
+
+"Please come on," he said. "Let's go see something. This isn't what
+you want."
+
+"Indeed, it is," I said resisting. "This tough talk is the very stuff
+that counts. There is a picturesqueness about the speech of the lower
+order of people that is quite unique. Did you say that this is the
+Bowery variety of slang?"
+
+"Oh, well," said Rivington, giving it up, "I'll tell you straight.
+That's one of our college professors talking. He ran down for a day or
+two at the club. It's a sort of fad with him lately to use slang in
+his conversation. He thinks it improves language. The man he is
+talking to is one of New York's famous social economists. Now will
+you come on. You can't use that, you know."
+
+"No," I agreed; "I can't use that. Would you call that typical of New
+York?"
+
+"Of course not," said Rivington, with a sigh of relief. "I'm glad you
+see the difference. But if you want to hear the real old tough Bowery
+slang I'll take you down where you'll get your fill of it."
+
+"I would like it," I said; "that is, if it's the real thing. I've
+often read it in books, but I never heard it. Do you think it will be
+dangerous to go unprotected among those characters?"
+
+"Oh, no," said Rivington; "not at this time of night. To tell the
+truth, I haven't been along the Bowery in a long time, but I know it
+as well as I do Broadway. We'll look up some of the typical Bowery
+boys and get them to talk. It'll be worth your while. They talk a
+peculiar dialect that you won't hear anywhere else on earth."
+
+Rivington and I went east in a Forty-second street car and then south
+on the Third avenue line.
+
+At Houston street we got off and walked.
+
+"We are now on the famous Bowery," said Rivington; "the Bowery
+celebrated in song and story."
+
+We passed block after block of "gents'" furnishing stores--the
+windows full of shirts with prices attached and cuffs inside. In
+other windows were neckties and no shirts. People walked up and down
+the sidewalks.
+
+"In some ways," said I, "this reminds me of Kokomono, Ind., during
+the peach-crating season."
+
+Rivington was nettled.
+
+"Step into one of these saloons or vaudeville shows," said he, "with a
+large roll of money, and see how quickly the Bowery will sustain its
+reputation."
+
+"You make impossible conditions," said I, coldly.
+
+By and by Rivington stopped and said we were in the heart of the
+Bowery. There was a policeman on the corner whom Rivington knew.
+
+"Hallo, Donahue!" said my guide. "How goes it? My friend and I are
+down this way looking up a bit of local colour. He's anxious to meet
+one of the Bowery types. Can't you put us on to something genuine in
+that line--something that's got the colour, you know?"
+
+Policeman Donahue turned himself about ponderously, his florid face
+full of good-nature. He pointed with his club down the street.
+
+"Sure!" he said huskily. "Here comes a lad now that was born on the
+Bowery and knows every inch of it. If he's ever been above Bleecker
+street he's kept it to himself."
+
+A man about twenty-eight or twenty-nine, with a smooth face, was
+sauntering toward us with his hands in his coat pockets. Policeman
+Donahue stopped him with a courteous wave of his club.
+
+"Evening, Kerry," he said. "Here's a couple of gents, friends of
+mine, that want to hear you spiel something about the Bowery. Can you
+reel 'em off a few yards?"
+
+"Certainly, Donahue," said the young man, pleasantly. "Good
+evening, gentlemen," he said to us, with a pleasant smile. Donahue
+walked off on his beat.
+
+"This is the goods," whispered Rivington, nudging me with his elbow.
+"Look at his jaw!"
+
+"Say, cull," said Rivington, pushing back his hat, "wot's doin'?
+Me and my friend's taking a look down de old line--see? De copper
+tipped us off dat you was wise to de bowery. Is dat right?"
+
+I could not help admiring Rivington's power of adapting himself to
+his surroundings.
+
+"Donahue was right," said the young man, frankly; "I was brought up
+on the Bowery. I have been news-boy, teamster, pugilist, member of
+an organized band of 'toughs,' bartender, and a 'sport' in various
+meanings of the word. The experience certainly warrants the
+supposition that I have at least a passing acquaintance with a few
+phases of Bowery life. I will be pleased to place whatever knowledge
+and experience I have at the service of my friend Donahue's friends."
+
+Rivington seemed ill at ease.
+
+"I say," he said--somewhat entreatingly, "I thought--you're not
+stringing us, are you? It isn't just the kind of talk we expected.
+You haven't even said 'Hully gee!' once. Do you really belong on the
+Bowery?"
+
+"I am afraid," said the Bowery boy, smilingly, "that at some time you
+have been enticed into one of the dives of literature and had the
+counterfeit coin of the Bowery passed upon you. The 'argot' to which
+you doubtless refer was the invention of certain of your literary
+'discoverers' who invaded the unknown wilds below Third avenue and
+put strange sounds into the mouths of the inhabitants. Safe in their
+homes far to the north and west, the credulous readers who were
+beguiled by this new 'dialect' perused and believed. Like Marco Polo
+and Mungo Park--pioneers indeed, but ambitious souls who could not
+draw the line of demarcation between discovery and invention--the
+literary bones of these explorers are dotting the trackless wastes of
+the subway. While it is true that after the publication of the
+mythical language attributed to the dwellers along the Bowery certain
+of its pat phrases and apt metaphors were adopted and, to a limited
+extent, used in this locality, it was because our people are prompt in
+assimilating whatever is to their commercial advantage. To the
+tourists who visited our newly discovered clime, and who expected a
+realization of their literary guide books, they supplied the demands
+of the market.
+
+"But perhaps I am wandering from the question. In what way can I
+assist you, gentlemen? I beg you will believe that the hospitality of
+the street is extended to all. There are, I regret to say, many
+catchpenny places of entertainment, but I cannot conceive that they
+would entice you."
+
+I felt Rivington lean somewhat heavily against me. "Say!" he
+remarked, with uncertain utterance; "come and have a drink with us."
+
+"Thank you, but I never drink. I find that alcohol, even in the
+smallest quantities, alters the perspective. And I must preserve my
+perspective, for I am studying the Bowery. I have lived in it nearly
+thirty years, and I am just beginning to understand its heartbeats.
+It is like a great river fed by a hundred alien streams. Each influx
+brings strange seeds on its flood, strange silt and weeds, and now and
+then a flower of rare promise. To construe this river requires a man
+who can build dykes against the overflow, who is a naturalist, a
+geologist, a humanitarian, a diver and a strong swimmer. I love my
+Bowery. It was my cradle and is my inspiration. I have published one
+book. The critics have been kind. I put my heart in it. I am writing
+another, into which I hope to put both heart and brain. Consider me
+your guide, gentlemen. Is there anything I can take you to see, any
+place to which I can conduct you?"
+
+I was afraid to look at Rivington except with one eye.
+
+"Thanks," said Rivington. "We were looking up . . . that is . . . my
+friend . . . confound it; it's against all precedent, you know . . .
+awfully obliged . . . just the same."
+
+"In case," said our friend, "you would like to meet some of our Bowery
+young men I would be pleased to have you visit the quarters of our
+East Side Kappa Delta Phi Society, only two blocks east of here."
+
+"Awfully sorry," said Rivington, "but my friend's got me on the jump
+to-night. He's a terror when he's out after local colour. Now,
+there's nothing I would like better than to drop in at the Kappa Delta
+Phi, but--some other time!"
+
+We said our farewells and boarded a home-bound car. We had a rabbit on
+upper Broadway, and then I parted with Rivington on a street corner.
+
+"Well, anyhow," said he, braced and recovered, "it couldn't have
+happened anywhere but in little old New York."
+
+Which to say the least, was typical of Rivington.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+GEORGIA'S RULING
+
+
+If you should chance to visit the General Land Office, step into the
+draughtsmen's room and ask to be shown the map of Salado County. A
+leisurely German--possibly old Kampfer himself--will bring it to
+you. It will be four feet square, on heavy drawing-cloth. The
+lettering and the figures will be beautifully clear and distinct. The
+title will be in splendid, undecipherable German text, ornamented with
+classic Teutonic designs--very likely Ceres or Pomona leaning
+against the initial letters with cornucopias venting grapes and
+wieners. You must tell him that this is not the map you wish to see;
+that he will kindly bring you its official predecessor. He will then
+say, "Ach, so!" and bring out a map half the size of the first, dim,
+old, tattered, and faded.
+
+By looking carefully near its northwest corner you will presently come
+upon the worn contours of Chiquito River, and, maybe, if your eyes are
+good, discern the silent witness to this story.
+
+
+The Commissioner of the Land Office was of the old style; his
+antique courtesy was too formal for his day. He dressed in fine
+black, and there was a suggestion of Roman drapery in his long
+coat-skirts. His collars were "undetached" (blame haberdashery
+for the word); his tie was a narrow, funereal strip, tied in the
+same knot as were his shoe-strings. His gray hair was a trifle
+too long behind, but he kept it smooth and orderly. His face was
+clean-shaven, like the old statesmen's. Most people thought it a
+stern face, but when its official expression was off, a few had
+seen altogether a different countenance. Especially tender and
+gentle it had appeared to those who were about him during the last
+illness of his only child.
+
+The Commissioner had been a widower for years, and his life, outside
+his official duties, had been so devoted to little Georgia that people
+spoke of it as a touching and admirable thing. He was a reserved man,
+and dignified almost to austerity, but the child had come below it all
+and rested upon his very heart, so that she scarcely missed the
+mother's love that had been taken away. There was a wonderful
+companionship between them, for she had many of his own ways, being
+thoughtful and serious beyond her years.
+
+One day, while she was lying with the fever burning brightly in her
+checks, she said suddenly:
+
+"Papa, I wish I could do something good for a whole lot of children!"
+
+"What would you like to do, dear?" asked the Commissioner. "Give
+them a party?"
+
+"Oh, I don't mean those kind. I mean poor children who haven't homes,
+and aren't loved and cared for as I am. I tell you what, papa!"
+
+"What, my own child?"
+
+"If I shouldn't get well, I'll leave them you--not _give_ you, but
+just lend you, for you must come to mamma and me when you die too. If
+you can find time, wouldn't you do something to help them, if I ask
+you, papa?"
+
+"Hush, hush dear, dear child," said the Commissioner, holding her hot
+little hand against his cheek; "you'll get well real soon, and you and
+I will see what we can do for them together."
+
+But in whatsoever paths of benevolence, thus vaguely premeditated, the
+Commissioner might tread, he was not to have the company of his
+beloved. That night the little frail body grew suddenly too tired to
+struggle further, and Georgia's exit was made from the great stage
+when she had scarcely begun to speak her little piece before the
+footlights. But there must be a stage manager who understands. She
+had given the cue to the one who was to speak after her.
+
+A week after she was laid away, the Commissioner reappeared at the
+office, a little more courteous, a little paler and sterner, with the
+black frock-coat hanging a little more loosely from his tall figure.
+
+His desk was piled with work that had accumulated during the four
+heartbreaking weeks of his absence. His chief clerk had done what he
+could, but there were questions of law, of fine judicial decisions
+to be made concerning the issue of patents, the marketing and
+leasing of school lands, the classification into grazing,
+agricultural, watered, and timbered, of new tracts to be opened to
+settlers.
+
+The Commissioner went to work silently and obstinately, putting
+back his grief as far as possible, forcing his mind to attack the
+complicated and important business of his office. On the second day
+after his return he called the porter, pointed to a leather-covered
+chair that stood near his own, and ordered it removed to a lumber-room
+at the top of the building. In that chair Georgia would always sit
+when she came to the office for him of afternoons.
+
+As time passed, the Commissioner seemed to grow more silent, solitary,
+and reserved. A new phase of mind developed in him. He could not
+endure the presence of a child. Often when a clattering youngster
+belonging to one of the clerks would come chattering into the big
+business-room adjoining his little apartment, the Commissioner would
+steal softly and close the door. He would always cross the street to
+avoid meeting the school-children when they came dancing along in
+happy groups upon the sidewalk, and his firm mouth would close into a
+mere line.
+
+It was nearly three months after the rains had washed the last dead
+flower-petals from the mound above little Georgia when the "land-shark"
+firm of Hamlin and Avery filed papers upon what they considered the
+"fattest" vacancy of the year.
+
+It should not be supposed that all who were termed "land-sharks"
+deserved the name. Many of them were reputable men of good business
+character. Some of them could walk into the most august councils of
+the State and say: "Gentlemen, we would like to have this, and that,
+and matters go thus." But, next to a three years' drought and the
+boll-worm, the Actual Settler hated the Land-shark. The land-shark
+haunted the Land Office, where all the land records were kept, and
+hunted "vacancies"--that is, tracts of unappropriated public
+domain, generally invisible upon the official maps, but actually
+existing "upon the ground." The law entitled any one possessing
+certain State scrip to file by virtue of same upon any land not
+previously legally appropriated. Most of the scrip was now in the
+hands of the land-sharks. Thus, at the cost of a few hundred dollars,
+they often secured lands worth as many thousands. Naturally, the
+search for "vacancies" was lively.
+
+But often--very often--the land they thus secured, though legally
+"unappropriated," would be occupied by happy and contented settlers,
+who had laboured for years to build up their homes, only to discover
+that their titles were worthless, and to receive peremptory notice to
+quit. Thus came about the bitter and not unjustifiable hatred felt by
+the toiling settlers toward the shrewd and seldom merciful speculators
+who so often turned them forth destitute and homeless from their
+fruitless labours. The history of the state teems with their
+antagonism. Mr. Land-shark seldom showed his face on "locations" from
+which he should have to eject the unfortunate victims of a monstrously
+tangled land system, but let his emissaries do the work. There was
+lead in every cabin, moulded into balls for him; many of his brothers
+had enriched the grass with their blood. The fault of it all lay far
+back.
+
+When the state was young, she felt the need of attracting newcomers,
+and of rewarding those pioneers already within her borders. Year
+after year she issued land scrip--Headrights, Bounties, Veteran
+Donations, Confederates; and to railroads, irrigation companies,
+colonies, and tillers of the soil galore. All required of the grantee
+was that he or it should have the scrip properly surveyed upon the
+public domain by the county or district surveyor, and the land thus
+appropriated became the property of him or it, or his or its heirs and
+assigns, forever.
+
+In those days--and here is where the trouble began--the state's
+domain was practically inexhaustible, and the old surveyors, with
+princely--yea, even Western American--liberality, gave good
+measure and over-flowing. Often the jovial man of metes and bounds
+would dispense altogether with the tripod and chain. Mounted on a pony
+that could cover something near a "vara" at a step, with a pocket
+compass to direct his course, he would trot out a survey by counting
+the beat of his pony's hoofs, mark his corners, and write out his
+field notes with the complacency produced by an act of duty well
+performed. Sometimes--and who could blame the surveyor?--when
+the pony was "feeling his oats," he might step a little higher and
+farther, and in that case the beneficiary of the scrip might get a
+thousand or two more acres in his survey than the scrip called for.
+But look at the boundless leagues the state had to spare! However, no
+one ever had to complain of the pony under-stepping. Nearly every
+old survey in the state contained an excess of land.
+
+In later years, when the state became more populous, and land values
+increased, this careless work entailed incalculable trouble, endless
+litigation, a period of riotous land-grabbing, and no little
+bloodshed. The land-sharks voraciously attacked these excesses in
+the old surveys, and filed upon such portions with new scrip as
+unappropriated public domain. Wherever the identifications of the
+old tracts were vague, and the corners were not to be clearly
+established, the Land Office would recognize the newer locations as
+valid, and issue title to the locators. Here was the greatest
+hardship to be found. These old surveys, taken from the pick of the
+land, were already nearly all occupied by unsuspecting and peaceful
+settlers, and thus their titles were demolished, and the choice was
+placed before them either to buy their land over at a double price or
+to vacate it, with their families and personal belongings,
+immediately. Land locators sprang up by hundreds. The country was
+held up and searched for "vacancies" at the point of a compass.
+Hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of splendid acres were wrested
+from their innocent purchasers and holders. There began a vast hegira
+of evicted settlers in tattered wagons; going nowhere, cursing
+injustice, stunned, purposeless, homeless, hopeless. Their children
+began to look up to them for bread, and cry.
+
+
+It was in consequence of these conditions that Hamilton and Avery
+had filed upon a strip of land about a mile wide and three miles long,
+comprising about two thousand acres, it being the excess over
+complement of the Elias Denny three-league survey on Chiquito River,
+in one of the middle-western counties. This two-thousand-acre body
+of land was asserted by them to be vacant land, and improperly
+considered a part of the Denny survey. They based this assertion and
+their claim upon the land upon the demonstrated facts that the
+beginning corner of the Denny survey was plainly identified; that its
+field notes called to run west 5,760 varas, and then called for
+Chiquito River; thence it ran south, with the meanders--and so on--
+and that the Chiquito River was, on the ground, fully a mile farther
+west from the point reached by course and distance. To sum up: there
+were two thousand acres of vacant land between the Denny survey proper
+and Chiquito River.
+
+One sweltering day in July the Commissioner called for the papers in
+connection with this new location. They were brought, and heaped, a
+foot deep, upon his desk--field notes, statements, sketches,
+affidavits, connecting lines--documents of every description that
+shrewdness and money could call to the aid of Hamlin and Avery.
+
+The firm was pressing the Commissioner to issue a patent upon their
+location. They possesed inside information concerning a new
+railroad that would probably pass somewhere near this land.
+
+The General Land Office was very still while the Commissioner was
+delving into the heart of the mass of evidence. The pigeons could
+be heard on the roof of the old, castle-like building, cooing and
+fretting. The clerks were droning everywhere, scarcely pretending
+to earn their salaries. Each little sound echoed hollow and loud
+from the bare, stone-flagged floors, the plastered walls, and the
+iron-joisted ceiling. The impalpable, perpetual limestone dust that
+never settled, whitened a long streamer of sunlight that pierced the
+tattered window-awning.
+
+It seemed that Hamlin and Avery had builded well. The Denny survey was
+carelessly made, even for a careless period. Its beginning corner
+was identical with that of a well-defined old Spanish grant, but its
+other calls were sinfully vague. The field notes contained no other
+object that survived--no tree, no natural object save Chiquito
+River, and it was a mile wrong there. According to precedent, the
+Office would be justified in giving it its complement by course and
+distance, and considering the remainder vacant instead of a mere
+excess.
+
+The Actual Settler was besieging the office with wild protests _in re_.
+Having the nose of a pointer and the eye of a hawk for the land-shark,
+he had observed his myrmidons running the lines upon his ground.
+Making inquiries, he learned that the spoiler had attacked his home,
+and he left the plough in the furrow and took his pen in hand.
+
+One of the protests the Commissioner read twice. It was from a woman,
+a widow, the granddaughter of Elias Denny himself. She told how her
+grandfather had sold most of the survey years before at a trivial
+price--land that was now a principality in extent and value. Her
+mother had also sold a part, and she herself had succeeded to this
+western portion, along Chiquito River. Much of it she had been forced
+to part with in order to live, and now she owned only about three
+hundred acres, on which she had her home. Her letter wound up rather
+pathetically:
+
+"I've got eight children, the oldest fifteen years. I work all day
+and half the night to till what little land I can and keep us in
+clothes and books. I teach my children too. My neighbours is all
+poor and has big families. The drought kills the crops every two or
+three years and then we has hard times to get enough to eat. There is
+ten families on this land what the land-sharks is trying to rob us of,
+and all of them got titles from me. I sold to them cheap, and they
+aint paid out yet, but part of them is, and if their land should be
+took from them I would die. My grandfather was an honest man, and he
+helped to build up this state, and he taught his children to be
+honest, and how could I make it up to them who bought from me? Mr.
+Commissioner, if you let them land-sharks take the roof from over my
+children and the little from them as they has to live on, whoever
+again calls this state great or its government just will have a lie in
+their mouths"
+
+The Commissioner laid this letter aside with a sigh. Many, many such
+letters he had received. He had never been hurt by them, nor had he
+ever felt that they appealed to him personally. He was but the
+state's servant, and must follow its laws. And yet, somehow, this
+reflection did not always eliminate a certain responsible feeling that
+hung upon him. Of all the state's officers he was supremest in his
+department, not even excepting the Governor. Broad, general land laws
+he followed, it was true, but he had a wide latitude in particular
+ramifications. Rather than law, what he followed was Rulings:
+Office Rulings and precedents. In the complicated and new questions
+that were being engendered by the state's development the
+Commissioner's ruling was rarely appealed from. Even the courts
+sustained it when its equity was apparent.
+
+The Commissioner stepped to the door and spoke to a clerk in the other
+room--spoke as he always did, as if he were addressing a prince of
+the blood:
+
+"Mr. Weldon, will you be kind enough to ask Mr. Ashe, the state
+school-land appraiser, to please come to my office as soon as
+convenient?"
+
+Ashe came quickly from the big table where he was arranging his
+reports.
+
+"Mr. Ashe," said the Commissioner, "you worked along the Chiquito
+River, in Salado County, during your last trip, I believe. Do you
+remember anything of the Elias Denny three-league survey?"
+
+"Yes, sir, I do," the blunt, breezy, surveyor answered. "I crossed it
+on my way to Block H, on the north side of it. The road runs with the
+Chiquito River, along the valley. The Denny survey fronts three miles
+on the Chiquito."
+
+"It is claimed," continued the commissioner, "that it fails to reach
+the river by as much as a mile."
+
+The appraiser shrugged his shoulder. He was by birth and instinct an
+Actual Settler, and the natural foe of the land-shark.
+
+"It has always been considered to extend to the river," he said,
+dryly.
+
+"But that is not the point I desired to discuss," said the
+Commissioner. "What kind of country is this valley portion of (let us
+say, then) the Denny tract?"
+
+The spirit of the Actual Settler beamed in Ashe's face.
+
+"Beautiful," he said, with enthusiasm. "Valley as level as this
+floor, with just a little swell on, like the sea, and rich as cream.
+Just enough brakes to shelter the cattle in winter. Black loamy soil
+for six feet, and then clay. Holds water. A dozen nice little houses
+on it, with windmills and gardens. People pretty poor, I guess--too
+far from market--but comfortable. Never saw so many kids in my
+life."
+
+"They raise flocks?" inquired the Commissioner.
+
+"Ho, ho! I mean two-legged kids," laughed the surveyor; "two-legged,
+and bare-legged, and tow-headed."
+
+"Children! oh, children!" mused the Commissioner, as though a new
+view had opened to him; "they raise children!
+
+"It's a lonesome country, Commissioner," said the surveyor. "Can you
+blame 'em?"
+
+"I suppose," continued the Commissioner, slowly, as one carefully
+pursues deductions from a new, stupendous theory, "not all of them are
+tow-headed. It would not be unreasonable, Mr. Ashe, I conjecture, to
+believe that a portion of them have brown, or even black, hair."
+
+"Brown and black, sure," said Ashe; "also red."
+
+"No doubt," said the Commissioner. "Well, I thank you for your
+courtesy in informing me, Mr. Ashe. I will not detain you any longer
+from your duties."
+
+Later, in the afternoon, came Hamlin and Avery, big, handsome, genial,
+sauntering men, clothed in white duck and low-cut shoes. They
+permeated the whole office with an aura of debonair prosperity. They
+passed among the clerks and left a wake of abbreviated given names and
+fat brown cigars.
+
+These were the aristocracy of the land-sharks, who went in for big
+things. Full of serene confidence in themselves, there was no
+corporation, no syndicate, no railroad company or attorney general
+too big for them to tackle. The peculiar smoke of their rare, fat
+brown cigars was to be perceived in the sanctum of every department of
+state, in every committee-room of the Legislature, in every bank
+parlour and every private caucus-room in the state Capital. Always
+pleasant, never in a hurry, in seeming to possess unlimited leisure,
+people wondered when they gave their attention to the many audacious
+enterprises in which they were known to be engaged.
+
+By and by the two dropped carelessly into the Commissioner's room
+and reclined lazily in the big, leather-upholstered arm-chairs. They
+drawled a good-natured complaint of the weather, and Hamlin told the
+Commissioner an excellent story he had amassed that morning from
+the Secretary of State.
+
+But the Commissioner knew why they were there. He had half promised
+to render a decision that day upon their location.
+
+The chief clerk now brought in a batch of duplicate certificates for
+the Commissioner to sign. As he traced his sprawling signature,
+"Hollis Summerfield, Comr. Genl. Land Office," on each one, the chief
+clerk stood, deftly removing them and applying the blotter.
+
+"I notice," said the chief clerk, "you've been going through that
+Salado County location. Kampfer is making a new map of Salado, and
+I believe is platting in that section of the county now."
+
+"I will see it," said the Commissioner. A few moments later he went to
+the draughtsmen's room.
+
+As he entered he saw five or six of the draughtsmen grouped about
+Kampfer's desk, gargling away at each other in pectoral German, and
+gazing at something thereupon. At the Commissioner's approach they
+scattered to their several places. Kampfer, a wizened little German,
+with long, frizzled ringlets and a watery eye, began to stammer
+forth some sort of an apology, the Commissioner thought, for the
+congregation of his fellows about his desk.
+
+"Never mind," said the Commissioner, "I wish to see the map you are
+making"; and, passing around the old German, seated himself upon the
+high draughtsman's stool. Kampfer continued to break English in
+trying to explain.
+
+"Herr Gommissioner, I assure you blenty sat I haf not it bremeditated
+--sat it wass--sat it itself make. Look you! from se field notes
+wass it blatted--blease to observe se calls: South, 10 degrees west
+1,050 varas; south, 10 degrees east 300 varas; south, 100; south, 9
+west, 200; south, 40 degrees west 400--and so on. Herr Gommissioner,
+nefer would I have--"
+
+The Commissioner raised one white hand, silently, Kampfer dropped his
+pipe and fled.
+
+With a hand at each side of his face, and his elbows resting upon the
+desk, the Commissioner sat staring at the map which was spread and
+fastened there--staring at the sweet and living profile of little
+Georgia drawn thereupon--at her face, pensive, delicate, and
+infantile, outlined in a perfect likeness.
+
+When his mind at length came to inquire into the reason of it, he
+saw that it must have been, as Kampfer had said, unpremeditated. The
+old draughtsman had been platting in the Elias Denny survey, and
+Georgia's likeness, striking though it was, was formed by nothing more
+than the meanders of Chiquito River. Indeed, Kampfer's blotter,
+whereon his preliminary work was done, showed the laborious tracings
+of the calls and the countless pricks of the compasses. Then, over
+his faint pencilling, Kampfer had drawn in India ink with a full, firm
+pen the similitude of Chiquito River, and forth had blossomed
+mysteriously the dainty, pathetic profile of the child.
+
+The Commissioner sat for half an hour with his face in his hands,
+gazing downward, and none dared approach him. Then he arose and
+walked out. In the business office he paused long enough to ask that
+the Denny file be brought to his desk.
+
+He found Hamlin and Avery still reclining in their chairs, apparently
+oblivious of business. They were lazily discussing summer opera, it
+being, their habit--perhaps their pride also--to appear supernaturally
+indifferent whenever they stood with large interests imperilled. And
+they stood to win more on this stake than most people knew. They
+possessed inside information to the effect that a new railroad would,
+within a year, split this very Chiquito River valley and send land
+values ballooning all along its route. A dollar under thirty thousand
+profit on this location, if it should hold good, would be a loss to
+their expectations. So, while they chatted lightly and waited for the
+Commissioner to open the subject, there was a quick, sidelong sparkle
+in their eyes, evincing a desire to read their title clear to those
+fair acres on the Chiquito.
+
+A clerk brought in the file. The Commissioner seated himself and
+wrote upon it in red ink. Then he rose to his feet and stood for a
+while looking straight out of the window. The Land Office capped the
+summit of a bold hill. The eyes of the Commissioner passed over the
+roofs of many houses set in a packing of deep green, the whole
+checkered by strips of blinding white streets. The horizon, where his
+gaze was focussed, swelled to a fair wooded eminence flecked with
+faint dots of shining white. There was the cemetery, where lay many
+who were forgotten, and a few who had not lived in vain. And one
+lay there, occupying very small space, whose childish heart had been
+large enough to desire, while near its last beats, good to others.
+The Commissioner's lips moved slightly as he whispered to himself: "It
+was her last will and testament, and I have neglected it so long!"
+
+The big brown cigars of Hamlin and Avery were fireless, but they still
+gripped them between their teeth and waited, while they marvelled at
+the absent expression upon the Commissioner's face.
+
+By and by he spoke suddenly and promptly.
+
+"Gentlemen, I have just indorsed the Elias Denny survey for patenting.
+This office will not regard your location upon a part of it as legal."
+He paused a moment, and then, extending his hand as those dear old-time
+ones used to do in debate, he enunciated the spirit of that Ruling that
+subsequently drove the land-sharks to the wall, and placed the seal of
+peace and security over the doors of ten thousand homes.
+
+"And, furthermore," he continued, with a clear, soft light upon his
+face, "it may interest you to know that from this time on this office
+will consider that when a survey of land made by virtue of a
+certificate granted by this state to the men who wrested it from the
+wilderness and the savage--made in good faith, settled in good faith,
+and left in good faith to their children or innocent purchasers--when
+such a survey, although overrunning its complement, shall call for
+any natural object visible to the eye of man, to that object it shall
+hold, and be good and valid. And the children of this state shall
+lie down to sleep at night, and rumours of disturbers of title shall
+not disquiet them. For," concluded the Commissioner, "of such is the
+Kingdom of Heaven."
+
+In the silence that followed, a laugh floated up from the patent-room
+below. The man who carried down the Denny file was exhibiting it
+among the clerks.
+
+"Look here," he said, delightedly, "the old man has forgotten his
+name. He's written 'Patent to original grantee,' and signed it
+'Georgia Summerfield, Comr."'
+
+The speech of the Commissioner rebounded lightly from the impregnable
+Hamlin and Avery. They smiled, rose gracefully, spoke of the baseball
+team, and argued feelingly that quite a perceptible breeze had arisen
+from the east. They lit fresh fat brown cigars, and drifted
+courteously away. But later they made another tiger-spring for their
+quarry in the courts. But the courts, according to reports in the
+papers, "coolly roasted them" (a remarkable performance, suggestive of
+liquid-air didoes), and sustained the Commissioner's Ruling.
+
+And this Ruling itself grew to be a Precedent, and the Actual Settler
+framed it, and taught his children to spell from it, and there was
+sound sleep o' nights from the pines to the sage-brush, and from the
+chaparral to the great brown river of the north.
+
+But I think, and I am sure the Commissioner never thought otherwise,
+that whether Kampfer was a snuffy old instrument of destiny, or
+whether the meanders of the Chiquito accidentally platted themselves
+into that memorable sweet profile or not, there was brought about
+"something good for a whole lot of children," and the result ought
+to be called "Georgia's Ruling."
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+BLIND MAN'S HOLIDAY
+
+
+Alas for the man and for the artist with the shifting point of
+perspective! Life shall be a confusion of ways to the one; the
+landscape shall rise up and confound the other. Take the case of
+Lorison. At one time he appeared to himself to be the feeblest of
+fools; at another he conceived that he followed ideals so fine that
+the world was not yet ready to accept them. During one mood he cursed
+his folly; possessed by the other, he bore himself with a serene
+grandeur akin to greatness: in neither did he attain the perspective.
+
+Generations before, the name had been "Larsen." His race had
+bequeathed him its fine-strung, melancholy temperament, its saving
+balance of thrift and industry.
+
+From his point of perspective he saw himself an outcast from society,
+forever to be a shady skulker along the ragged edge of respectability;
+a denizen _des trois-quartz de monde_, that pathetic spheroid lying
+between the _haut_ and the _demi_, whose inhabitants envy each of their
+neighbours, and are scorned by both. He was self-condemned to this
+opinion, as he was self-exiled, through it, to this quaint Southern
+city a thousand miles from his former home. Here he had dwelt for
+longer than a year, knowing but few, keeping in a subjective world
+of shadows which was invaded at times by the perplexing bulks of
+jarring realities. Then he fell in love with a girl whom he met in a
+cheap restaurant, and his story begins.
+
+
+The Rue Chartres, in New Orleans, is a street of ghosts. It lies in
+the quarter where the Frenchman, in his prime, set up his translated
+pride and glory; where, also, the arrogant don had swaggered, and
+dreamed of gold and grants and ladies' gloves. Every flagstone has
+its grooves worn by footsteps going royally to the wooing and the
+fighting. Every house has a princely heartbreak; each doorway its
+untold tale of gallant promise and slow decay.
+
+By night the Rue Chartres is now but a murky fissure, from which the
+groping wayfarer sees, flung against the sky, the tangled filigree of
+Moorish iron balconies. The old houses of monsieur stand yet,
+indomitable against the century, but their essence is gone. The
+street is one of ghosts to whosoever can see them.
+
+A faint heartbeat of the street's ancient glory still survives in a
+corner occupied by the Cafe Carabine d'Or. Once men gathered there to
+plot against kings, and to warn presidents. They do so yet, but they
+are not the same kind of men. A brass button will scatter these;
+those would have set their faces against an army. Above the door
+hangs the sign board, upon which has been depicted a vast animal of
+unfamiliar species. In the act of firing upon this monster is
+represented an unobtrusive human levelling an obtrusive gun, once the
+colour of bright gold. Now the legend above the picture is faded
+beyond conjecture; the gun's relation to the title is a matter of
+faith; the menaced animal, wearied of the long aim of the hunter, has
+resolved itself into a shapeless blot.
+
+The place is known as "Antonio's," as the name, white upon the red-lit
+transparency, and gilt upon the windows, attests. There is a promise
+in "Antonio"; a justifiable expectancy of savoury things in oil and
+pepper and wine, and perhaps an angel's whisper of garlic. But the
+rest of the name is "O'Riley." Antonio O'Riley!
+
+The Carabine d'Or is an ignominious ghost of the Rue Chartres. The
+cafe where Bienville and Conti dined, where a prince has broken bread,
+is become a "family ristaurant."
+
+Its customers are working men and women, almost to a unit.
+Occasionally you will see chorus girls from the cheaper theatres,
+and men who follow avocations subject to quick vicissitudes; but at
+Antonio's--name rich in Bohemian promise, but tame in fulfillment--
+manners debonair and gay are toned down to the "family" standard.
+Should you light a cigarette, mine host will touch you on the "arrum"
+and remind you that the proprieties are menaced. "Antonio" entices
+and beguiles from fiery legend without, but "O'Riley" teaches decorum
+within.
+
+It was at this restaurant that Lorison first saw the girl. A flashy
+fellow with a predatory eye had followed her in, and had advanced to
+take the other chair at the little table where she stopped, but
+Lorison slipped into the seat before him. Their acquaintance began,
+and grew, and now for two months they had sat at the same table each
+evening, not meeting by appointment, but as if by a series of
+fortuitous and happy accidents. After dining, they would take a walk
+together in one of the little city parks, or among the panoramic
+markets where exhibits a continuous vaudeville of sights and sounds.
+Always at eight o'clock their steps led them to a certain street
+corner, where she prettily but firmly bade him good night and left
+him. "I do not live far from here," she frequently said, "and you
+must let me go the rest of the way alone."
+
+But now Lorison had discovered that he wanted to go the rest of the
+way with her, or happiness would depart, leaving, him on a very lonely
+corner of life. And at the same time that he made the discovery, the
+secret of his banishment from the society of the good laid its finger
+in his face and told him it must not be.
+
+Man is too thoroughly an egoist not to be also an egotist; if he love,
+the object shall know it. During a lifetime he may conceal it through
+stress of expediency and honour, but it shall bubble from his dying
+lips, though it disrupt a neighbourhood. It is known, however, that
+most men do not wait so long to disclose their passion. In the case
+of Lorison, his particular ethics positively forbade him to declare
+his sentiments, but he must needs dally with the subject, and woo by
+innuendo at least.
+
+On this night, after the usual meal at the Carabine d'Or, he strolled
+with his companion down the dim old street toward the river.
+
+The Rue Chartres perishes in the old Place d'Armes. The ancient
+Cabildo, where Spanish justice fell like hail, faces it, and the
+Cathedral, another provincial ghost, overlooks it. Its centre is a
+little, iron-railed park of flowers and immaculate gravelled walks,
+where citizens take the air of evenings. Pedestalled high above it,
+the general sits his cavorting steed, with his face turned stonily
+down the river toward English Turn, whence come no more Britons to
+bombard his cotton bales.
+
+Often the two sat in this square, but to-night Lorison guided her past
+the stone-stepped gate, and still riverward. As they walked, he smiled
+to himself to think that all he knew of her--except that be loved
+her--was her name, Norah Greenway, and that she lived with her
+brother. They had talked about everything except themselves. Perhaps
+her reticence had been caused by his.
+
+They came, at length, upon the levee, and sat upon a great, prostrate
+beam. The air was pungent with the dust of commerce. The great river
+slipped yellowly past. Across it Algiers lay, a longitudinous black
+bulk against a vibrant electric haze sprinkled with exact stars.
+
+The girl was young and of the piquant order. A certain bright
+melancholy pervaded her; she possessed an untarnished, pale prettiness
+doomed to please. Her voice, when she spoke, dwarfed her theme. It
+was the voice capable of investing little subjects with a large
+interest. She sat at ease, bestowing her skirts with the little
+womanly touch, serene as if the begrimed pier were a summer garden.
+Lorison poked the rotting boards with his cane.
+
+He began by telling her that he was in love with some one to whom he
+durst not speak of it. "And why not?" she asked, accepting swiftly
+his fatuous presentation of a third person of straw. "My place in the
+world," he answered, "is none to ask a woman to share. I am an
+outcast from honest people; I am wrongly accused of one crime, and am,
+I believe, guilty of another."
+
+Thence he plunged into the story of his abdication from society. The
+story, pruned of his moral philosophy, deserves no more than the
+slightest touch. It is no new tale, that of the gambler's declension.
+During one night's sitting he lost, and then had imperilled a certain
+amount of his employer's money, which, by accident, he carried with
+him. He continued to lose, to the last wager, and then began to gain,
+leaving the game winner to a somewhat formidable sum. The same night
+his employer's safe was robbed. A search was had; the winnings of
+Lorison were found in his room, their total forming an accusative
+nearness to the sum purloined. He was taken, tried and, through
+incomplete evidence, released, smutched with the sinister _devoirs_
+of a disagreeing jury.
+
+"It is not in the unjust accusation," he said to the girl, "that my
+burden lies, but in the knowledge that from the moment I staked the
+first dollar of the firm's money I was a criminal--no matter whether
+I lost or won. You see why it is impossible for me to speak of love
+to her."
+
+"It is a sad thing," said Norah, after a little pause, "to think what
+very good people there are in the world."
+
+"Good?" said Lorison.
+
+"I was thinking of this superior person whom you say you love. She
+must be a very poor sort of creature."
+
+"I do not understand."
+
+"Nearly," she continued, "as poor a sort of creature as yourself."
+
+"You do not understand," said Lorison, removing his hat and sweeping
+back his fine, light hair. "Suppose she loved me in return, and
+were willing to marry me. Think, if you can, what would follow. Never
+a day would pass but she would be reminded of her sacrifice. I would
+read a condescension in her smile, a pity even in her affection, that
+would madden me. No. The thing would stand between us forever. Only
+equals should mate. I could never ask her to come down upon my lower
+plane."
+
+An arc light faintly shone upon Lorison's face. An illumination from
+within also pervaded it. The girl saw the rapt, ascetic look; it was
+the face either of Sir Galahad or Sir Fool.
+
+"Quite starlike," she said, "is this unapproachable angel. Really too
+high to be grasped."
+
+"By me, yes."
+
+She faced him suddenly. "My dear friend, would you prefer your star
+fallen?" Lorison made a wide gesture.
+
+"You push me to the bald fact," he declared; "you are not in sympathy
+with my argument. But I will answer you so. If I could reach my
+particular star, to drag it down, I would not do it; but if it were
+fallen, I would pick it up, and thank Heaven for the privilege."
+
+They were silent for some minutes. Norah shivered, and thrust her
+hands deep into the pockets of her jacket. Lorison uttered a
+remorseful exclamation.
+
+"I'm not cold," she said. "I was just thinking. I ought to tell you
+something. You have selected a strange confidante. But you cannot
+expect a chance acquaintance, picked up in a doubtful restaurant, to
+be an angel."
+
+"Norah!" cried Lorison.
+
+"Let me go on. You have told me about yourself. We have been such
+good friends. I must tell you now what I never wanted you to know.
+I am--worse than you are. I was on the stage . . . I sang in the
+chorus . . . I was pretty bad, I guess . . . I stole diamonds from
+the prima donna . . . they arrested me . . . I gave most of them up,
+and they let me go . . . I drank wine every night . . . a great
+deal . . . I was very wicked, but--"
+
+Lorison knelt quickly by her side and took her hands.
+
+"Dear Norah!" he said, exultantly. "It is you, it is you I love!
+You never guessed it, did you? 'Tis you I meant all the time. Now I
+can speak. Let me make you forget the past. We have both suffered;
+let us shut out the world, and live for each other. Norah, do you
+hear me say I love you?"
+
+"In spite of--"
+
+"Rather say because of it. You have come out of your past noble and
+good. Your heart is an angel's. Give it to me."
+
+"A little while ago you feared the future too much to even speak."
+
+"But for you; not for myself. Can you love me?"
+
+She cast herself, wildly sobbing, upon his breast.
+
+"Better than life--than truth itself--than everything."
+
+"And my own past," said Lorison, with a note of solicitude--"can you
+forgive and--"
+
+"I answered you that," she whispered, "when I told you I loved you."
+She leaned away, and looked thoughtfully at him. "If I had not told
+you about myself, would you have--would you--"
+
+"No," he interrupted; "I would never have let you know I loved you. I
+would never have asked you this--Norah, will you be my wife?"
+
+She wept again.
+
+"Oh, believe me; I am good now--I am no longer wicked! I will be
+the best wife in the world. Don't think I am--bad any more. If you
+do I shall die, I shall die!"
+
+While he was consoling, her, she brightened up, eager and impetuous.
+"Will you marry me to-night?" she said. "Will you prove it that way.
+I have a reason for wishing it to be to-night. Will you?"
+
+Of one of two things was this exceeding frankness the outcome: either
+of importunate brazenness or of utter innocence. The lover's
+perspective contained only the one.
+
+"The sooner," said Lorison, "the happier I shall be."
+
+"What is there to do?" she asked. "What do you have to get? Come!
+You should know."
+
+Her energy stirred the dreamer to action.
+
+"A city directory first," he cried, gayly, "to find where the man
+lives who gives licenses to happiness. We will go together and rout
+him out. Cabs, cars, policemen, telephones and ministers shall aid
+us."
+
+"Father Rogan shall marry us," said the girl, with ardour. "I will
+take you to him."
+
+
+An hour later the two stood at the open doorway of an immense, gloomy
+brick building in a narrow and lonely street. The license was tight
+in Norah's hand.
+
+"Wait here a moment," she said, "till I find Father Rogan."
+
+She plunged into the black hallway, and the lover was left standing,
+as it were, on one leg, outside. His impatience was not greatly
+taxed. Gazing curiously into what seemed the hallway to Erebus,
+he was presently reassured by a stream of light that bisected the
+darkness, far down the passage. Then he heard her call, and
+fluttered lampward, like the moth. She beckoned him through a
+doorway into the room whence emanated the light. The room was
+bare of nearly everything except books, which had subjugated all
+its space. Here and there little spots of territory had been
+reconquered. An elderly, bald man, with a superlatively calm,
+remote eye, stood by a table with a book in his hand, his finger
+still marking a page. His dress was sombre and appertained to a
+religious order. His eye denoted an acquaintance with the
+perspective.
+
+"Father Rogan," said Norah, "this is _he_."
+
+"The two of ye," said Father Rogan, "want to get married?"
+
+They did not deny it. He married them. The ceremony was quickly
+done. One who could have witnessed it, and felt its scope, might have
+trembled at the terrible inadequacy of it to rise to the dignity of
+its endless chain of results.
+
+Afterward the priest spake briefly, as if by rote, of certain other
+civil and legal addenda that either might or should, at a later time,
+cap the ceremony. Lorison tendered a fee, which was declined, and
+before the door closed after the departing couple Father Rogan's book
+popped open again where his finger marked it.
+
+In the dark hall Norah whirled and clung to her companion, tearful.
+
+"Will you never, never be sorry?"
+
+At last she was reassured.
+
+At the first light they reached upon the street, she asked the time,
+just as she had each night. Lorison looked at his watch. Half-past
+eight.
+
+Lorison thought it was from habit that she guided their steps toward
+the corner where they always parted. But, arrived there, she
+hesitated, and then released his arm. A drug store stood on the
+corner; its bright, soft light shone upon them.
+
+"Please leave me here as usual to-night," said Norah, sweetly. "I
+must--I would rather you would. You will not object? At six
+to-morrow evening I will meet you at Antonio's. I want to sit with
+you there once more. And then--I will go where you say." She gave
+him a bewildering, bright smile, and walked swiftly away.
+
+Surely it needed all the strength of her charm to carry off this
+astounding behaviour. It was no discredit to Lorison's strength of
+mind that his head began to whirl. Pocketing his hands, he rambled
+vacuously over to the druggist's windows, and began assiduously to
+spell over the names of the patent medicines therein displayed.
+
+As soon as be had recovered his wits, he proceeded along the street in
+an aimless fashion. After drifting for two or three squares, he
+flowed into a somewhat more pretentious thoroughfare, a way much
+frequented by him in his solitary ramblings. For here was a row of
+shops devoted to traffic in goods of the widest range of choice--
+handiworks of art, skill and fancy, products of nature and labour from
+every zone.
+
+Here, for a time, he loitered among the conspicuous windows, where was
+set, emphasized by congested floods of light, the cunningest spoil of
+the interiors. There were few passers, and of this Lorison was glad.
+He was not of the world. For a long time he had touched his fellow
+man only at the gear of a levelled cog-wheel--at right angles, and
+upon a different axis. He had dropped into a distinctly new orbit.
+The stroke of ill fortune had acted upon him, in effect, as a blow
+delivered upon the apex of a certain ingenious toy, the musical top,
+which, when thus buffeted while spinning, gives forth, with scarcely
+retarded motion, a complete change of key and chord.
+
+Strolling along the pacific avenue, he experienced singular,
+supernatural calm, accompanied by an unusual a activity of brain.
+Reflecting upon recent affairs, he assured himself of his happiness in
+having won for a bride the one he had so greatly desired, yet he
+wondered mildly at his dearth of active emotion. Her strange
+behaviour in abandoning him without valid excuse on his bridal eve
+aroused in him only a vague and curious speculation. Again, he found
+himself contemplating, with complaisant serenity, the incidents of her
+somewhat lively career. His perspective seemed to have been queerly
+shifted.
+
+As he stood before a window near a corner, his ears were assailed by a
+waxing clamour and commotion. He stood close to the window to allow
+passage to the cause of the hubbub--a procession of human beings,
+which rounded the corner and headed in his direction. He perceived a
+salient hue of blue and a glitter of brass about a central figure of
+dazzling white and silver, and a ragged wake of black, bobbing
+figures.
+
+Two ponderous policemen were conducting between them a woman dressed
+as if for the stage, in a short, white, satiny skirt reaching to the
+knees, pink stockings, and a sort of sleeveless bodice bright with
+relucent, armour-like scales. Upon her curly, light hair was perched,
+at a rollicking angle, a shining tin helmet. The costume was to be
+instantly recognized as one of those amazing conceptions to which
+competition has harried the inventors of the spectacular ballet. One
+of the officers bore a long cloak upon his arm, which, doubtless, had
+been intended to veil the I candid attractions of their effulgent
+prisoner, but, for some reason, it had not been called into use, to
+the vociferous delight of the tail of the procession.
+
+Compelled by a sudden and vigorous movement of the woman, the parade
+halted before the window by which Lorison stood. He saw that she was
+young, and, at the first glance, was deceived by a sophistical
+prettiness of her face, which waned before a more judicious scrutiny.
+Her look was bold and reckless, and upon her countenance, where yet
+the contours of youth survived, were the finger-marks of old age's
+credentialed courier, Late Hours.
+
+The young woman fixed her unshrinking gaze upon Lorison, and called to
+him in the voice of the wronged heroine in straits:
+
+"Say! You look like a good fellow; come and put up the bail, won't
+you? I've done nothing to get pinched for. It's all a mistake. See
+how they're treating me! You won't be sorry, if you'll help me out of
+this. Think of your sister or your girl being dragged along the
+streets this way! I say, come along now, like a good fellow."
+
+It may be that Lorison, in spite of the unconvincing bathos of this
+appeal, showed a sympathetic face, for one of the officers left the
+woman's side, and went over to him.
+
+"It's all right, Sir," he said, in a husky, confidential tone; "she's
+the right party. We took her after the first act at the Green Light
+Theatre, on a wire from the chief of police of Chicago. It's only a
+square or two to the station. Her rig's pretty bad, but she refused
+to change clothes--or, rather," added the officer, with a smile, "to
+put on some. I thought I'd explain matters to you so you wouldn't
+think she was being imposed upon."
+
+"What is the charge?" asked Lorison.
+
+"Grand larceny. Diamonds. Her husband is a jeweller in Chicago. She
+cleaned his show case of the sparklers, and skipped with a comic-opera
+troupe."
+
+The policeman, perceiving that the interest of the entire group of
+spectators was centred upon himself and Lorison--their conference
+being regarded as a possible new complication--was fain to prolong
+the situation--which reflected his own importance--by a little
+afterpiece of philosophical comment.
+
+"A gentleman like you, Sir," he went on affably, "would never notice
+it, but it comes in my line to observe what an immense amount of
+trouble is made by that combination--I mean the stage, diamonds
+and light-headed women who aren't satisfied with good homes. I tell
+you, Sir, a man these days and nights wants to know what his women
+folks are up to."
+
+The policeman smiled a good night, and returned to the side of his
+charge, who had been intently watching Lorison's face during the
+conversation, no doubt for some indication of his intention to render
+succour. Now, at the failure of the sign, and at the movement made to
+continue the ignominious progress, she abandoned hope, and addressed
+him thus, pointedly:
+
+"You damn chalk-faced quitter! You was thinking of giving me a hand,
+but you let the cop talk you out of it the first word. You're a dandy
+to tie to. Say, if you ever get a girl, she'll have a picnic. Won't
+she work you to the queen's taste! Oh, my!" She concluded with a
+taunting, shrill laugh that rasped Lorison like a saw. The policemen
+urged her forward; the delighted train of gaping followers closed up
+the rear; and the captive Amazon, accepting her fate, extended the
+scope of her maledictions so that none in hearing might seem to be
+slighted.
+
+Then there came upon Lorison an overwhelming revulsion of his
+perspective. It may be that he had been ripe for it, that the
+abnormal condition of mind in which he had for so long existed was
+already about to revert to its balance; however, it is certain that
+the events of the last few minutes had furnished the channel, if not
+the impetus, for the change.
+
+The initial determining influence had been so small a thing as the
+fact and manner of his having been approached by the officer. That
+agent had, by the style of his accost, restored the loiterer to his
+former place in society. In an instant he had been transformed from a
+somewhat rancid prowler along the fishy side streets of gentility into
+an honest gentleman, with whom even so lordly a guardian of the peace
+might agreeably exchange the compliments.
+
+This, then, first broke the spell, and set thrilling in him a
+resurrected longing for the fellowship of his kind, and the rewards of
+the virtuous. To what end, he vehemently asked himself, was this
+fanciful self-accusation, this empty renunciation, this moral
+squeamishness through which he had been led to abandon what was his
+heritage in life, and not beyond his deserts? Technically, he was
+uncondemned; his sole guilty spot was in thought rather than deed, and
+cognizance of it unshared by others. For what good, moral or
+sentimental, did he slink, retreating like the hedgehog from his own
+shadow, to and fro in this musty Bohemia that lacked even the
+picturesque?
+
+But the thing that struck home and set him raging was the part played
+by the Amazonian prisoner. To the counterpart of that astounding
+belligerent--identical at least, in the way of experience--to one,
+by her own confession, thus far fallen, had he, not three hours since,
+been united in marriage. How desirable and natural it had seemed to
+him then, and how monstrous it seemed now! How the words of diamond
+thief number two yet burned in his ears: "If you ever get a girl,
+she'll have a picnic." What did that mean but that women instinctively
+knew him for one they could hoodwink? Still again, there reverberated
+the policeman's sapient contribution to his agony: "A man these days
+and nights wants to know what his women folks are up to." Oh, yes, he
+had been a fool; he had looked at things from the wrong standpoint.
+
+But the wildest note in all the clamour was struck by pain's
+forefinger, jealousy. Now, at least, he felt that keenest sting--a
+mounting love unworthily bestowed. Whatever she might be, he loved
+her; he bore in his own breast his doom. A grating, comic flavour to
+his predicament struck him suddenly, and he laughed creakingly as he
+swung down the echoing pavement. An impetuous desire to act, to
+battle with his fate, seized him. He stopped upon his heel, and smote
+his palms together triumphantly. His wife was--where? But there
+was a tangible link; an outlet more or less navigable, through which
+his derelict ship of matrimony might yet be safely towed--the
+priest!
+
+Like all imaginative men with pliable natures, Lorison was, when
+thoroughly stirred, apt to become tempestuous. With a high and
+stubborn indignation upon him, be retraced his steps to the
+intersecting street by which he had come. Down this he hurried to the
+corner where he had parted with--an astringent grimace tinctured the
+thought--his wife. Thence still back he harked, following through
+an unfamiliar district his stimulated recollections of the way they
+had come from that preposterous wedding. Many times he went abroad,
+and nosed his way back to the trail, furious.
+
+At last, when he reached the dark, calamitous building in which his
+madness had culminated, and found the black hallway, he dashed down
+it, perceiving no light or sound. But he raised his voice, hailing
+loudly; reckless of everything but that he should find the old
+mischief-maker with the eyes that looked too far away to see the
+disaster he had wrought. The door opened, and in the stream of light
+Father Rogan stood, his book in hand, with his finger marking the
+place.
+
+"Ah!" cried Lorison. "You are the man I want. I had a wife of you a
+few hours ago. I would not trouble you, but I neglected to note how
+it was done. Will you oblige me with the information whether the
+business is beyond remedy?"
+
+"Come inside," said the priest; "there are other lodgers in the
+house, who might prefer sleep to even a gratified curiosity."
+
+Lorison entered the room and took the chair offered him. The priest's
+eyes looked a courteous interrogation.
+
+"I must apologize again," said the young man, "for so soon intruding
+upon you with my marital infelicities, but, as my wife has neglected
+to furnish me with her address, I am deprived of the legitimate
+recourse of a family row."
+
+"I am quite a plain man," said Father Rogan, pleasantly; "but I do
+not see how I am to ask you questions."
+
+"Pardon my indirectness," said Lorison; "I will ask one. In this room
+to-night you pronounced me to be a husband. You afterward spoke of
+additional rites or performances that either should or could be
+effected. I paid little attention to your words then, but I am hungry
+to hear them repeated now. As matters stand, am I married past all
+help?"
+
+"You are as legally and as firmly bound," said the priest, "as though
+it had been done in a cathedral, in the presence of thousands. The
+additional observances I referred to are not necessary to the
+strictest legality of the act, but were advised as a precaution for
+the future--for convenience of proof in such contingencies as wills,
+inheritances and the like."
+
+Lorison laughed harshly.
+
+"Many thanks," he said. "Then there is no mistake, and I am the happy
+benedict. I suppose I should go stand upon the bridal corner, and
+when my wife gets through walking the streets she will look me up."
+
+Father Rogan regarded him calmly.
+
+"My son," he said, "when a man and woman come to me to be married I
+always marry them. I do this for the sake of other people whom they
+might go away and marry if they did not marry each other. As you see,
+I do not seek your confidence; but your case seems to me to be one not
+altogether devoid of interest. Very few marriages that have come to
+my notice have brought such well-expressed regret within so short a
+time. I will hazard one question: were you not under the impression
+that you loved the lady you married, at the time you did so;"
+
+"Loved her!" cried Lorison, wildly. "Never so well as now, though
+she told me she deceived and sinned and stole. Never more than now,
+when, perhaps, she is laughing at the fool she cajoled and left, with
+scarcely a word, to return to God only knows what particular line of
+her former folly."
+
+Father Rogan answered nothing. During the silence that succeeded, he
+sat with a quiet expectation beaming in his full, lambent eye.
+
+"If you would listen--" began Lorison. The priest held up his hand.
+
+"As I hoped," he said. "I thought you would trust me. Wait but a
+moment." He brought a long clay pipe, filled and lighted it.
+
+"Now, my son," he said.
+
+Lorison poured a twelve month's accumulated confidence into Father
+Rogan's ear. He told all; not sparing himself or omitting the facts
+of his past, the events of the night, or his disturbing conjectures
+and fears.
+
+"The main point," said the priest, when he had concluded, "seems to
+me to be this--are you reasonably sure that you love this woman whom
+you have married?"
+
+"Why," exclaimed Lorison, rising impulsively to his feet--"why
+should I deny it? But look at me--am fish, flesh or fowl? That is
+the main point to me, I assure you."
+
+"I understand you," said the priest, also rising, and laying down his
+pipe. "The situation is one that has taxed the endurance of much
+older men than you--in fact, especially much older men than you. I
+will try to relieve you from it, and this night. You shall see for
+yourself into exactly what predicament you have fallen, and how you
+shall, possibly, be extricated. There is no evidence so credible as
+that of the eyesight."
+
+Father Rogan moved about the room, and donned a soft black hat.
+Buttoning his coat to his throat, he laid his hand on the doorknob.
+"Let us walk," he said.
+
+The two went out upon the street. The priest turned his face down it,
+and Lorison walked with him through a squalid district, where the
+houses loomed, awry and desolate-looking, high above them. Presently
+they turned into a less dismal side street, where the houses were
+smaller, and, though hinting of the most meagre comfort, lacked the
+concentrated wretchedness of the more populous byways.
+
+At a segregated, two-story house Father Rogan halted, and mounted the
+steps with the confidence of a familiar visitor. He ushered Lorison
+into a narrow hallway, faintly lighted by a cobwebbed hanging lamp.
+Almost immediately a door to the right opened and a dingy Irishwoman
+protruded her head.
+
+"Good evening to ye, Mistress Geehan," said the priest, unconsciously,
+it seemed, falling into a delicately flavoured brogue. "And is it
+yourself can tell me if Norah has gone out again, the night, maybe?"
+
+"Oh, it's yer blissid riverence! Sure and I can tell ye the same.
+The purty darlin' wint out, as usual, but a bit later. And she says:
+'Mother Geehan,' says she, 'it's me last noight out, praise the
+saints, this noight is!' And, oh, yer riverence, the swate, beautiful
+drame of a dress she had this toime! White satin and silk and
+ribbons, and lace about the neck and arrums--'twas a sin, yer
+reverence, the gold was spint upon it."
+
+The priest heard Lorison catch his breath painfully, and a faint smile
+flickered across his own clean-cut mouth.
+
+"Well, then, Mistress Geehan," said he, "I'll just step upstairs and
+see the bit boy for a minute, and I'll take this gentleman up with
+me."
+
+"He's awake, thin," said the woman. 'I've just come down from sitting
+wid him the last hour, tilling him fine shtories of ould County
+Tyrone. 'Tis a greedy gossoon, it is, yer riverence, for me
+shtories."
+
+"Small the doubt," said Father Rogan. "There's no rocking would put
+him to slape the quicker, I'm thinking."
+
+Amid the woman's shrill protest against the retort, the two men
+ascended the steep stairway. The priest pushed open the door of a
+room near its top.
+
+"Is that you already, sister?" drawled a sweet, childish voice from
+the darkness.
+
+"It's only ould Father Denny come to see ye, darlin'; and a foine
+gentleman I've brought to make ye a gr-r-and call. And ye resaves us
+fast aslape in bed! Shame on yez manners!"
+
+"Oh, Father Denny, is that you? I'm glad. And will you light the
+lamp, please? It's on the table by the door. And quit talking like
+Mother Geehan, Father Denny."
+
+The priest lit the lamp, and Lorison saw a tiny, towsled-haired boy,
+with a thin, delicate face, sitting up in a small bed in a corner.
+Quickly, also, his rapid glance considered the room and its
+contents. It was furnished with more than comfort, and its adornments
+plainly indicated a woman's discerning taste. An open door beyond
+revealed the blackness of an adjoining room's interior.
+
+The boy clutched both of Father Rogan's hands. "I'm so glad you
+came," he said; "but why did you come in the night? Did sister send
+you?"
+
+"Off wid ye! Am I to be sint about, at me age, as was Terence
+McShane, of Ballymahone? I come on me own r-r-responsibility."
+
+Lorison had also advanced to the boy's bedside. He was fond of
+children; and the wee fellow, laying himself down to sleep alone in
+that dark room, stirred-his heart.
+
+"Aren't you afraid, little man?" he asked, stooping down beside him.
+
+"Sometimes," answered the boy, with a shy smile, "when the rats make
+too much noise. But nearly every night, when sister goes out, Mother
+Geehan stays a while with me, and tells me funny stories. I'm not
+often afraid, sir."
+
+"This brave little gentleman," said Father Rogan, "is a scholar of
+mine. Every day from half-past six to half-past eight--when sister
+comes for him--he stops in my study, and we find out what's in the
+inside of books. He knows multiplication, division and fractions; and
+he's troubling me to begin wid the chronicles of Ciaran of
+Clonmacnoise, Corurac McCullenan and Cuan O'Lochain, the gr-r-reat
+Irish histhorians." The boy was evidently accustomed to the priest's
+Celtic pleasantries. A little, appreciative grin was all the attention
+the insinuation of pedantry received.
+
+Lorison, to have saved his life, could not have put to the child one
+of those vital questions that were wildly beating about, unanswered,
+in his own brain. The little fellow was very like Norah; he had the
+same shining hair and candid eyes.
+
+"Oh, Father Denny," cried the boy, suddenly, "I forgot to tell you!
+Sister is not going away at night any more! She told me so when she
+kissed me good night as she was leaving. And she said she was so
+happy, and then she cried. Wasn't that queer? But I'm glad; aren't
+you?"
+
+"Yes, lad. And now, ye omadhaun, go to sleep, and say good night; we
+must be going."
+
+"Which shall I do first, Father Denny?"
+
+"Faith, he's caught me again! Wait till I get the sassenach into the
+annals of Tageruach, the hagiographer; I'll give him enough of the
+Irish idiom to make him more respectful."
+
+The light was out, and the small, brave voice bidding them good night
+from the dark room. They groped downstairs, and tore away from the
+garrulity of Mother Geehan.
+
+Again the priest steered them through the dim ways, but this time in
+another direction. His conductor was serenely silent, and Lorison
+followed his example to the extent of seldom speaking. Serene he
+could not be. His heart beat suffocatingly in his breast. The
+following of this blind, menacing trail was pregnant with he knew not
+what humiliating revelation to be delivered at its end.
+
+They came into a more pretentious street, where trade, it could be
+surmised, flourished by day. And again the priest paused; this time
+before a lofty building, whose great doors and windows in the lowest
+floor were carefully shuttered and barred. Its higher apertures were
+dark, save in the third story, the windows of which were brilliantly
+lighted. Lorison's ear caught a distant, regular, pleasing thrumming,
+as of music above. They stood at an angle of the building. Up, along
+the side nearest them, mounted an iron stairway. At its top was an
+upright, illuminated parallelogram. Father Rogan had stopped, and
+stood, musing.
+
+"I will say this much," he remarked, thoughtfully: "I believe you to
+be a better man than you think yourself to be, and a better man than I
+thought some hours ago. But do not take this," he added, with a smile,
+"as much praise. I promised you a possible deliverance from an
+unhappy perplexity. I will have to modify that promise. I can only
+remove the mystery that enhanced that perplexity. Your deliverance
+depends upon yourself. Come."
+
+He led his companion up the stairway. Halfway up, Lorison caught him
+by the sleeve. "Remember," he gasped, "I love that woman."
+
+"You desired to know.
+
+"I--Go on."
+
+The priest reached the landing at the top of the stairway. Lorison,
+behind him, saw that the illuminated space was the glass upper half of
+a door opening into the lighted room. The rhythmic music increased as
+they neared it; the stairs shook with the mellow vibrations.
+
+Lorison stopped breathing when he set foot upon the highest step, for
+the priest stood aside, and motioned him to look through the glass of
+the door.
+
+His eye, accustomed to the darkness, met first a blinding glare,
+and then he made out the faces and forms of many people, amid
+an extravagant display of splendid robings--billowy laces,
+brilliant-hued finery, ribbons, silks and misty drapery. And then
+he caught the meaning of that jarring hum, and he saw the tired,
+pale, happy face of his wife, bending, as were a score of others,
+over her sewing machine--toiling, toiling. Here was the folly she
+pursued, and the end of his quest.
+
+But not his deliverance, though even then remorse struck him. His
+shamed soul fluttered once more before it retired to make room for the
+other and better one. For, to temper his thrill of joy, the shine of
+the satin and the glimmer of ornaments recalled the disturbing figure
+of the bespangled Amazon, and the base duplicate histories lit by the
+glare of footlights and stolen diamonds. It is past the wisdom of him
+who only sets the scenes, either to praise or blame the man. But this
+time his love overcame his scruples. He took a quick step, and
+reached out his hand for the doorknob. Father Rogan was quicker to
+arrest it and draw him back.
+
+"You use my trust in you queerly," said the priest sternly. "What are
+you about to do?"
+
+"I am going to my wife," said Lorison. "Let me pass."
+
+"Listen," said the priest, holding him firmly by the arm. "I am about
+to put you in possession of a piece of knowledge of which, thus far,
+you have scarcely proved deserving. I do not think you ever will; but
+I will not dwell upon that. You see in that room the woman you
+married, working for a frugal living for herself, and a generous
+comfort for an idolized brother. This building belongs to the chief
+costumer of the city. For months the advance orders for the coming
+Mardi Gras festivals have kept the work going day and night. I myself
+secured employment here for Norah. She toils here each night from
+nine o'clock until daylight, and, besides, carries home with her some
+of the finer costumes, requiring more delicate needlework, and works
+there part of the day. Somehow, you two have remained strangely
+ignorant of each other's lives. Are you convinced now that your wife
+is not walking the streets?"
+
+"Let me go to her," cried Lorison, again struggling, "and beg her
+forgiveness!'
+
+"Sir," said the priest, "do you owe me nothing? Be quiet. It seems
+so often that Heaven lets fall its choicest gifts into hands that must
+be taught to hold them. Listen again. You forgot that repentant sin
+must not compromise, but look up, for redemption, to the purest and
+best. You went to her with the fine-spun sophistry that peace could be
+found in a mutual guilt; and she, fearful of losing what her heart so
+craved, thought it worth the price to buy it with a desperate, pure,
+beautiful lie. I have known her since the day she was born; she is as
+innocent and unsullied in life and deed as a holy saint. In that
+lowly street where she dwells she first saw the light, and she has
+lived there ever since, spending her days in generous self-sacrifice
+for others. Och, ye spalpeen!" continued Father Rogan, raising his
+finger in kindly anger at Lorison. "What for, I wonder, could she be
+after making a fool of hersilf, and shamin' her swate soul with lies,
+for the like of you!"
+
+"Sir," said Lorison, trembling, "say what you please of me. Doubt it
+as you must, I will yet prove my gratitude to you, and my devotion to
+her. But let me speak to her once now, let me kneel for just one
+moment at her feet, and--"
+
+"Tut, tut!" said the priest. "How many acts of a love drama do you
+think an old bookworm like me capable of witnessing? Besides, what
+kind of figures do we cut, spying upon the mysteries of midnight
+millinery! Go to meet your wife to-morrow, as she ordered you, and
+obey her thereafter, and maybe some time I shall get forgiveness for
+the part I have played in this night's work. Off wid yez down the
+shtairs, now! 'Tis late, and an ould man like me should be takin' his
+rest."
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES
+
+
+"Aunt Ellen," said Octavia, cheerfully, as she threw her black kid
+gloves carefully at the dignified Persian cat on the window-seat, "I'm
+a pauper."
+
+"You are so extreme in your statements, Octavia, dear," said Aunt
+Ellen, mildly, looking up from her paper. "If you find yourself
+temporarily in need of some small change for bonbons, you will find
+my purse in the drawer of the writing desk."
+
+Octavia Beaupree removed her hat and seated herself on a footstool
+near her aunt's chair, clasping her hands about her knees. Her slim
+and flexible figure, clad in a modish mourning costume, accommodated
+itself easily and gracefully to the trying position. Her bright and
+youthful face, with its pair of sparkling, life-enamoured eyes, tried
+to compose itself to the seriousness that the occasion seemed to
+demand.
+
+"You good auntie, it isn't a case of bonbons; it is abject, staring,
+unpicturesque poverty, with ready-made clothes, gasolined gloves, and
+probably one o'clock dinners all waiting with the traditional wolf at
+the door. I've just come from my lawyer, auntie, and, 'Please, ma'am,
+I ain't got nothink 't all. Flowers, lady? Buttonhole, gentleman?
+Pencils, sir, three for five, to help a poor widow?' Do I do it
+nicely, auntie, or, as a bread-winner accomplishment, were my lessons
+in elocution entirely wasted?"
+
+"Do be serious, my dear," said Aunt Ellen, letting her paper fall to
+the floor, "long enough to tell me what you mean. Colonel Beaupree's
+estate--"
+
+"Colonel Beaupree's estate," interrupted Octavia, emphasizing her
+words with appropriate dramatic gestures, "is of Spanish castellar
+architecture. Colonel Beaupree's resources are--wind. Colonel
+Beaupree's stocks are--water. Colonel Beaupree's income is--all
+in. The statement lacks the legal technicalities to which I have been
+listening for an hour, but that is what it means when translated."
+
+"Octavia!" Aunt Ellen was now visibly possessed by consternation. "I
+can hardly believe it. And it was the impression that he was worth a
+million. And the De Peysters themselves introduced him!"
+
+Octavia rippled out a laugh, and then became properly grave.
+
+"_De mortuis nil_, auntie--not even the rest of it. The dear old
+colonel--what a gold brick he was, after all! I paid for my bargain
+fairly--I'm all here, am I not?--items: eyes, fingers, toes,
+youth, old family, unquestionable position in society as called for
+in the contract--no wild-cat stock here." Octavia picked up the morning
+paper from the floor. "But I'm not going to 'squeal'--isn't that
+what they call it when you rail at Fortune because you've, lost the
+game?" She turned the pages of the paper calmly. "'Stock market'--no
+use for that. 'Society's doings'--that's done. Here is my page--the
+wish column. A Van Dresser could not be said to 'want' for anything,
+of course. 'Chamber-maids, cooks, canvassers, stenographers--'"
+
+"Dear," said Aunt Ellen, with a little tremor in her voice, "please do
+not talk in that way. Even if your affairs are in so unfortunate a
+condition, there is my three thousand--"
+
+Octavia sprang up lithely, and deposited a smart kiss on the delicate
+cheek of the prim little elderly maid.
+
+"Blessed auntie, your three thousand is just sufficient to insure your
+Hyson to be free from willow leaves and keep the Persian in sterilized
+cream. I know I'd be welcome, but I prefer to strike bottom like
+Beelzebub rather than hang around like the Peri listening to the music
+from the side entrance. I'm going to earn my own living. There's
+nothing else to do. I'm a--Oh, oh, oh!--I had forgotten. There's
+one thing saved from the wreck. It's a corral--no, a ranch in--let
+me see--Texas: an asset, dear old Mr. Bannister called it. How
+pleased he was to show me something he could describe as unencumbered!
+I've a description of it among those stupid papers he made me bring
+away with me from his office. I'll try to find it."
+
+Octavia found her shopping-bag, and drew from it a long envelope
+filled with typewritten documents.
+
+"A ranch in Texas," sighed Aunt Ellen. "It sounds to me more like a
+liability than an asset. Those are the places where the centipedes are
+found, and cowboys, and fandangos."
+
+"'The Rancho de las Sombras,'" read Octavia from a sheet of violently
+purple typewriting, "'is situated one hundred and ten miles southeast
+of San Antonio, and thirty-eight miles from its nearest railroad
+station, Nopal, on the I. and G. N. Ranch, consists of 7,680 acres
+of well-watered land, with title conferred by State patents, and
+twenty-two sections, or 14,080 acres, partly under yearly running
+lease and partly bought under State's twenty-year-purchase act. Eight
+thousand graded merino sheep, with the necessary equipment of horses,
+vehicles and general ranch paraphernalia. Ranch-house built of brick,
+with six rooms comfortably furnished according to the requirements of
+the climate. All within a strong barbed-wire fence.
+
+"'The present ranch manager seems to be competent and reliable, and is
+rapidly placing upon a paying basis a business that, in other hands,
+had been allowed to suffer from neglect and misconduct.
+
+"'This property was secured by Colonel Beaupree in a deal with a
+Western irrigation syndicate, and the title to it seems to be perfect.
+With careful management and the natural increase of land values, it
+ought to be made the foundation for a comfortable fortune for its
+owner.'"
+
+When Octavia ceased reading, Aunt Ellen uttered something as near a
+sniff as her breeding permitted.
+
+"The prospectus," she said, with uncompromising metropolitan
+suspicion, "doesn't mention the centipedes, or the Indians. And you
+never did like mutton, Octavia. I don't see what advantage you can
+derive from this--desert."
+
+But Octavia was in a trance. Her eyes were steadily regarding
+something quite beyond their focus. Her lips were parted, and her face
+was lighted by the kindling furor of the explorer, the ardent,
+stirring disquiet of the adventurer. Suddenly she clasped her hands
+together exultantly.
+
+"The problem solves itself, auntie," she cried. "I'm going to that
+ranch. I'm going to live on it. I'm going to learn to like mutton,
+and even concede the good qualities of centipedes--at a respectful
+distance. It's just what I need. It's a new life that comes when my
+old one is just ending. It's a release, auntie; it isn't a narrowing.
+Think of the gallops over those leagues of prairies, with the wind
+tugging at the roots of your hair, the coming close to the earth
+and learning over again the stories of the growing grass and the
+little wild flowers without names! Glorious is what it will be. Shall
+I be a shepherdess with a Watteau hat, and a crook to keep the bad
+wolves from the lambs, or a typical Western ranch girl, with short
+hair, like the pictures of her in the Sunday papers? I think the
+latter. And they'll have my picture, too, with the wild-cats I've
+slain, single-handed, hanging from my saddle horn. 'From the Four
+Hundred to the Flocks' is the way they'll headline it, and they'll
+print photographs of the old Van Dresser mansion and the church where
+I was married. They won't have my picture, but they'll get an artist
+to draw it. I'll be wild and woolly, and I'll grow my own wool."
+
+"Octavia!" Aunt Ellen condensed into the one word all the protests
+she was unable to utter.
+
+"Don't say a word, auntie. I'm going. I'll see the sky at night fit
+down on the world like a big butter-dish cover, and I'll make friends
+again with the stars that I haven't had a chat with since I was a wee
+child. I wish to go. I'm tired of all this. I'm glad I haven't any
+money. I could bless Colonel Beaupree for that ranch, and forgive him
+for all his bubbles. What if the life will be rough and lonely! I--I
+deserve it. I shut my heart to everything except that miserable
+ambition. I--oh, I wish to go away, and forget--forget!"
+
+Octavia swerved suddenly to her knees, laid her flushed face in her
+aunt's lap, and shook with turbulent sobs.
+
+Aunt Ellen bent over her, and smoothed the coppery-brown hair.
+
+"I didn't know," she said, gently; "I didn't know--that. Who was it,
+dear?"
+
+
+When Mrs. Octavia Beaupree, nee Van Dresser, stepped from the train at
+Nopal, her manner lost, for the moment, some of that easy certitude
+which had always marked her movements. The town was of recent
+establishment, and seemed to have been hastily constructed of undressed
+lumber and flapping canvas. The element that had congregated about the
+station, though not offensively demonstrative, was clearly composed of
+citizens accustomed to and prepared for rude alarms.
+
+Octavia stood on the platform, against the telegraph office, and
+attempted to choose by intuition from the swaggering, straggling
+string, of loungers the manager of the Rancho de las Sombras, who
+had been instructed by Mr. Bannister to meet her there. That tall,
+serious, looking, elderly man in the blue flannel shirt and white tie
+she thought must be he. But, no; he passed by, removing his gaze from
+the lady as hers rested on him, according to the Southern custom. The
+manager, she thought, with some impatience at being kept waiting,
+should have no difficulty in selecting her. Young women wearing the
+most recent thing in ash-coloured travelling suits were not so
+plentiful in Nopal!
+
+Thus keeping a speculative watch on all persons of possible managerial
+aspect, Octavia, with a catching breath and a start of surprise,
+suddenly became aware of Teddy Westlake hurrying along the platform in
+the direction of the train--of Teddy Westlake or his sun-browned
+ghost in cheviot, boots and leather-girdled hat--Theodore Westlake,
+Jr., amateur polo (almost) champion, all-round butterfly and cumberer
+of the soil; but a broader, surer, more emphasized and determined
+Teddy than the one she had known a year ago when last she saw him.
+
+He perceived Octavia at almost the same time, deflected his course,
+and steered for her in his old, straightforward way. Something like
+awe came upon her as the strangeness of his metamorphosis was
+brought into closer range; the rich, red-brown of his complexion
+brought out so vividly his straw-coloured mustache and steel-gray
+eyes. He seemed more grown-up, and, somehow, farther away. But, when
+he spoke, the old, boyish Teddy came back again. They had been friends
+from childhood.
+
+"Why, 'Tave!" he exclaimed, unable to reduce his perplexity to
+coherence. "How--what--when--where?"
+
+"Train," said Octavia; "necessity; ten minutes ago; home. Your
+complexion's gone, Teddy. Now, how--what--when--where?"
+
+"I'm working down here," said Teddy. He cast side glances about the
+station as one does who tries to combine politeness with duty.
+
+"You didn't notice on the train," he asked, "an old lady with gray
+curls and a poodle, who occupied two seats with her bundles and
+quarrelled with the conductor, did you?"
+
+"I think not," answered Octavia, reflecting. "And you haven't, by
+any chance, noticed a big, gray-mustached man in a blue shirt and
+six-shooters, with little flakes of merino wool sticking in his hair,
+have you?"
+
+"Lots of 'em," said Teddy, with symptoms of mental delirium under the
+strain. Do you happen to know any such individual?"
+
+"No; the description is imaginary. Is your interest in the old lady
+whom you describe a personal one?"
+
+"Never saw her in my life. She's painted entirely from fancy. She owns
+the little piece of property where I earn my bread and butter--the
+Rancho de las Sombras. I drove up to meet her according to arrangement
+with her lawyer."
+
+Octavia leaned against the wall of the telegraph office. Was this
+possible? And didn't he know?
+
+"Are you the manager of that ranch?" she asked weakly.
+
+"I am," said Teddy, with pride.
+
+"I am Mrs. Beaupree," said Octavia faintly; "but my hair never would
+curl, and I was polite to the conductor."
+
+For a moment that strange, grown-up look came back, and removed Teddy
+miles away from her.
+
+"I hope you'll excuse me," he said, rather awkwardly. "You see, I've
+been down here in the chaparral a year. I hadn't heard. Give me your
+checks, please, and I'll have your traps loaded into the wagon. Jose
+will follow with them. We travel ahead in the buckboard."
+
+Seated by Teddy in a feather-weight buckboard, behind a pair of wild,
+cream-coloured Spanish ponies, Octavia abandoned all thought for the
+exhilaration of the present. They swept out of the little town and
+down the level road toward the south. Soon the road dwindled and
+disappeared, and they struck across a world carpeted with an endless
+reach of curly mesquite grass. The wheels made no sound. The tireless
+ponies bounded ahead at an unbroken gallop. The temperate wind, made
+fragrant by thousands of acres of blue and yellow wild flowers, roared
+gloriously in their ears. The motion was aerial, ecstatic, with a
+thrilling sense of perpetuity in its effect. Octavia sat silent,
+possessed by a feeling of elemental, sensual bliss. Teddy seemed to be
+wrestling with some internal problem.
+
+"I'm going to call you madama," he announced as the result of his
+labours. "That is what the Mexicans will call you--they're nearly
+all Mexicans on the ranch, you know. That seems to me about the proper
+thing."
+
+"Very well, Mr. Westlake," said Octavia, primly.
+
+"Oh, now," said Teddy, in some consternation, "that's carrying the
+thing too far, isn't it?"
+
+"Don't worry me with your beastly etiquette. I'm just beginning to
+live. Don't remind me of anything artificial. If only this air could
+be bottled! This much alone is worth coming for. Oh, look I there goes
+a deer!"
+
+"Jack-rabbit," said Teddy, without turning his head.
+
+"Could I--might I drive?" suggested Octavia, panting, with rose-tinted
+cheeks and the eye of an eager child.
+
+"On one condition. Could I--might I smoke?"
+
+"Forever!" cried Octavia, taking the lines with solemn joy. "How shall
+I know which way to drive?"
+
+"Keep her sou' by sou'east, and all sail set. You see that black speck
+on the horizon under that lowermost Gulf cloud? That's a group of
+live-oaks and a landmark. Steer halfway between that and the little
+hill to the left. I'll recite you the whole code of driving rules for
+the Texas prairies: keep the reins from under the horses' feet, and
+swear at 'em frequent."
+
+"I'm too happy to swear, Ted. Oh, why do people buy yachts or travel
+in palace-cars, when a buckboard and a pair of plugs and a spring
+morning like this can satisfy all desire?"
+
+"Now, I'll ask you," protested Teddy, who was futilely striking match
+after match on the dashboard, "not to call those denizens of the air
+plugs. They can kick out a hundred miles between daylight and dark."
+At last he succeeded in snatching a light for his cigar from the flame
+held in the hollow of his hands.
+
+"Room!" said Octavia, intensely. "That's what produces the effect. I
+know now what I've wanted--scope--range--room!"
+
+"Smoking-room," said Teddy, unsentimentally. "I love to smoke in a
+buckboard. The wind blows the smoke into you and out again. It saves
+exertion."
+
+The two fell so naturally into their old-time goodfellowship that it
+was only by degrees that a sense of the strangeness of the new
+relations between them came to be felt.
+
+"Madama," said Teddy, wonderingly, "however did you get it into your
+bead to cut the crowd and come down here? Is it a fad now among the
+upper classes to trot off to sheep ranches instead of to Newport?"
+
+"I was broke, Teddy," said Octavia, sweetly, with her interest centred
+upon steering safely between a Spanish dagger plant and a clump of
+chaparral; "I haven't a thing in the world but this ranch--not even
+any other home to go to."
+
+"Come, now," said Teddy, anxiously but incredulously, "you don't
+mean it?"
+
+"When my husband," said Octavia, with a shy slurring of the word,
+"died three months ago I thought I had a reasonable amount of the
+world's goods. His lawyer exploded that theory in a sixty-minute fully
+illustrated lecture. I took to the sheep as a last resort. Do you
+happen to know of any fashionable caprice among the gilded youth of
+Manhattan that induces them to abandon polo and club windows to become
+managers of sheep ranches?"
+
+"It's easily explained in my case," responded Teddy, promptly. "I
+had to go to work. I couldn't have earned my board in New York, so I
+chummed a while with old Sandford, one of the syndicate that owned the
+ranch before Colonel Beaupree bought it, and got a place down here. I
+wasn't manager at first. I jogged around on ponies and studied the
+business in detail, until I got all the points in my head. I saw where
+it was losing and what the remedies were, and then Sandford put me
+in charge. I get a hundred dollars a month, and I earn it."
+
+"Poor Teddy!" said Octavia, with a smile.
+
+"You needn't. I like it. I save half my wages, and I'm as hard as a
+water plug. It beats polo."
+
+"Will it furnish bread and tea and jam for another outcast from
+civilization?"
+
+"The spring shearing," said the manager, "just cleaned up a deficit in
+last year's business. Wastefulness and inattention have been the rule
+heretofore. The autumn clip will leave a small profit over all
+expenses. Next year there will be jam."
+
+When, about four o'clock in the afternoon, the ponies rounded a
+gentle, brush-covered hill, and then swooped, like a double
+cream-coloured cyclone, upon the Rancho de las Sombras, Octavia gave
+a little cry of delight. A lordly grove of magnificent live-oaks cast
+an area of grateful, cool shade, whence the ranch had drawn its name,
+"de las Sombras"--of the shadows. The house, of red brick, one story,
+ran low and long beneath the trees. Through its middle, dividing its
+six rooms in half, extended a broad, arched passageway, picturesque
+with flowering cactus and hanging red earthern jars. A "gallery," low
+and broad, encircled the building. Vines climbed about it, and the
+adjacent ground was, for a space, covered with transplanted grass and
+shrubs. A little lake, long and narrow, glimmered in the sun at the
+rear. Further away stood the shacks of the Mexican workers, the
+corrals, wool sheds and shearing pens. To the right lay the low hills,
+splattered with dark patches of chaparral; to the left the unbounded
+green prairie blending against the blue heavens.
+
+"It's a home, Teddy," said Octavia, breathlessly; that's what it
+is--it's a home."
+
+"Not so bad for a sheep ranch," admitted Teddy, with excusable pride.
+"I've been tinkering on it at odd times."
+
+A Mexican youth sprang from somewhere in the grass, and took charge of
+the creams. The mistress and the manager entered the house.
+
+"Here's Mrs. MacIntyre," said Teddy, as a placid, neat, elderly lady
+came out upon the gallery to meet them. "Mrs. Mac, here's the boss.
+Very likely she will be wanting a hunk of ham and a dish of beans
+after her drive."
+
+Mrs. MacIntyre, the housekeeper, as much a fixture on the place as the
+lake or the live-oaks, received the imputation of the ranch's
+resources of refreshment with mild indignation, and was about to give
+it utterance when Octavia spoke.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. MacIntyre, don't apologize for Teddy. Yes, I call him Teddy.
+So does every one whom he hasn't duped into taking him seriously. You
+see, we used to cut paper dolls and play jackstraws together ages ago.
+No one minds what he says."
+
+"No," said Teddy, "no one minds what he says, just so he doesn't do it
+again."
+
+Octavia cast one of those subtle, sidelong glances toward him from
+beneath her lowered eyelids--a glance that Teddy used to describe as
+an upper-cut. But there was nothing in his ingenuous, weather-tanned
+face to warrant a suspicion that he was making an allusion--nothing.
+Beyond a doubt, thought Octavia, he had forgotten.
+
+"Mr. Westlake likes his fun," said Mrs. Maclntyre, as she conducted
+Octavia to her rooms. "But," she added, loyally, "people around here
+usually pay attention to what he says when he talks in earnest. I
+don't know what would have become of this place without him."
+
+Two rooms at the east end of the house had been arranged for the
+occupancy of the ranch's mistress. When she entered them a slight
+dismay seized her at their bare appearance and the scantiness of
+their furniture; but she quickly reflected that the climate was a
+semi-tropical one, and was moved to appreciation of the well-conceived
+efforts to conform to it. The sashes had already been removed from the
+big windows, and white curtains waved in the Gulf breeze that streamed
+through the wide jalousies. The bare floor was amply strewn with cool
+rugs; the chairs were inviting, deep, dreamy willows; the walls were
+papered with a light, cheerful olive. One whole side of her sitting
+room was covered with books on smooth, unpainted pine shelves. She
+flew to these at once. Before her was a well-selected library. She
+caught glimpses of titles of volumes of fiction and travel not yet
+seasoned from the dampness of the press.
+
+Presently, recollecting that she was now in a wilderness given over to
+mutton, centipedes and privations, the incongruity of these luxuries
+struck her, and, with intuitive feminine suspicion, she began turning
+to the fly-leaves of volume after volume. Upon each one was inscribed
+in fluent characters the name of Theodore Westlake, Jr.
+
+Octavia, fatigued by her long journey, retired early that night. Lying
+upon her white, cool bed, she rested deliciously, but sleep coquetted
+long with her. She listened to faint noises whose strangeness kept her
+faculties on the alert--the fractious yelping of the coyotes, the
+ceaseless, low symphony of the wind, the distant booming of the frogs
+about the lake, the lamentation of a concertina in the Mexicans'
+quarters. There were many conflicting feelings in her heart--
+thankfulness and rebellion, peace and disquietude, loneliness and a
+sense of protecting care, happiness and an old, haunting pain.
+
+She did what any other woman would have done--sought relief in a
+wholesome tide of unreasonable tears, and her last words, murmured to
+herself before slumber, capitulating, came softly to woo her, were "He
+has forgotten."
+
+The manager of the Rancho de las Sombras was no dilettante. He was a
+"hustler." He was generally up, mounted, and away of mornings before
+the rest of the household were awake, making the rounds of the flocks
+and camps. This was the duty of the major-domo, a stately old Mexican
+with a princely air and manner, but Teddy seemed to have a great deal
+of confidence in his own eyesight. Except in the busy seasons, he
+nearly always returned to the ranch to breakfast at eight o'clock,
+with Octavia and Mrs. Maclntyre, at the little table set in the
+central hallway, bringing with him a tonic and breezy cheerfulness
+full of the health and flavour of the prairies.
+
+A few days after Octavia's arrival he made her get out one of her
+riding skirts, and curtail it to a shortness demanded by the chaparral
+brakes.
+
+With some misgivings she donned this and the pair of buckskin leggings
+he prescribed in addition, and, mounted upon a dancing pony, rode with
+him to view her possessions. He showed her everything--the flocks
+of ewes, muttons and grazing lambs, the dipping vats, the shearing
+pens, the uncouth merino rams in their little pasture, the water-tanks
+prepared against the summer drought--giving account of his stewardship
+with a boyish enthusiasm that never flagged.
+
+Where was the old Teddy that she knew so well? This side of him was
+the same, and it was a side that pleased her; but this was all she
+ever saw of him now. Where was his sentimentality--those old,
+varying moods of impetuous love-making, of fanciful, quixotic
+devotion, of heart-breaking gloom, of alternating, absurd tenderness
+and haughty dignity? His nature had been a sensitive one, his
+temperament bordering closely on the artistic. She knew that, besides
+being a follower of fashion and its fads and sports, he had cultivated
+tastes of a finer nature. He had written things, he had tampered with
+colours, he was something of a student in certain branches of art, and
+once she had been admitted to all his aspirations and thoughts. But
+now--and she could not avoid the conclusion--Teddy had barricaded
+against her every side of himself except one--the side that showed the
+manager of the Rancho de las Sombras and a jolly chum who had forgiven
+and forgotten. Queerly enough the words of Mr. Bannister's description
+of her property came into her mind--"all inclosed within a strong
+barbed-wire fence."
+
+"Teddy's fenced, too," said Octavia to herself.
+
+It was not difficult for her to reason out the cause of his
+fortifications. It had originated one night at the Hammersmiths' ball.
+It occurred at a time soon after she had decided to accept Colonel
+Beaupree and his million, which was no more than her looks and the
+entree she held to the inner circles were worth. Teddy had proposed
+with all his impetuosity and fire, and she looked him straight in the
+eyes, an said, coldly and finally: "Never let me hear any such silly
+nonsense from you again." "You won't," said Teddy, with an expression
+around his mouth, and--now Teddy was inclosed within a strong
+barbed-wire fence.
+
+It was on this first ride of inspection that Teddy was seized by the
+inspiration that suggested the name of Mother Goose's heroine, and he
+at once bestowed it upon Octavia. The idea, supported by both a
+similarity of names and identity of occupations, seemed to strike him
+as a peculiarly happy one, and he never tired of using it. The
+Mexicans on the ranch also took up the name, adding another syllable
+to accommodate their lingual incapacity for the final "p," gravely
+referring to her as "La Madama Bo-Peepy." Eventually it spread, and
+"Madame Bo-Peep's ranch" was as often mentioned as the "Rancho de las
+Sombras."
+
+Came the long, hot season from May to September, when work is scarce
+on the ranches. Octavia passed the days in a kind of lotus-eater's
+dream. Books, hammocks, correspondence with a few intimate friends, a
+renewed interest in her old water-colour box and easel--these
+disposed of the sultry hours of daylight. The evenings were always
+sure to bring enjoyment. Best of all were the rapturous horseback
+rides with Teddy, when the moon gave light over the wind-swept
+leagues, chaperoned by the wheeling night-hawk and the startled owl.
+Often the Mexicans would come up from their shacks with their guitars
+and sing the weirdest of heart-breaking songs. There were long, cosy
+chats on the breezy gallery, and an interminable warfare of wits
+between Teddy and Mrs. MacIntyre, whose abundant Scotch shrewdness
+often more than overmatched the lighter humour in which she was
+lacking.
+
+And the nights came, one after another, and were filed away by weeks
+and months--nights soft and languorous and fragrant, that should
+have driven Strephon to Chloe over wires however barbed, that might
+have drawn Cupid himself to hunt, lasso in hand, among those amorous
+pastures--but Teddy kept his fences up.
+
+One July night Madame Bo-Peep and her ranch manager were sitting on
+the east gallery. Teddy had been exhausting the science of
+prognostication as to the probabilities of a price of twenty-four
+cents for the autumn clip, and had then subsided into an anesthetic
+cloud of Havana smoke. Only as incompetent a judge as a woman would
+have failed to note long ago that at least a third of his salary must
+have gone up in the fumes of those imported Regalias.
+
+"Teddy," said Octavia, suddenly, and rather sharply, "what are you
+working down here on a ranch for?"
+
+"One hundred per," said Teddy, glibly, "and found."
+
+"I've a good mind to discharge you."
+
+"Can't do it," said Teddy, with a grin.
+
+"Why not?" demanded Octavia, with argumentative heat.
+
+"Under contract. Terms of sale respect all unexpired contracts. Mine
+runs until 12 P. M., December thirty-first. You might get up at
+midnight on that date and fire me. If you try it sooner I'll be in a
+position to bring legal proceedings."
+
+Octavia seemed to be considering the prospects of litigation.
+
+"But," continued Teddy cheerfully, "I've been thinking of resigning
+anyway."
+
+Octavia's rocking-chair ceased its motion. There were centipedes in
+this country, she felt sure; and Indians, and vast, lonely, desolate,
+empty wastes; all within strong barbed-wire fence. There was a Van
+Dresser pride, but there was also a Van Dresser heart. She must know
+for certain whether or not he had forgotten.
+
+"Ah, well, Teddy," she said, with a fine assumption of polite
+interest, "it's lonely down here; you're longing to get back to the
+old life--to polo and lobsters and theatres and balls."
+
+"Never cared much for balls," said Teddy virtuously.
+
+"You're getting old, Teddy. Your memory is failing. Nobody ever knew
+you to miss a dance, unless it occurred on the same night with another
+one which you attended. And you showed such shocking bad taste, too,
+in dancing too often with the same partner. Let me see, what was that
+Forbes girl's name--the one with wall eyes--Mabel, wasn't it?"
+
+"No; Adele. Mabel was the one with the bony elbows. That wasn't wall
+in Adele's eyes. It was soul. We used to talk sonnets together, and
+Verlaine. Just then I was trying to run a pipe from the Pierian
+spring."
+
+"You were on the floor with her," said Octavia, undeflected, "five
+times at the Hammersmiths'."
+
+"Hammersmiths' what?" questioned Teddy, vacuously.
+
+"Ball--ball," said Octavia, viciously. "What were we talking of?"
+
+"Eyes, I thought," said Teddy, after some reflection; "and elbows."
+
+"Those Hammersmiths," went on Octavia, in her sweetest society
+prattle, after subduing an intense desire to yank a handful of
+sunburnt, sandy hair from the head lying back contentedly against the
+canvas of the steamer chair, "had too much money. Mines, wasn't it? It
+was something that paid something to the ton. You couldn't get a glass
+of plain water in their house. Everything at that ball was dreadfully
+overdone."
+
+"It was," said Teddy.
+
+"Such a crowd there was!" Octavia continued, conscious that she was
+talking the rapid drivel of a school-girl describing her first dance.
+"The balconies were as warm as the rooms. I--lost--something at
+that ball." The last sentence was uttered in a tone calculated to
+remove the barbs from miles of wire.
+
+"So did I," confessed Teddy, in a lower voice.
+
+"A glove," said Octavia, falling back as the enemy approached her
+ditches.
+
+"Caste," said Teddy, halting his firing line without loss. "I
+hobnobbed, half the evening with one of Hammersmith's miners, a fellow
+who kept his hands in his pockets, and talked like an archangel about
+reduction plants and drifts and levels and sluice-boxes."
+
+"A pearl-gray glove, nearly new," sighed Octavia, mournfully.
+
+"A bang-up chap, that McArdle," maintained Teddy approvingly. "A
+man who hated olives and elevators; a man who handled mountains as
+croquettes, and built tunnels in the air; a man who never uttered a
+word of silly nonsense in his life. Did you sign those lease-renewal
+applications yet, madama? They've got to be on file in the land office
+by the thirty-first."
+
+Teddy turned his head lazily. Octavia's chair was vacant.
+
+
+A certain centipede, crawling along the lines marked out by fate,
+expounded the situation. It was early one morning while Octavia and
+Mrs. Maclntyre were trimming the honeysuckle on the west gallery.
+Teddy had risen and departed hastily before daylight in response to
+word that a flock of ewes had been scattered from their bedding ground
+during the night by a thunder-storm.
+
+The centipede, driven by destiny, showed himself on the floor of the
+gallery, and then, the screeches of the two women giving him his cue,
+he scuttled with all his yellow legs through the open door into the
+furthermost west room, which was Teddy's. Arming themselves with
+domestic utensils selected with regard to their length, Octavia and
+Mrs. Maclntyre, with much clutching of skirts and skirmishing for the
+position of rear guard in the attacking force, followed.
+
+Once outside, the centipede seemed to have disappeared, and his
+prospective murderers began a thorough but cautious search for their
+victim.
+
+Even in the midst of such a dangerous and absorbing adventure Octavia
+was conscious of an awed curiosity on finding herself in Teddy's
+sanctum. In that room he sat alone, silently communing with those
+secret thoughts that he now shared with no one, dreamed there whatever
+dreams he now called on no one to interpret.
+
+It was the room of a Spartan or a soldier. In one corner stood a wide,
+canvas-covered cot; in another, a small bookcase; in another, a grim
+stand of Winchesters and shotguns. An immense table, strewn with
+letters, papers and documents and surmounted by a set of pigeon-holes,
+occupied one side.
+
+The centipede showed genius in concealing himself in such bare
+quarters. Mrs. Maclntyre was poking a broom-handle behind the
+bookcase. Octavia approached Teddy's cot. The room was just as the
+manager had left it in his hurry. The Mexican maid had not yet given
+it her attention. There was his big pillow with the imprint of his
+head still in the centre. She thought the horrid beast might have
+climbed the cot and hidden itself to bite Teddy. Centipedes were thus
+cruel and vindictive toward managers.
+
+She cautiously overturned the pillow, and then parted her lips to give
+the signal for reinforcements at sight of a long, slender, dark object
+lying there. But, repressing it in time, she caught up a glove, a
+pearl-gray glove, flattened--it might be conceived--by many, many
+months of nightly pressure beneath the pillow of the man who had
+forgotten the Hammersmiths' ball. Teddy must have left so hurriedly
+that morning that he had, for once, forgotten to transfer it to its
+resting-place by day. Even managers, who are notoriously wily and
+cunning, are sometimes caught up with.
+
+Octavia slid the gray glove into the bosom of her summery morning gown.
+It was hers. Men who put themselves within a strong barbed-wire fence,
+and remember Hammersmith balls only by the talk of miners about
+sluice-boxes, should not be allowed to possess such articles.
+
+After all, what a paradise this prairie country was! How it blossomed
+like the rose when you found things that were thought to be lost! How
+delicious was that morning breeze coming in the windows, fresh and
+sweet with the breath of the yellow ratama blooms! Might one not
+stand, for a minute, with shining, far-gazing eyes, and dream that
+mistakes might be corrected?
+
+Why was Mrs. Maclntyre poking about so absurdly with a broom?
+
+"I've found it," said Mrs. MacIntyre, banging the door. "Here it is."
+
+"Did you lose something? asked Octavia, with sweetly polite
+non-interest.
+
+"The little devil!" said Mrs. Maclntyre, driven to violence. "Ye've no
+forgotten him alretty?"
+
+Between them they slew the centipede. Thus was he rewarded for his
+agency toward the recovery of things lost at the Hammersmiths' ball.
+
+It seems that Teddy, in due course, remembered the glove, and when he
+returned to the house at sunset made a secret but exhaustive search
+for it. Not until evening, upon the moonlit eastern gallery, did he
+find it. It was upon the hand that he had thought lost to him forever,
+and so he was moved to repeat certain nonsense that he had been
+commanded never, never to utter again. Teddy's fences were down.
+
+This time there was no ambition to stand in the way, and the wooing
+was as natural and successful as should be between ardent shepherd and
+gentle shepherdess.
+
+The prairies changed to a garden. The Rancho de las Sombras became the
+Ranch of Light.
+
+A few days later Octavia received a letter from Mr. Bannister, in
+reply to one she had written to him asking some questions about her
+business. A portion of the letter ran as follows:
+
+
+ "I am at a loss to account for your references to the sheep ranch.
+ Two months after your departure to take up your residence upon it,
+ it was discovered that Colonel Beaupree's title was worthless. A
+ deed came to light showing that he disposed of the property before
+ his death. The matter was reported to your manager, Mr. Westlake,
+ who at once repurchased the property. It is entirely beyond my
+ powers of conjecture to imagine how you have remained in ignorance
+ of this fact. I beg that you that will at once confer with that
+ gentleman, who will, at least, corroborate my statement."
+
+
+Octavia sought Teddy, with battle in her eye.
+
+"What are you working on this ranch for?" she asked once more.
+
+"One hundred--" he began to repeat, but saw in her face that she
+knew. She held Mr. Bannister's letter in her hand. He knew that the
+game was up.
+
+"It's my ranch," said Teddy, like a schoolboy detected in evil. "It's
+a mighty poor manager that isn't able to absorb the boss's business if
+you give him time."
+
+"Why were you working down here?" pursued Octavia still struggling
+after the key to the riddle of Teddy.
+
+"To tell the truth, 'Tave," said Teddy, with quiet candour, "it wasn't
+for the salary. That about kept me in cigars and sunburn lotions. I
+was sent south by my doctor. 'Twas that right lung that was going to
+the bad on account of over-exercise and strain at polo and gymnastics.
+I needed climate and ozone and rest and things of that sort."
+
+In an instant Octavia was close against the vicinity of the affected
+organ. Mr. Bannister's letter fluttered to the floor.
+
+"It's--it's well now, isn't it, Teddy?"
+
+"Sound as a mesquite chunk. I deceived you in one thing. I paid fifty
+thousand for your ranch as soon as I found you had no title. I had
+just about that much income accumulated at my banker's while I've been
+herding sheep down here, so it was almost like picking the thing up on
+a bargain-counter for a penny. There's another little surplus of
+unearned increment piling up there, 'Tave. I've been thinking of a
+wedding trip in a yacht with white ribbons tied to the mast, through
+the Mediterranean, and then up among the Hebrides and down Norway to
+the Zuyder Zee."
+
+"And I was thinking," said Octavia, softly, "of a wedding gallop with
+my manager among the flocks of sheep and back to a wedding breakfast
+with Mrs. MacIntyre on the gallery, with, maybe, a sprig of orange
+blossom fastened to the red jar above the table."
+
+Teddy laughed, and began to chant:
+
+ "Little Bo-Peep has lost her sheep,
+ And doesn't know where to find 'em.
+ Let 'em alone, and they'll come home,
+ And--"
+
+Octavia drew his head down, and whispered in his ear, But that is one
+of the tales they brought behind them.
+
+
+
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Whirligigs, by O. Henry
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+Title: Whirligigs
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+Author: O. Henry
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+Character set encoding: iso-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, WHIRLIGIGS ***
+
+
+
+
+E-text prepared by anonymous Project Gutenberg Volunteers and revised by
+Joseph E. Loewenstein, M.D.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHIRLIGIGS
+
+by
+
+O. HENRY
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. THE WORLD AND THE DOOR
+
+ II. THE THEORY AND THE HOUND
+
+ III. THE HYPOTHESES OF FAILURE
+
+ IV. CALLOWAY'S CODE
+
+ V. A MATTER OF MEAN ELEVATION
+
+ VI. "GIRL"
+
+ VII. SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW
+
+ VIII. THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF
+
+ IX. THE MARRY MONTH OF MAY
+
+ X. A TECHNICAL ERROR
+
+ XI. SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE
+
+ XII. THE WHIRLIGIG OF LIFE
+
+ XIII. A SACRIFICE HIT
+
+ XIV. THE ROADS WE TAKE
+
+ XV. A BLACKJACK BARGAINER
+
+ XVI. THE SONG AND THE SERGEANT
+
+ XVII. ONE DOLLAR'S WORTH
+
+XVIII. A NEWSPAPER STORY
+
+ XIX. TOMMY'S BURGLAR
+
+ XX. A CHAPARRAL CHRISTMAS
+
+ XXI. A LITTLE LOCAL COLOUR
+
+ XXII. GEORGIA'S RULING
+
+XXIII. BLIND MAN'S HOLIDAY
+
+ XXIV. MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+THE WORLD AND THE DOOR
+
+
+A favourite dodge to get your story read by the public is to assert
+that it is true, and then add that Truth is stranger than Fiction.
+I do not know if the yarn I am anxious for you to read is true; but
+the Spanish purser of the fruit steamer _El Carrero_ swore to me by
+the shrine of Santa Guadalupe that he had the facts from the U. S.
+vice-consul at La Paz--a person who could not possibly have been
+cognizant of half of them.
+
+As for the adage quoted above, I take pleasure in puncturing it by
+affirming that I read in a purely fictional story the other day the
+line: "'Be it so,' said the policeman." Nothing so strange has yet
+cropped out in Truth.
+
+
+When H. Ferguson Hedges, millionaire promoter, investor and man-about-
+New-York, turned his thoughts upon matters convivial, and word of it
+went "down the line," bouncers took a precautionary turn at the Indian
+clubs, waiters put ironstone china on his favourite tables, cab
+drivers crowded close to the curbstone in front of all-night cafs,
+and careful cashiers in his regular haunts charged up a few bottles to
+his account by way of preface and introduction.
+
+As a money power a one-millionaire is of small account in a city where
+the man who cuts your slice of beef behind the free-lunch counter
+rides to work in his own automobile. But Hedges spent his money as
+lavishly, loudly and showily as though he were only a clerk
+squandering a week's wages. And, after all, the bartender takes no
+interest in your reserve fund. He would rather look you up on his
+cash register than in Bradstreet.
+
+On the evening that the material allegation of facts begins, Hedges
+was bidding dull care begone in the company of five or six good
+fellows--acquaintances and friends who had gathered in his wake.
+
+Among them were two younger men--Ralph Merriam, a broker, and Wade,
+his friend.
+
+Two deep-sea cabmen were chartered. At Columbus Circle they hove to
+long enough to revile the statue of the great navigator,
+unpatriotically rebuking him for having voyaged in search of land
+instead of liquids. Midnight overtook the party marooned in the rear
+of a cheap caf far uptown.
+
+Hedges was arrogant, overriding and quarrelsome. He was burly and
+tough, iron-gray but vigorous, "good" for the rest of the night. There
+was a dispute--about nothing that matters--and the five-fingered words
+were passed--the words that represent the glove cast into the lists.
+Merriam played the rle of the verbal Hotspur.
+
+Hedges rose quickly, seized his chair, swung it once and smashed
+wildly down at Merriam's head. Merriam dodged, drew a small revolver
+and shot Hedges in the chest. The leading roysterer stumbled, fell in
+a wry heap, and lay still.
+
+Wade, a commuter, had formed that habit of promptness. He juggled
+Merriam out a side door, walked him to the corner, ran him a block and
+caught a hansom. They rode five minutes and then got out on a dark
+corner and dismissed the cab. Across the street the lights of a small
+saloon betrayed its hectic hospitality.
+
+"Go in the back room of that saloon," said Wade, "and wait. I'll go
+find out what's doing and let you know. You may take two drinks while
+I am gone--no more."
+
+At ten minutes to one o'clock Wade returned. "Brace up, old chap," he
+said. "The ambulance got there just as I did. The doctor says he's
+dead. You may have one more drink. You let me run this thing for
+you. You've got to skip. I don't believe a chair is legally a deadly
+weapon. You've got to make tracks, that's all there is to it."
+
+Merriam complained of the cold querulously, and asked for another
+drink. "Did you notice what big veins he had on the back of his
+hands?" he said. "I never could stand--I never could--"
+
+"Take one more," said Wade, "and then come on. I'll see you through."
+
+Wade kept his promise so well that at eleven o'clock the next morning
+Merriam, with a new suit case full of new clothes and hair-brushes,
+stepped quietly on board a little 500-ton fruit steamer at an East
+River pier. The vessel had brought the season's first cargo of limes
+from Port Limon, and was homeward bound. Merriam had his bank balance
+of $2,800 in his pocket in large bills, and brief instructions to pile
+up as much water as he could between himself and New York. There was
+no time for anything more.
+
+From Port Limon Merriam worked down the coast by schooner and sloop to
+Colon, thence across the isthmus to Panama, where he caught a tramp
+bound for Callao and such intermediate ports as might tempt the
+discursive skipper from his course.
+
+It was at La Paz that Merriam decided to land--La Paz the Beautiful,
+a little harbourless town smothered in a living green ribbon that
+banded the foot of a cloud-piercing mountain. Here the little
+steamer stopped to tread water while the captain's dory took him
+ashore that he might feel the pulse of the cocoanut market. Merriam
+went too, with his suit case, and remained.
+
+Kalb, the vice-consul, a Grco-Armenian citizen of the United States,
+born in Hessen-Darmstadt, and educated in Cincinnati ward primaries,
+considered all Americans his brothers and bankers. He attached
+himself to Merriam's elbow, introduced him to every one in La Paz who
+wore shoes, borrowed ten dollars and went back to his hammock.
+
+There was a little wooden hotel in the edge of a banana grove, facing
+the sea, that catered to the tastes of the few foreigners that had
+dropped out of the world into the _triste_ Peruvian town. At Kalb's
+introductory: "Shake hands with ----," he had obediently exchanged
+manual salutations with a German doctor, one French and two Italian
+merchants, and three or four Americans who were spoken of as gold men,
+rubber men, mahogany men--anything but men of living tissue.
+
+After dinner Merriam sat in a corner of the broad front _galeria_ with
+Bibb, a Vermonter interested in hydraulic mining, and smoked and drank
+Scotch "smoke." The moonlit sea, spreading infinitely before him,
+seemed to separate him beyond all apprehension from his old life. The
+horrid tragedy in which he had played such a disastrous part now
+began, for the first time since he stole on board the fruiter, a
+wretched fugitive, to lose its sharper outlines. Distance lent
+assuagement to his view. Bibb had opened the flood-gates of a stream
+of long-dammed discourse, overjoyed to have captured an audience that
+had not suffered under a hundred repetitions of his views and
+theories.
+
+"One year more," said Bibb, "and I'll go back to God's country. Oh, I
+know it's pretty here, and you get _dolce far niente_ handed to you in
+chunks, but this country wasn't made for a white man to live in.
+You've got to have to plug through snow now and then, and see a game
+of baseball and wear a stiff collar and have a policeman cuss you.
+Still, La Paz is a good sort of a pipe-dreamy old hole. And Mrs.
+Conant is here. When any of us feels particularly like jumping into
+the sea we rush around to her house and propose. It's nicer to be
+rejected by Mrs. Conant than it is to be drowned. And they say
+drowning is a delightful sensation."
+
+"Many like her here?" asked Merriam.
+
+"Not anywhere," said Bibb, with a comfortable sigh. She's the only
+white woman in La Paz. The rest range from a dappled dun to the
+colour of a b-flat piano key. She's been here a year. Comes from--
+well, you know how a woman can talk--ask 'em to say 'string' and
+they'll say 'crow's foot' or 'cat's cradle.' Sometimes you'd think
+she was from Oshkosh, and again from Jacksonville, Florida, and the
+next day from Cape Cod."
+
+"Mystery?" ventured Merriam.
+
+"M--well, she looks it; but her talk's translucent enough. But
+that's a woman. I suppose if the Sphinx were to begin talking she'd
+merely say: 'Goodness me! more visitors coming for dinner, and nothing
+to eat but the sand which is here.' But you won't think about that
+when you meet her, Merriam. You'll propose to her too."
+
+To make a hard story soft, Merriam did meet her and propose to her.
+He found her to be a woman in black with hair the colour of a bronze
+turkey's wings, and mysterious, _remembering_ eyes that--well, that
+looked as if she might have been a trained nurse looking on when Eve
+was created. Her words and manner, though, were translucent, as Bibb
+had said. She spoke, vaguely, of friends in California and some of
+the lower parishes in Louisiana. The tropical climate and indolent
+life suited her; she had thought of buying an orange grove later on;
+La Paz, all in all, charmed her.
+
+Merriam's courtship of the Sphinx lasted three months, although be did
+not know that he was courting her. He was using her as an antidote
+for remorse, until he found, too late, that he had acquired the habit.
+During that time he had received no news from home. Wade did not know
+where he was; and he was not sure of Wade's exact address, and was
+afraid to write. He thought he had better let matters rest as they
+were for a while.
+
+One afternoon he and Mrs. Conant hired two ponies and rode out along
+the mountain trail as far as the little cold river that came tumbling
+down the foothills. There they stopped for a drink, and Merriam spoke
+his piece--he proposed, as Bibb had prophesied.
+
+Mrs. Conant gave him one glance of brilliant tenderness, and then her
+face took on such a strange, haggard look that Merriam was shaken out
+of his intoxication and back to his senses.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Florence," he said, releasing her hand; "but I'll
+have to hedge on part of what I said. I can't ask you to marry me, of
+course. I killed a man in New York--a man who was my friend--shot
+him down--in quite a cowardly manner, I understand. Of course, the
+drinking didn't excuse it. Well, I couldn't resist having my say; and
+I'll always mean it. I'm here as a fugitive from justice, and--I
+suppose that ends our acquaintance."
+
+Mrs. Conant plucked little leaves assiduously from the low-hanging
+branch of a lime tree.
+
+"I suppose so," she said, in low and oddly uneven tones; "but that
+depends upon you. I'll be as honest as you were. I poisoned my
+husband. I am a self-made widow. A man cannot love a murderess. So
+I suppose that ends our acquaintance."
+
+She looked up at him slowly. His face turned a little pale, and he
+stared at her blankly, like a deaf-and-dumb man who was wondering what
+it was all about.
+
+She took a swift step toward him, with stiffened arms and eyes
+blazing.
+
+"Don't look at me like that!" she cried, as though she were in acute
+pain. "Curse me, or turn your back on me, but don't look that way.
+Am I a woman to be beaten? If I could show you--here on my arms,
+and on my back are scars--and it has been more than a year--scars
+that he made in his brutal rages. A holy nun would have risen and
+struck the fiend down. Yes, I killed him. The foul and horrible
+words that he hurled at me that last day are repeated in my ears every
+night when I sleep. And then came his blows, and the end of my
+endurance. I got the poison that afternoon. It was his custom to
+drink every night in the library before going to bed a hot punch made
+of rum and wine. Only from my fair hands would he receive it--
+because he knew the fumes of spirits always sickened me. That night
+when the maid brought it to me I sent her downstairs on an errand.
+Before taking him his drink I went to my little private cabinet and
+poured into it more than a tea-spoonful of tincture of aconite--
+enough to kill three men, so I had learned. I had drawn $6,000 that I
+had in bank, and with that and a few things in a satchel I left the
+house without any one seeing me. As I passed the library I heard him
+stagger up and fall heavily on a couch. I took a night train for New
+Orleans, and from there I sailed to the Bermudas. I finally cast
+anchor in La Paz. And now what have you to say? Can you open your
+mouth?"
+
+Merriam came back to life.
+
+"Florence," he said earnestly, "I want you. I don't care what you've
+done. If the world--"
+
+"Ralph," she interrupted, almost with a scream, "be my world!"
+
+Her eyes melted; she relaxed magnificently and swayed toward Merriam
+so suddenly that he had to jump to catch her.
+
+Dear me! in such scenes how the talk runs into artificial prose. But
+it can't be helped. It's the subconscious smell of the footlights'
+smoke that's in all of us. Stir the depths of your cook's soul
+sufficiently and she will discourse in Bulwer-Lyttonese.
+
+Merriam and Mrs. Conant were very happy. He announced their
+engagement at the Hotel Orilla del Mar. Eight foreigners and four
+native Astors pounded his back and shouted insincere congratulations
+at him. Pedrito, the Castilian-mannered barkeep, was goaded to extra
+duty until his agility would have turned a Boston cherry-phosphate
+clerk a pale lilac with envy.
+
+They were both very happy. According to the strange mathematics of
+the god of mutual affinity, the shadows that clouded their pasts when
+united became only half as dense instead of darker. They shut the
+world out and bolted the doors. Each was the other's world. Mrs.
+Conant lived again. The remembering look left her eyes. Merriam was
+with her every moment that was possible. On a little plateau under a
+grove of palms and calabash trees they were going to build a fairy
+bungalow. They were to be married in two months. Many hours of the
+day they had their heads together over the house plans. Their joint
+capital would set up a business in fruit or woods that would yield a
+comfortable support. "Good night, my world," would say Mrs. Conant
+every evening when Merriam left her for his hotel. They were very
+happy. Their love had, circumstantially, that element of melancholy
+in it that it seems to require to attain its supremest elevation. And
+it seemed that their mutual great misfortune or sin was a bond that
+nothing could sever.
+
+One day a steamer hove in the offing. Bare-legged and bare-shouldered
+La Paz scampered down to the beach, for the arrival of a steamer was
+their loop-the-loop, circus, Emancipation Day and four-o'clock tea.
+
+When the steamer was near enough, wise ones proclaimed that she was
+the _Pajaro_, bound up-coast from Callao to Panama.
+
+The _Pajaro_ put on brakes a mile off shore. Soon a boat came bobbing
+shoreward. Merriam strolled down on the beach to look on. In the
+shallow water the Carib sailors sprang out and dragged the boat with a
+mighty rush to the firm shingle. Out climbed the purser, the captain
+and two passengers, ploughing their way through the deep sand toward
+the hotel. Merriam glanced toward them with the mild interest due to
+strangers. There was something familiar to him in the walk of one of
+the passengers. He looked again, and his blood seemed to turn to
+strawberry ice cream in his veins. Burly, arrogant, debonair as ever,
+H. Ferguson Hedges, the man he had killed, was coming toward him ten
+feet away.
+
+When Hedges saw Merriam his face flushed a dark red. Then he shouted
+in his old, bluff way: "Hello, Merriam. Glad to see you. Didn't
+expect to find you out here. Quinby, this is my old friend Merriam,
+of New York--Merriam, Mr. Quinby."
+
+Merriam gave Hedges and then Quinby an ice-cold hand. "Br-r-r-r!" said
+Hedges. "But you've got a frappd flipper! Man, you're not well.
+You're as yellow as a Chinaman. Malarial here? Steer us to a bar if
+there is such a thing, and let's take a prophylactic."
+
+Merriam, still half comatose, led them toward the Hotel Orilla del
+Mar.
+
+"Quinby and I," explained Hedges, puffing through the slippery sand,
+"are looking out along the coast for some investments. We've just
+come up from Concepcin and Valparaiso and Lima. The captain of this
+subsidized ferry boat told us there was some good picking around
+here in silver mines. So we got off. Now, where is that caf,
+Merriam? Oh, in this portable soda water pavilion?"
+
+Leaving Quinby at the bar, Hedges drew Merriam aside.
+
+"Now, what does this mean?" he said, with gruff kindness. "Are you
+sulking about that fool row we had?"
+
+"I thought," stammered Merriam--"I heard--they told me you were--
+that I had--"
+
+"Well, you didn't, and I'm not," said Hedges. "That fool young
+ambulance surgeon told Wade I was a candidate for a coffin just
+because I'd got tired and quit breathing. I laid up in a private
+hospital for a month; but here I am, kicking as hard as ever. Wade
+and I tried to find you, but couldn't. Now, Merriam, shake hands and
+forget it all. I was as much to blame as you were; and the shot
+really did me good--I came out of the hospital as healthy and fit as
+a cab horse. Come on; that drink's waiting."
+
+"Old man," said Merriam, brokenly, "I don't know how to thank you--I
+--well, you know--"
+
+"Oh, forget it," boomed Hedges. "Quinby'll die of thirst if we don't
+join him."
+
+Bibb was sitting on the shady side of the gallery waiting for the
+eleven-o'clock breakfast. Presently Merriam came out and joined him.
+His eye was strangely bright.
+
+"Bibb, my boy," said he, slowly waving his hand, "do you see those
+mountains and that sea and sky and sunshine?--they're mine, Bibbsy
+--all mine."
+
+"You go in," said Bibb, "and take eight grains of quinine, right away.
+It won't do in this climate for a man to get to thinking he's
+Rockefeller, or James O'Neill either."
+
+Inside, the purser was untying a great roll of newspapers, many of
+them weeks old, gathered in the lower ports by the _Pajaro_ to be
+distributed at casual stopping-places. Thus do the beneficent voyagers
+scatter news and entertainment among the prisoners of sea and
+mountains.
+
+Tio Pancho, the hotel proprietor, set his great silver-rimmed _anteojos_
+upon his nose and divided the papers into a number of smaller rolls.
+A barefooted _muchacho_ dashed in, desiring the post of messenger.
+
+"_Bien venido_," said Tio Pancho. "This to Seora Conant; that to el
+Doctor S-S-Schlegel--_Dios_! what a name to say!--that to Seor Davis
+--one for Don Alberto. These two for the _Casa de Huespedes, Numero
+6, en la calle de las Buenas Gracias_. And say to them all, _muchacho_,
+that the _Pajaro_ sails for Panama at three this afternoon. If any have
+letters to send by the post, let them come quickly, that they may
+first pass through the _correo_."
+
+Mrs. Conant received her roll of newspapers at four o'clock. The boy
+was late in delivering them, because he had been deflected from his
+duty by an iguana that crossed his path and to which he immediately
+gave chase. But it made no hardship, for she had no letters to send.
+
+She was idling in a hammock in the patio of the house that she
+occupied, half awake, half happily dreaming of the paradise that she
+and Merriam had created out of the wrecks of their pasts. She was
+content now for the horizon of that shimmering sea to be the horizon
+of her life. They had shut out the world and closed the door.
+
+Merriam was coming to her house at seven, after his dinner at the
+hotel. She would put on a white dress and an apricot-coloured lace
+mantilla, and they would walk an hour under the cocoanut palms by the
+lagoon. She smiled contentedly, and chose a paper at random from the
+roll the boy had brought.
+
+At first the words of a certain headline of a Sunday newspaper meant
+nothing to her; they conveyed only a visualized sense of familiarity.
+The largest type ran thus: "Lloyd B. Conant secures divorce." And then
+the subheadings: "Well-known Saint Louis paint manufacturer wins
+suit, pleading one year's absence of wife." "Her mysterious
+disappearance recalled." "Nothing has been heard of her since."
+
+Twisting herself quickly out of the hammock, Mrs. Conant's eye soon
+traversed the half-column of the "Recall." It ended thus: "It will be
+remembered that Mrs. Conant disappeared one evening in March of last
+year. It was freely rumoured that her marriage with Lloyd B. Conant
+resulted in much unhappiness. Stories were not wanting to the effect
+that his cruelty toward his wife had more than once taken the form of
+physical abuse. After her departure a full bottle of tincture of
+aconite, a deadly poison, was found in a small medicine cabinet in her
+bedroom. This might have been an indication that she meditated
+suicide. It is supposed that she abandoned such an intention if she
+possessed it, and left her home instead."
+
+Mrs. Conant slowly dropped the paper, and sat on a chair, clasping her
+hands tightly.
+
+"Let me think--O God!--let me think," she whispered. "I took
+the bottle with me . . . I threw it out of the window of the train
+. . . I-- . . . there was another bottle in the cabinet . . .
+there were two, side by side--the aconite--and the valerian that I
+took when I could not sleep . . . If they found the aconite bottle
+full, why--but, he is alive, of course--I gave him only a
+harmless dose of valerian . . . I am not a murderess in fact . . .
+Ralph, I--O God, don't let this be a dream!"
+
+She went into the part of the house that she rented from the old
+Peruvian man and his wife, shut the door, and walked up and down her
+room swiftly and feverishly for half an hour. Merriam's photograph
+stood in a frame on a table. She picked it up, looked at it with a
+smile of exquisite tenderness, and--dropped four tears on it. And
+Merriam only twenty rods away! Then she stood still for ten minutes,
+looking into space. She looked into space through a slowly opening
+door. On her side of the door was the building material for a castle
+of Romance--love, an Arcady of waving palms, a lullaby of waves on
+the shore of a haven of rest, respite, peace, a lotus land of dreamy
+ease and security--a life of poetry and heart's ease and refuge.
+Romanticist, will you tell me what Mrs. Conant saw on the other side
+of the door? You cannot?--that is, you will not? Very well; then
+listen.
+
+_She saw herself go into a department store and buy five spools of
+silk thread and three yards of gingham to make an apron for the cook.
+"Shall I charge it, ma'am?" asked the clerk. As she walked out a
+lady whom she met greeted her cordially. "Oh, where did you get the
+pattern for those sleeves, dear Mrs. Conant?" she said. At the corner
+a policeman helped her across the street and touched his helmet. "Any
+callers?" she asked the maid when she reached home. "Mrs. Waldron,"
+answered the maid, "and the two Misses Jenkinson." "Very well," she
+said. "You may bring me a cup of tea, Maggie._"
+
+Mrs. Conant went to the door and called Angela, the old Peruvian
+woman. "If Mateo is there send him to me." Mateo, a half-breed,
+shuffling and old but efficient, came.
+
+"Is there a steamer or a vessel of any kind leaving this coast
+to-night or to-morrow that I can get passage on?" she asked.
+
+Mateo considered.
+
+"At Punta Reina, thirty miles down the coast, seora," he answered,
+"there is a small steamer loading with cinchona and dyewoods. She
+sails for San Francisco to-morrow at sunrise. So says my brother, who
+arrived in his sloop to-day, passing by Punta Reina."
+
+"You must take me in that sloop to that steamer to-night. Will you do
+that?"
+
+"Perhaps--" Mateo shrugged a suggestive shoulder. Mrs. Conant
+took a handful of money from a drawer and gave it to him.
+
+"Get the sloop ready behind the little point of land below the town,"
+she ordered. "Get sailors, and be ready to sail at six o'clock. In
+half an hour bring a cart partly filled with straw into the patio
+here, and take my trunk to the sloop. There is more money yet. Now,
+hurry."
+
+For one time Mateo walked away without shuffling his feet.
+
+"Angela," cried Mrs. Conant, almost fiercely, "come and help me pack.
+I am going away. Out with this trunk. My clothes first. Stir
+yourself. Those dark dresses first. Hurry."
+
+From the first she did not waver from her decision. Her view was clear
+and final. Her door had opened and let the world in. Her love for
+Merriam was not lessened; but it now appeared a hopeless and
+unrealizable thing. The visions of their future that had seemed so
+blissful and complete had vanished. She tried to assure herself that
+her renunciation was rather for his sake than for her own. Now that
+she was cleared of her burden--at least, technically--would not
+his own weigh too heavily upon him? If she should cling to him, would
+not the difference forever silently mar and corrode their happiness?
+Thus she reasoned; but there were a thousand little voices calling to
+her that she could feel rather than hear, like the hum of distant,
+powerful machinery--the little voices of the world, that, when
+raised in unison, can send their insistent call through the thickest
+door.
+
+Once while packing, a brief shadow of the lotus dream came back to
+her. She held Merriam's picture to her heart with one hand, while she
+threw a pair of shoes into the trunk with her other.
+
+At six o'clock Mateo returned and reported the sloop ready. He and
+his brother lifted the trunk into the cart, covered it with straw and
+conveyed it to the point of embarkation. From there they transferred
+it on board in the sloop's dory. Then Mateo returned for additional
+orders.
+
+Mrs. Conant was ready. She had settled all business matters with
+Angela, and was impatiently waiting. She wore a long, loose black-silk
+duster that she often walked about in when the evenings were chilly.
+On her head was a small round hat, and over it the apricot-coloured
+lace mantilla.
+
+Dusk had quickly followed the short twilight. Mateo led her by dark
+and grass-grown streets toward the point behind which the sloop was
+anchored. On turning a corner they beheld the Hotel Orilla del Mar
+three streets away, nebulously aglow with its array of kerosene lamps.
+
+Mrs. Conant paused, with streaming eyes. "I must, I _must_ see him
+once before I go," she murmured in anguish. But even then she did not
+falter in her decision. Quickly she invented a plan by which she might
+speak to him, and yet make her departure without his knowing. She
+would walk past the hotel, ask some one to call him out and talk a few
+moments on some trivial excuse, leaving him expecting to see her at
+her home at seven.
+
+She unpinned her hat and gave it to Mateo. "Keep this, and wait here
+till I come," she ordered. Then she draped the mantilla over her head
+as she usually did when walking after sunset, and went straight to the
+Orilla del Mar.
+
+She was glad to see the bulky, white-clad figure of Tio Pancho
+standing alone on the gallery.
+
+"Tio Pancho," she said, with a charming smile, "may I trouble you to
+ask Mr. Merriam to come out for just a few moments that I may speak
+with him?"
+
+Tio Pancho bowed as an elephant bows.
+
+"Buenas tardes, Seora Conant," he said, as a cavalier talks. And
+then he went on, less at his ease:
+
+"But does not the seora know that Seor Merriam sailed on the _Pajaro_
+for Panama at three o'clock of this afternoon?"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+THE THEORY AND THE HOUND
+
+
+Not many days ago my old friend from the tropics, J. P. Bridger,
+United States consul on the island of Ratona, was in the city. We
+had wassail and jubilee and saw the Flatiron building, and missed
+seeing the Bronxless menagerie by about a couple of nights. And
+then, at the ebb tide, we were walking up a street that parallels and
+parodies Broadway.
+
+A woman with a comely and mundane countenance passed us, holding in
+leash a wheezing, vicious, waddling, brute of a yellow pug. The dog
+entangled himself with Bridger's legs and mumbled his ankles in a
+snarling, peevish, sulky bite. Bridger, with a happy smile, kicked
+the breath out of the brute; the woman showered us with a quick rain
+of well-conceived adjectives that left us in no doubt as to our place
+in her opinion, and we passed on. Ten yards farther an old woman
+with disordered white hair and her bankbook tucked well hidden
+beneath her tattered shawl begged. Bridger stopped and disinterred
+for her a quarter from his holiday waistcoat.
+
+On the next corner a quarter of a ton of well-clothed man with a
+rice-powdered, fat, white jowl, stood holding the chain of a
+devil-born bulldog whose forelegs were strangers by the length of a
+dachshund. A little woman in a last-season's hat confronted him and
+wept, which was plainly all she could do, while he cursed her in low
+sweet, practised tones.
+
+Bridger smiled again--strictly to himself--and this time he took out
+a little memorandum book and made a note of it. This he had no right
+to do without due explanation, and I said so.
+
+"It's a new theory," said Bridger, "that I picked up down in Ratona.
+I've been gathering support for it as I knock about. The world isn't
+ripe for it yet, but--well I'll tell you; and then you run your
+mind back along the people you've known and see what you make of it."
+
+And so I cornered Bridger in a place where they have artificial palms
+and wine; and he told me the story which is here in my words and on
+his responsibility.
+
+One afternoon at three o'clock, on the island of Ratona, a boy raced
+along the beach screaming, "_Pajaro_, ahoy!"
+
+Thus he made known the keenness of his hearing and the justice of his
+discrimination in pitch.
+
+He who first heard and made oral proclamation concerning the toot
+of an approaching steamer's whistle, and correctly named the steamer,
+was a small hero in Ratona--until the next steamer came. Wherefore,
+there was rivalry among the barefoot youth of Ratona, and many fell
+victims to the softly blown conch shells of sloops which, as they
+enter harbour, sound surprisingly like a distant steamer's signal.
+And some could name you the vessel when its call, in your duller
+ears, sounded no louder than the sigh of the wind through the
+branches of the cocoanut palms.
+
+But to-day he who proclaimed the _Pajaro_ gained his honours. Ratona
+bent its ear to listen; and soon the deep-tongued blast grew louder
+and nearer, and at length Ratona saw above the line of palms on the
+low "point" the two black funnels of the fruiter slowly creeping
+toward the mouth of the harbour.
+
+You must know that Ratona is an island twenty miles off the south of
+a South American republic. It is a port of that republic; and it
+sleeps sweetly in a smiling sea, toiling not nor spinning; fed by the
+abundant tropics where all things "ripen, cease and fall toward the
+grave."
+
+Eight hundred people dream life away in a green-embowered village
+that follows the horseshoe curve of its bijou harbour. They are
+mostly Spanish and Indian _mestizos_, with a shading of San Domingo
+Negroes, a lightening of pure-blood Spanish officials and a slight
+leavening of the froth of three or four pioneering white races. No
+steamers touch at Ratona save the fruit steamers which take on their
+banana inspectors there on their way to the coast. They leave Sunday
+newspapers, ice, quinine, bacon, watermelons and vaccine matter at
+the island and that is about all the touch Ratona gets with the
+world.
+
+The _Pajaro_ paused at the mouth of the harbour, rolling heavily in
+the swell that sent the whitecaps racing beyond the smooth water
+inside. Already two dories from the village--one conveying fruit
+inspectors, the other going for what it could get--were halfway out
+to the steamer.
+
+The inspectors' dory was taken on board with them, and the _Pajaro_
+steamed away for the mainland for its load of fruit.
+
+The other boat returned to Ratona bearing a contribution from the
+_Pajaro's_ store of ice, the usual roll of newspapers and one
+passenger--Taylor Plunkett, sheriff of Chatham County, Kentucky.
+
+Bridger, the United States consul at Ratona, was cleaning his rifle
+in the official shanty under a bread-fruit tree twenty yards from the
+water of the harbour. The consul occupied a place somewhat near the
+tail of his political party's procession. The music of the band
+wagon sounded very faintly to him in the distance. The plums of
+office went to others. Bridger's share of the spoils--the
+consulship at Ratona--was little more than a prune--a dried prune
+from the boarding-house department of the public crib. But $900
+yearly was opulence in Ratona. Besides, Bridger had contracted a
+passion for shooting alligators in the lagoons near his consulate,
+and was not unhappy.
+
+He looked up from a careful inspection of his rifle lock and saw a
+broad man filling his doorway. A broad, noiseless, slow-moving man,
+sunburned almost to the brown of Vandyke. A man of forty-five,
+neatly clothed in homespun, with scanty light hair, a close-clipped
+brown-and-gray beard and pale-blue eyes expressing mildness and
+simplicity.
+
+"You are Mr. Bridger, the consul," said the broad man. "They
+directed me here. Can you tell me what those big bunches of things
+like gourds are in those trees that look like feather dusters along
+the edge of the water?"
+
+"Take that chair," said the consul, reoiling his cleaning rag.
+"No, the other one--that bamboo thing won't hold you. Why, they're
+cocoanuts--green cocoanuts. The shell of 'em is always a light
+green before they're ripe."
+
+"Much obliged," said the other man, sitting down carefully. "I
+didn't quite like to tell the folks at home they were olives unless I
+was sure about it. My name is Plunkett. I'm sheriff of Chatham
+County, Kentucky. I've got extradition papers in my pocket
+authorizing the arrest of a man on this island. They've been signed
+by the President of this country, and they're in correct shape. The
+man's name is Wade Williams. He's in the cocoanut raising
+business. What he's wanted for is the murder of his wife two years
+ago. Where can I find him?"
+
+The consul squinted an eye and looked through his rifle barrel.
+
+"There's nobody on the island who calls himself 'Williams,'" he
+remarked.
+
+"Didn't suppose there was," said Plunkett mildly. "He'll do by any
+other name."
+
+"Besides myself," said Bridger, "there are only two Americans on
+Ratona--Bob Reeves and Henry Morgan."
+
+"The man I want sells cocoanuts," suggested Plunkett.
+
+"You see that cocoanut walk extending up to the point?" said the
+consul, waving his hand toward the open door. "That belongs to Bob
+Reeves. Henry Morgan owns half the trees to loo'ard on the island."
+
+"One, month ago," said the sheriff, "Wade Williams wrote a
+confidential letter to a man in Chatham county, telling him where he
+was and how he was getting along. The letter was lost; and the person
+that found it gave it away. They sent me after him, and I've got the
+papers. I reckon he's one of your cocoanut men for certain."
+
+"You've got his picture, of course," said Bridger. "It might be
+Reeves or Morgan, but I'd hate to think it. They're both as fine
+fellows as you'd meet in an all-day auto ride."
+
+"No," doubtfully answered Plunkett; "there wasn't any picture of
+Williams to be had. And I never saw him myself. I've been sheriff
+only a year. But I've got a pretty accurate description of him. About
+5 feet 11; dark-hair and eyes; nose inclined to be Roman; heavy about
+the shoulders; strong, white teeth, with none missing; laughs a good
+deal, talkative; drinks considerably but never to intoxication; looks
+you square in the eye when talking; age thirty-five. Which one of
+your men does that description fit?"
+
+The consul grinned broadly.
+
+"I'll tell you what you do," he said, laying down his rifle and
+slipping on his dingy black alpaca coat. "You come along, Mr.
+Plunkett, and I'll take you up to see the boys. If you can tell
+which one of 'em your description fits better than it does the
+other you have the advantage of me."
+
+Bridger conducted the sheriff out and along the hard beach close to
+which the tiny houses of the village were distributed. Immediately
+back of the town rose sudden, small, thickly wooded hills. Up one of
+these, by means of steps cut in the hard clay, the consul led
+Plunkett. On the very verge of an eminence was perched a two-room
+wooden cottage with a thatched roof. A Carib woman was washing
+clothes outside. The consul ushered the sheriff to the door of the
+room that overlooked the harbour.
+
+Two men were in the room, about to sit down, in their shirt sleeves,
+to a table spread for dinner. They bore little resemblance one to
+the other in detail; but the general description given by Plunkett
+could have been justly applied to either. In height, colour of hair,
+shape of nose, build and manners each of them tallied with it. They
+were fair types of jovial, ready-witted, broad-gauged Americans who
+had gravitated together for companionship in an alien land.
+
+"Hello, Bridger" they called in unison at sight Of the consul. "Come
+and have dinner with us!" And then they noticed Plunkett at his
+heels, and came forward with hospitable curiosity.
+
+"Gentlemen," said the consul, his voice taking on unaccustomed
+formality, "this is Mr. Plunkett. Mr. Plunkett--Mr. Reeves and Mr.
+Morgan."
+
+The cocoanut barons greeted the newcomer joyously. Reeves seemed
+about an inch taller than Morgan, but his laugh was not quite as
+loud. Morgan's eyes were deep brown; Reeves's were black. Reeves
+was the host and busied himself with fetching other chairs and
+calling to the Carib woman for supplemental table ware. It was
+explained that Morgan lived in a bamboo shack to "loo'ard," but that
+every day the two friends dined together. Plunkett stood still
+during the preparations, looking about mildly with his pale-blue
+eyes. Bridger looked apologetic and uneasy.
+
+At length two other covers were laid and the company was assigned to
+places. Reeves and Morgan stood side by side across the table from
+the visitors. Reeves nodded genially as a signal for all to seat
+themselves. And then suddenly Plunkett raised his hand with a
+gesture of authority. He was looking straight between Reeves and
+Morgan.
+
+"Wade Williams," he said quietly, "you are under arrest for murder."
+
+Reeves and Morgan instantly exchanged a quick, bright glance, the
+quality of which was interrogation, with a seasoning of surprise.
+Then, simultaneously they turned to the speaker with a puzzled and
+frank deprecation in their gaze.
+
+"Can't say that we understand you, Mr. Plunkett," said Morgan,
+cheerfully. "Did you say 'Williams'?"
+
+"What's the joke, Bridgy?" asked Reeves, turning, to the consul with
+a smile.
+
+Before Bridger could answer Plunkett spoke again.
+
+"I'll explain," he said, quietly. "One of you don't need any
+explanation, but this is for the other one. One of you is Wade
+Williams of Chatham County, Kentucky. You murdered your wife on May
+5, two years ago, after ill-treating and abusing her continually for
+five years. I have the proper papers in my pocket for taking you
+back with me, and you are going. We will return on the fruit steamer
+that comes back by this island to-morrow to leave its inspectors. I
+acknowledge, gentlemen, that I'm not quite sure which one of you is
+Williams. But Wade Williams goes back to Chatham County to-morrow. I
+want you to understand that."
+
+A great sound of merry laughter from Morgan and Reeves went out over
+the still harbour. Two or three fishermen in the fleet of sloops
+anchored there looked up at the house of the diablos Americanos on
+the hill and wondered.
+
+"My dear Mr. Plunkett," cried Morgan, conquering his mirth, "the
+dinner is getting, cold. Let us sit down and eat. I am anxious to
+get my spoon into that shark-fin soup. Business afterward."
+
+"Sit down, gentlemen, if you please," added Reeves, pleasantly. "I
+am sure Mr. Plunkett will not object. Perhaps a little time may be of
+advantage to him in identifying--the gentleman he wishes to
+arrest."
+
+"No objections, I'm sure," said Plunkett, dropping into his chair
+heavily. "I'm hungry myself. I didn't want to accept the
+hospitality of you folks without giving you notice; that's all."
+
+Reeves set bottles and glasses on the table.
+
+"There's cognac," he said, "and anisada, and Scotch 'smoke,' and rye.
+Take your choice."
+
+Bridger chose rye, Reeves poured three fingers of Scotch for himself,
+Morgan took the same. The sheriff, against much protestation, filled
+his glass from the water bottle.
+
+"Here's to the appetite," said Reeves, raising his glass, "of Mr.
+Williams!" Morgan's laugh and his drink encountering sent him into a
+choking splutter. All began to pay attention to the dinner, which
+was well cooked and palatable.
+
+"Williams!" called Plunkett, suddenly and sharply.
+
+All looked up wonderingly. Reeves found the sheriff's mild eye
+resting upon him. He flushed a little.
+
+"See here," he said, with some asperity, "my name's Reeves, and I
+don't want you to--" But the comedy of the thing came to his rescue,
+and he ended with a laugh.
+
+"I suppose, Mr. Plunkett," said Morgan, carefully seasoning an
+alligator pear, "that you are aware of the fact that you will import
+a good deal of trouble for yourself into Kentucky if you take back
+the wrong man--that is, of course, if you take anybody back?"
+
+"Thank you for the salt," said the sheriff. "Oh, I'll take somebody
+back. It'll be one of you two gentlemen. Yes, I know I'd get stuck
+for damages if I make a mistake. But I'm going to try to get the
+right man."
+
+"I'll tell you what you do," said Morgan, leaning forward with a
+jolly twinkle in his eyes. "You take me. I'll go without any
+trouble. The cocoanut business hasn't panned out well this year, and
+I'd like to make some extra money out of your bondsmen."
+
+"That's not fair," chimed in Reeves. "I got only $16 a thousand for
+my last shipment. Take me, Mr. Plunkett."
+
+"I'll take Wade Williams," said the sheriff, patiently, "or I'll come
+pretty close to it."
+
+"It's like dining with a ghost," remarked Morgan, with a pretended
+shiver. "The ghost of a murderer, too! Will somebody pass the
+toothpicks to the shade of the naughty Mr. Williams?"
+
+Plunkett seemed as unconcerned as if he were dining at his own table
+in Chatham County. He was a gallant trencherman, and the strange
+tropic viands tickled his palate. Heavy, commonplace, almost
+slothful in his movements, he appeared to be devoid of all the
+cunning and watchfulness of the sleuth. He even ceased to observe,
+with any sharpness or attempted discrimination, the two men, one of
+whom he had undertaken with surprising self-confidence, to drag
+away upon the serious charge of wife-murder. Here, indeed, was a
+problem set before him that if wrongly solved would have amounted to
+his serious discomfiture, yet there he sat puzzling his soul (to all
+appearances) over the novel flavour of a broiled iguana cutlet.
+
+The consul felt a decided discomfort. Reeves and Morgan were his
+friends and pals; yet the sheriff from Kentucky had a certain right
+to his official aid and moral support. So Bridger sat the silentest
+around the board and tried to estimate the peculiar situation. His
+conclusion was that both Reeves and Morgan, quickwitted, as he knew
+them to be, had conceived at the moment of Plunkett's disclosure of
+his mission--and in the brief space of a lightning flash--the
+idea that the other might be the guilty Williams; and that each of
+them had decided in that moment loyally to protect his comrade
+against the doom that threatened him. This was the consul's theory
+and if he had been a bookmaker at a race of wits for life and liberty
+he would have offered heavy odds against the plodding sheriff from
+Chatham County, Kentucky.
+
+When the meal was concluded the Carib woman came and removed the
+dishes and cloth. Reeves strewed the table with excellent cigars,
+and Plunkett, with the others, lighted one of these with evident
+gratification.
+
+"I may be dull," said Morgan, with a grin and a wink at Bridger; "but
+I want to know if I am. Now, I say this is all a joke of Mr.
+Plunkett's, concocted to frighten two babes-in-the-woods. Is this
+Williamson to be taken seriously or not?"
+
+"'Williams,'" corrected Plunkett gravely. "I never got off any jokes
+in my life. I know I wouldn't travel 2,000 miles to get off a poor
+one as this would be if I didn't take Wade Williams back with me.
+Gentlemen!" continued the sheriff, now letting his mild eyes travel
+impartially from one of the company to another, "see if you can find
+any joke in this case. Wade Williams is listening to the words I
+utter now; but out of politeness, I will speak of him as a third
+person. For five years he made his wife lead the life of a dog--No;
+I'll take that back. No dog in Kentucky was ever treated as she
+was. He spent the money that she brought him--spent it at races, at
+the card table and on horses and hunting. He was a good fellow to
+his friends, but a cold, sullen demon at home. He wound up the five
+years of neglect by striking her with his closed hand--a hand as
+hard as a stone--when she was ill and weak from suffering. She
+died the next day; and he skipped. That's all there is to it. It's
+enough. I never saw Williams; but I knew his wife. I'm not a man to
+tell half. She and I were keeping company when she met him. She
+went to Louisville on a visit and saw him there. I'll admit that he
+spoilt my chances in no time. I lived then on the edge of the
+Cumberland mountains. I was elected sheriff of Chatham County a year
+after Wade Williams killed his wife. My official duty sends me out
+here after him; but I'll admit that there's personal feeling, too.
+And he's going back with me. Mr.--er--Reeves, will you pass me a
+match?
+
+"Awfully imprudent of Williams," said Morgan, putting his feet up
+against the wall, "to strike a Kentucky lady. Seems to me I've heard
+they were scrappers."
+
+"Bad, bad Williams," said Reeves, pouring out more Scotch.
+
+The two men spoke lightly, but the consul saw and felt the tension
+and the carefulness in their actions and words. "Good old fellows,"
+he said to himself; "they're both all right. Each of 'em is standing
+by the other like a little brick church."
+
+And then a dog walked into the room where they sat--a black-and-tan
+hound, long-eared, lazy, confident of welcome.
+
+Plunkett turned his head and looked at the animal, which halted,
+confidently, within a few feet of his chair.
+
+Suddenly the sheriff, with a deep-mouthed oath, left his seat and,
+bestowed upon the dog a vicious and heavy kick, with his ponderous
+shoe.
+
+The hound, heartbroken, astonished, with flapping ears and incurved
+tail, uttered a piercing yelp of pain and surprise.
+
+Reeves and the consul remained in their chairs, saying nothing, but
+astonished at the unexpected show of intolerance from the easy-going
+man from Chatham county.
+
+But Morgan, with a suddenly purpling face, leaped, to his feet and
+raised a threatening arm above the guest.
+
+"You--brute!" he shouted, passionately; "why did you do that?"
+
+Quickly the amenities returned, Plunkett muttered some indistinct
+apology and regained his seat. Morgan with a decided effort
+controlled his indignation and also returned to his chair.
+
+And then Plunkett with the spring of a tiger, leaped around the
+corner of the table and snapped handcuffs on the paralyzed Morgan's
+wrists.
+
+"Hound-lover and woman-killer!" he cried; "get ready to meet your
+God."
+
+When Bridger had finished I asked him:
+
+"Did he get the right man?"
+
+"He did," said the Consul.
+
+"And how did he know?" I inquired, being in a kind of bewilderment.
+
+"When he put Morgan in the dory," answered Bridger, "the next day to
+take him aboard the _Pajaro_, this man Plunkett stopped to shake hands
+with me and I asked him the same question."
+
+"'Mr. Bridger,' said he, 'I'm a Kentuckian, and I've seen a great
+deal of both men and animals. And I never yet saw a man that was
+overfond of horses and dogs but what was cruel to women.'"
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+THE HYPOTHESES OF FAILURE
+
+
+Lawyer Gooch bestowed his undivided attention upon the engrossing arts
+of his profession. But one flight of fancy did he allow his mind to
+entertain. He was fond of likening his suite of office rooms to the
+bottom of a ship. The rooms were three in number, with a door
+opening from one to another. These doors could also be closed.
+
+"Ships," Lawyer Gooch would say, "are constructed for safety, with
+separate, water-tight compartments in their bottoms. If one
+compartment springs a leak it fills with water; but the good ship goes
+on unhurt. Were it not for the separating bulkheads one leak would
+sink the vessel. Now it often happens that while I am occupied with
+clients, other clients with conflicting interests call. With the
+assistance of Archibald--an office boy with a future--I cause the
+dangerous influx to be diverted into separate compartments, while I
+sound with my legal plummet the depth of each. If necessary, they
+may be baled into the hallway and permitted to escape by way of the
+stairs, which we may term the lee scuppers. Thus the good ship of
+business is kept afloat; whereas if the element that supports her were
+allowed to mingle freely in her hold we might be swamped--ha, ha, ha!"
+
+The law is dry. Good jokes are few. Surely it might be permitted
+Lawyer Gooch to mitigate the bore of briefs, the tedium of torts and
+the prosiness of processes with even so light a levy upon the good
+property of humour.
+
+Lawyer Gooch's practice leaned largely to the settlement of marital
+infelicities. Did matrimony languish through complications, he
+mediated, soothed and arbitrated. Did it suffer from implications,
+he readjusted, defended and championed. Did it arrive at the
+extremity of duplications, he always got light sentences for his
+clients.
+
+But not always was Lawyer Gooch the keen, armed, wily belligerent,
+ready with his two-edged sword to lop off the shackles of Hymen. He
+had been known to build up instead of demolishing, to reunite instead
+of severing, to lead erring and foolish ones back into the fold
+instead of scattering the flock. Often had he by his eloquent and
+moving appeals sent husband and wife, weeping, back into each other's
+arms. Frequently he had coached childhood so successfully that, at
+the psychological moment (and at a given signal) the plaintive pipe of
+"Papa, won't you tum home adain to me and muvver?" had won the day
+and upheld the pillars of a tottering home.
+
+Unprejudiced persons admitted that Lawyer Gooch received as big fees
+from these reyoked clients as would have been paid him had the cases
+been contested in court. Prejudiced ones intimated that his fees were
+doubled, because the penitent couples always came back later for the
+divorce, anyhow.
+
+There came a season in June when the legal ship of Lawyer Gooch (to
+borrow his own figure) was nearly becalmed. The divorce mill grinds
+slowly in June. It is the month of Cupid and Hymen.
+
+Lawyer Gooch, then, sat idle in the middle room of his clientless
+suite. A small anteroom connected--or rather separated--this
+apartment from the hallway. Here was stationed Archibald, who wrested
+from visitors their cards or oral nomenclature which he bore to his
+master while they waited.
+
+Suddenly, on this day, there came a great knocking at the outermost
+door.
+
+Archibald, opening it, was thrust aside as superfluous by the visitor,
+who without due reverence at once penetrated to the office of Lawyer
+Gooch and threw himself with good-natured insolence into a comfortable
+chair facing that gentlemen.
+
+"You are Phineas C. Gooch, attorney-at-law?" said the visitor, his
+tone of voice and inflection making his words at once a question, an
+assertion and an accusation.
+
+Before committing himself by a reply, the lawyer estimated his
+possible client in one of his brief but shrewd and calculating
+glances.
+
+The man was of the emphatic type--large-sized, active, bold and
+debonair in demeanour, vain beyond a doubt, slightly swaggering, ready
+and at ease. He was well-clothed, but with a shade too much
+ornateness. He was seeking a lawyer; but if that fact would seem to
+saddle him with troubles they were not patent in his beaming eye and
+courageous air.
+
+"My name is Gooch," at length the lawyer admitted. Upon pressure he
+would also have confessed to the Phineas C. But he did not consider it
+good practice to volunteer information. "I did not receive your
+card," he continued, by way of rebuke, "so I--"
+
+"I know you didn't," remarked the visitor, coolly; "And you won't just
+yet. Light up?" He threw a leg over an arm of his chair, and tossed
+a handful of rich-hued cigars upon the table. Lawyer Gooch knew the
+brand. He thawed just enough to accept the invitation to smoke.
+
+"You are a divorce lawyer," said the cardless visitor. This time there
+was no interrogation in his voice. Nor did his words constitute a
+simple assertion. They formed a charge--a denunciation--as one would
+say to a dog: "You are a dog." Lawyer Gooch was silent under the
+imputation.
+
+"You handle," continued the visitor, "all the various ramifications of
+busted-up connubiality. You are a surgeon, we might saw, who extracts
+Cupid's darts when he shoots 'em into the wrong parties. You furnish
+patent, incandescent lights for premises where the torch of Hymen has
+burned so low you can't light a cigar at it. Am I right, Mr. Gooch?"
+
+"I have undertaken cases," said the lawyer, guardedly, "in the line to
+which your figurative speech seems to refer. Do you wish to consult me
+professionally, Mr.--" The lawyer paused, with significance.
+
+"Not yet," said the other, with an arch wave of his cigar, "not just
+yet. Let us approach the subject with the caution that should have
+been used in the original act that makes this pow-wow necessary.
+There exists a matrimonial jumble to be straightened out. But before
+I give you names I want your honest--well, anyhow, your professional
+opinion on the merits of the mix-up. I want you to size up the
+catastrophe--abstractly--you understand? I'm Mr. Nobody; and I've got
+a story to tell you. Then you say what's what. Do you get my
+wireless?"
+
+"You want to state a hypothetical case?" suggested Lawyer Gooch.
+
+"That's the word I was after. 'Apothecary' was the best shot I could
+make at it in my mind. The hypothetical goes. I'll state the case.
+Suppose there's a woman--a deuced fine-looking woman--who has run
+away from her husband and home? She's badly mashed on another man who
+went to her town to work up some real estate business. Now, we may as
+well call this woman's husband Thomas R. Billings, for that's his
+name. I'm giving you straight tips on the cognomens. The Lothario
+chap is Henry K. Jessup. The Billingses lived in a little town called
+Susanville--a good many miles from here. Now, Jessup leaves
+Susanville two weeks ago. The next day Mrs. Billings follows him.
+She's dead gone on this man Jessup; you can bet your law library on
+that."
+
+Lawyer Gooch's client said this with such unctuous satisfaction that
+even the callous lawyer experienced a slight ripple of repulsion. He
+now saw clearly in his fatuous visitor the conceit of the lady-killer,
+the egoistic complacency of the successful trifler.
+
+"Now," continued the visitor, "suppose this Mrs. Billings wasn't happy
+at home? We'll say she and her husband didn't gee worth a cent.
+They've got incompatibility to burn. The things she likes, Billings
+wouldn't have as a gift with trading-stamps. It's Tabby and Rover
+with them all the time. She's an educated woman in science and
+culture, and she reads things out loud at meetings. Billings is not
+on. He don't appreciate progress and obelisks and ethics, and
+things of that sort. Old Billings is simply a blink when it comes to
+such things. The lady is out and out above his class. Now, lawyer,
+don't it look like a fair equalization of rights and wrongs that a
+woman like that should be allowed to throw down Billings and take the
+man that can appreciate her?
+
+"Incompatibility," said Lawyer Gooch, "is undoubtedly the source of
+much marital discord and unhappiness. Where it is positively proved,
+divorce would seem to be the equitable remedy. Are you--excuse me--is
+this man Jessup one to whom the lady may safely trust her future?"
+
+"Oh, you can bet on Jessup," said the client, with a confident wag of
+his head. "Jessup's all right. He'll do the square thing. Why, he
+left Susanville just to keep people from talking about Mrs. Billings.
+But she followed him up, and now, of course, he'll stick to her.
+When she gets a divorce, all legal and proper, Jessup will do the
+proper thing."
+
+"And now," said Lawyer Gooch, "continuing the hypothesis, if you
+prefer, and supposing that my services should be desired in the case,
+what--"
+
+The client rose impulsively to his feet.
+
+"Oh, dang the hypothetical business," he exclaimed, impatiently.
+"Let's let her drop, and get down to straight talk. You ought to know
+who I am by this time. I want that woman to have her divorce. I'll
+pay for it. The day you set Mrs. Billings free I'll pay you five
+hundred dollars."
+
+Lawyer Gooch's client banged his fist upon the table to punctuate his
+generosity.
+
+"If that is the case--" began the lawyer.
+
+"Lady to see you, sir," bawled Archibald, bouncing in from his
+anteroom. He had orders to always announce immediately any client
+that might come. There was no sense in turning business away.
+
+Lawyer Gooch took client number one by the arm and led him suavely
+into one of the adjoining rooms. "Favour me by remaining here a few
+minutes, sir," said he. "I will return and resume our consultation
+with the least possible delay. I am rather expecting a visit from a
+very wealthy old lady in connection with a will. I will not keep you
+waiting long."
+
+The breezy gentleman seated himself with obliging acquiescence, and
+took up a magazine. The lawyer returned to the middle office,
+carefully closing behind him the connecting door.
+
+"Show the lady in, Archibald," he said to the office boy, who was
+awaiting the order.
+
+A tall lady, of commanding presence and sternly handsome, entered
+the room. She wore robes--robes; not clothes--ample and fluent.
+In her eye could be perceived the lambent flame of genius and soul.
+In her hand was a green bag of the capacity of a bushel, and an
+umbrella that also seemed to wear a robe, ample and fluent. She
+accepted a chair.
+
+"Are you Mr. Phineas C. Gooch, the lawyer?" she asked, in formal and
+unconciliatory tones.
+
+"I am," answered Lawyer Gooch, without circumlocution. He never
+circumlocuted when dealing with a woman. Women circumlocute. Time is
+wasted when both sides in debate employ the same tactics.
+
+"As a lawyer, sir," began the lady, "you may have acquired some
+knowledge of the human heart. Do you believe that the pusillanimous
+and petty conventions of our artificial social life should stand as an
+obstacle in the way of a noble and affectionate heart when it finds
+its true mate among the miserable and worthless wretches in the world
+that are called men?"
+
+"Madam," said Lawyer Gooch, in the tone that he used in curbing his
+female clients, "this is an office for conducting the practice of law.
+I am a lawyer, not a philosopher, nor the editor of an 'Answers to the
+Lovelorn' column of a newspaper. I have other clients waiting. I
+will ask you kindly to come to the point."
+
+"Well, you needn't get so stiff around the gills about it," said the
+lady, with a snap of her luminous eyes and a startling gyration of her
+umbrella. "Business is what I've come for. I want your opinion in
+the matter of a suit for divorce, as the vulgar would call it, but
+which is really only the readjustment of the false and ignoble
+conditions that the short-sighted laws of man have interposed between
+a loving--"
+
+"I beg your pardon, madam," interrupted Lawyer Gooch, with some
+impatience, "for reminding you again that this is a law office.
+Perhaps Mrs. Wilcox--"
+
+"Mrs. Wilcox is all right," cut in the lady, with a hint of asperity.
+"And so are Tolstoi, and Mrs. Gertrude Atherton, and Omar Khayyam, and
+Mr. Edward Bok. I've read 'em all. I would like to discuss with you
+the divine right of the soul as opposed to the freedom-destroying
+restrictions of a bigoted and narrow-minded society. But I will
+proceed to business. I would prefer to lay the matter before you in
+an impersonal way until you pass upon its merits. That is to describe
+it as a supposable instance, without--"
+
+"You wish to state a hypothetical case?" said Lawyer Gooch.
+
+"I was going to say that," said the lady, sharply. "Now, suppose there
+is a woman who is all soul and heart and aspirations for a complete
+existence. This woman has a husband who is far below her in intellect,
+in taste--in everything. Bah! he is a brute. He despises literature.
+He sneers at the lofty thoughts of the world's great thinkers. He
+thinks only of real estate and such sordid things. He is no mate for a
+woman with soul. We will say that this unfortunate wife one day meets
+with her ideal--a man with brain and heart and force. She loves him.
+Although this man feels the thrill of a new-found affinity he is too
+noble, too honourable to declare himself. He flies from the presence
+of his beloved. She flies after him, trampling, with superb
+indifference, upon the fetters with which an unenlightened social
+system would bind her. Now, what will a divorce cost? Eliza Ann
+Timmins, the poetess of Sycamore Gap, got one for three hundred and
+forty dollars. Can I--I mean can this lady I speak of get one that
+cheap?"
+
+"Madam," said Lawyer Gooch, "your last two or three sentences delight
+me with their intelligence and clearness. Can we not now abandon the
+hypothetical and come down to names and business?"
+
+"I should say so," exclaimed the lady, adopting the practical with
+admirable readiness. "Thomas R. Billings is the name of the low
+brute who stands between the happiness of his legal--his legal, but
+not his spiritual--wife and Henry K. Jessup, the noble man whom
+nature intended for her mate. I," concluded the client, with an air
+of dramatic revelation, "am Mrs. Billings!"
+
+"Gentlemen to see you, sir," shouted Archibald, invading the room
+almost at a handspring. Lawyer Gooch arose from his chair.
+
+"Mrs. Billings," he said courteously, "allow me to conduct you into
+the adjoining office apartment for a few minutes. I am expecting a
+very wealthy old gentleman on business connected with a will. In a
+very short while I will join you, and continue our consultation."
+
+With his accustomed chivalrous manner, Lawyer Gooch ushered his
+soulful client into the remaining unoccupied room, and came out,
+closing the door with circumspection.
+
+The next visitor introduced by Archibald was a thin, nervous,
+irritable-looking man of middle age, with a worried and apprehensive
+expression of countenance. He carried in one hand a small satchel,
+which he set down upon the floor beside the chair which the lawyer
+placed for him. His clothing was of good quality, but it was worn
+without regard to neatness or style, and appeared to be covered with
+the dust of travel.
+
+"You make a specialty of divorce cases," he said, in, an agitated but
+business-like tone.
+
+"I may say," began Lawyer Gooch, "that my practice has not
+altogether avoided--"
+
+"I know you do," interrupted client number three. "You needn't tell
+me. I've heard all about you. I have a case to lay before you
+without necessarily disclosing any connection that I might have with
+it--that is--"
+
+"You wish," said Lawyer Gooch, "to state a hypothetical case.
+
+"You may call it that. I am a plain man of business. I will be as
+brief as possible. We will first take up hypothetical woman. We will
+say she is married uncongenially. In many ways she is a superior
+woman. Physically she is considered to be handsome. She is devoted
+to what she calls literature--poetry and prose, and such stuff. Her
+husband is a plain man in the business walks of life. Their home has
+not been happy, although the husband has tried to make it so. Some
+time ago a man--a stranger--came to the peaceful town in which
+they lived and engaged in some real estate operations. This woman met
+him, and became unaccountably infatuated with him. Her attentions
+became so open that the man felt the community to be no safe place for
+him, so he left it. She abandoned husband and home, and followed him.
+She forsook her home, where she was provided with every comfort, to
+follow this man who had inspired her with such a strange affection.
+Is there anything more to be deplored," concluded the client, in a
+trembling voice, "than the wrecking of a home by a woman's
+uncalculating folly?"
+
+Lawyer Gooch delivered the cautious opinion that there was not.
+
+"This man she has gone to join," resumed the visitor, "is not the man
+to make her happy. It is a wild and foolish self-deception that makes
+her think he will. Her husband, in spite of their many disagreements,
+is the only one capable of dealing with her sensitive and peculiar
+nature. But this she does not realize now."
+
+"Would you consider a divorce the logical cure in the case you
+present?" asked Lawyer Gooch, who felt that the conversation was
+wandering too far from the field of business.
+
+"A divorce!" exclaimed the client, feelingly--almost tearfully.
+"No, no--not that. I have read, Mr. Gooch, of many instances where
+your sympathy and kindly interest led you to act as a mediator
+between estranged husband and wife, and brought them together again.
+Let us drop the hypothetical case--I need conceal no longer that it
+is I who am the sufferer in this sad affair--the names you shall
+have--Thomas R. Billings and wife--and Henry K. Jessup, the man
+with whom she is infatuated."
+
+Client number three laid his hand upon Mr. Gooch's arm. Deep emotion
+was written upon his careworn face. "For Heaven's sake", he said
+fervently, "help me in this hour of trouble. Seek out Mrs. Billings,
+and persuade her to abandon this distressing pursuit of her lamentable
+folly. Tell her, Mr. Gooch, that her husband is willing to receive
+her back to his heart and home--promise her anything that will
+induce her to return. I have heard of your success in these matters.
+Mrs. Billings cannot be very far away. I am worn out with travel
+and weariness. Twice during the pursuit I saw her, but various
+circumstances prevented our having an interview. Will you undertake
+this mission for me, Mr. Gooch, and earn my everlasting gratitude?"
+
+"It is true," said Lawyer Gooch, frowning slightly at the other's last
+words, but immediately calling up an expression of virtuous
+benevolence, "that on a number of occasions I have been successful in
+persuading couples who sought the severing of their matrimonial bonds
+to think better of their rash intentions and return to their homes
+reconciled. But I assure you that the work is often exceedingly
+difficult. The amount of argument, perseverance, and, if I may be
+allowed to say it, eloquence that it requires would astonish you. But
+this is a case in which my sympathies would be wholly enlisted. I
+feel deeply for you sir, and I would be most happy to see husband and
+wife reunited. But my time," concluded the lawyer, looking at his
+watch as if suddenly reminded of the fact, "is valuable."
+
+"I am aware of that," said the client, "and if you will take the case
+and persuade Mrs. Billings to return home and leave the man alone that
+she is following--on that day I will pay you the sum of one thousand
+dollars. I have made a little money in real estate during the recent
+boom in Susanville, and I will not begrudge that amount."
+
+"Retain your seat for a few moments, please," said Lawyer Gooch,
+arising, and again consulting his watch. "I have another client
+waiting in an adjoining room whom I had very nearly forgotten. I will
+return in the briefest possible space."
+
+The situation was now one that fully satisfied Lawyer Gooch's love of
+intricacy and complication. He revelled in cases that presented such
+subtle problems and possibilities. It pleased him to think that he
+was master of the happiness and fate of the three individuals who sat,
+unconscious of one another's presence, within his reach. His old
+figure of the ship glided into his mind. But now the figure failed,
+for to have filled every compartment of an actual vessel would have
+been to endanger her safety; with his compartments full, his ship of
+affairs could but sail on to the advantageous port of a fine, fat fee.
+The thing for him to do, of course, was to wring the best bargain he
+could from some one of his anxious cargo.
+
+First he called to the office boy: "Lock the outer door, Archibald,
+and admit no one." Then he moved, with long, silent strides into the
+room in which client number one waited. That gentleman sat, patiently
+scanning the pictures in the magazine, with a cigar in his mouth and
+his feet upon a table.
+
+"Well," he remarked, cheerfully, as the lawyer entered, "have you made
+up your mind? Does five hundred dollars go for getting the fair lady
+a divorce?"
+
+"You mean that as a retainer?" asked Lawyer Gooch, softly
+interrogative.
+
+"Hey? No; for the whole job. It's enough, ain't it?"
+
+"My fee," said Lawyer Gooch, "would be one thousand five hundred
+dollars. Five hundred dollars down, and the remainder upon issuance
+of the divorce."
+
+A loud whistle came from client number one. His feet descended to the
+floor.
+
+"Guess we can't close the deal," he said, arising, "I cleaned up five
+hundred dollars in a little real estate dicker down in Susanville.
+I'd do anything I could to free the lady, but it out-sizes my pile."
+
+"Could you stand one thousand two hundred dollars?" asked the lawyer,
+insinuatingly.
+
+"Five hundred is my limit, I tell you. Guess I'll have to hunt up a
+cheaper lawyer." The client put on his hat.
+
+"Out this way, please," said Lawyer Gooch, opening the door that led
+into the hallway.
+
+As the gentleman flowed out of the compartment and down the stairs,
+Lawyer Gooch smiled to himself. "Exit Mr. Jessup," he murmured, as he
+fingered the Henry Clay tuft of hair at his ear. "And now for the
+forsaken husband." He returned to the middle office, and assumed a
+businesslike manner.
+
+"I understand," he said to client number three, "that you agree to pay
+one thousand dollars if I bring about, or am instrumental in bringing
+about, the return of Mrs. Billings to her home, and her abandonment of
+her infatuated pursuit of the man for whom she has conceived such a
+violent fancy. Also that the case is now unreservedly in my hands on
+that basis. Is that correct?"
+
+"Entirely", said the other, eagerly. "And I can produce the cash any
+time at two hours' notice."
+
+Lawyer Gooch stood up at his full height. His thin figure seemed to
+expand. His thumbs sought the arm-holes of his vest. Upon his face
+was a look of sympathetic benignity that he always wore during such
+undertakings.
+
+"Then, sir," he said, in kindly tones, "I think I can promise you an
+early relief from your troubles. I have that much confidence in my
+powers of argument and persuasion, in the natural impulses of the
+human heart toward good, and in the strong influence of a husband's
+unfaltering love. Mrs. Billings, sir, is here--in that room--" the
+lawyer's long arm pointed to the door. "I will call her in at once;
+and our united pleadings--"
+
+Lawyer Gooch paused, for client number three had leaped from his chair
+as if propelled by steel springs, and clutched his satchel.
+
+"What the devil," he exclaimed, harshly, "do you mean? That woman in
+there! I thought I shook her off forty miles back."
+
+He ran to the open window, looked out below, and threw one leg over
+the sill.
+
+"Stop!" cried Lawyer Gooch, in amazement. "What would you do? Come,
+Mr. Billings, and face your erring but innocent wife. Our combined
+entreaties cannot fail to--"
+
+"Billings!" shouted the now thoroughly moved client. "I'll Billings
+you, you old idiot!"
+
+Turning, he hurled his satchel with fury at the lawyer's head. It
+struck that astounded peacemaker between the eyes, causing him to
+stagger backward a pace or two. When Lawyer Gooch recovered his wits
+he saw that his client had disappeared. Rushing to the window, he
+leaned out, and saw the recreant gathering himself up from the top of
+a shed upon which he had dropped from the second-story window.
+Without stopping to collect his hat he then plunged downward the
+remaining ten feet to the alley, up which he flew with prodigious
+celerity until the surrounding building swallowed him up from view.
+
+Lawyer Gooch passed his hand tremblingly across his brow. It was a
+habitual act with him, serving to clear his thoughts. Perhaps also it
+now seemed to soothe the spot where a very hard alligator-hide satchel
+had struck.
+
+The satchel lay upon the floor, wide open, with its contents spilled
+about. Mechanically, Lawyer Gooch stooped to gather up the articles.
+The first was a collar; and the omniscient eye of the man of law
+perceived, wonderingly, the initials H. K. J. marked upon it. Then
+came a comb, a brush, a folded map, and a piece of soap. Lastly, a
+handful of old business letters, addressed--every one of them--to
+"Henry K. Jessup, Esq."
+
+Lawyer Gooch closed the satchel, and set it upon the table. He
+hesitated for a moment, and then put on his hat and walked into the
+office boy's anteroom.
+
+"Archibald," he said mildly, as he opened the hall door, "I am going
+around to the Supreme Court rooms. In five minutes you may step into
+the inner office, and inform the lady who is waiting there that"--
+here Lawyer Gooch made use of the vernacular--"that there's nothing
+doing."
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+CALLOWAY'S CODE
+
+
+The New York _Enterprise_ sent H. B. Calloway as special correspondent
+to the Russo-Japanese-Portsmouth war.
+
+For two months Calloway hung about Yokohama and Tokio, shaking dice
+with the other correspondents for drinks of 'rickshaws--oh, no,
+that's something to ride in; anyhow, he wasn't earning the salary
+that his paper was paying him. But that was not Calloway's fault.
+The little brown men who held the strings of Fate between their
+fingers were not ready for the readers of the _Enterprise_ to season
+their breakfast bacon and eggs with the battles of the descendants of
+the gods.
+
+But soon the column of correspondents that were to go out with the
+First Army tightened their field-glass belts and went down to the
+Yalu with Kuroki. Calloway was one of these.
+
+Now, this is no history of the battle of the Yalu River. That has
+been told in detail by the correspondents who gazed at the shrapnel
+smoke rings from a distance of three miles. But, for justice's sake,
+let it be understood that the Japanese commander prohibited a nearer
+view.
+
+Calloway's feat was accomplished before the battle. What he did was
+to furnish the _Enterprise_ with the biggest beat of the war. That
+paper published exclusively and in detail the news of the attack on
+the lines of the Russian General on the same day that it was made.
+No other paper printed a word about it for two days afterward, except
+a London paper, whose account was absolutely incorrect and untrue.
+
+Calloway did this in face of the fact that General Kuroki was making
+his moves and laying his plans with the profoundest secrecy as far
+as the world outside his camps was concerned. The correspondents
+were forbidden to send out any news whatever of his plans; and every
+message that was allowed on the wires was censored with rigid
+severity.
+
+The correspondent for the London paper handed in a cablegram
+describing Kuroki's plans; but as it was wrong from beginning to end
+the censor grinned and let it go through.
+
+So, there they were--Kuroki on one side of the Yalu with forty-two
+thousand infantry, five thousand cavalry, and one hundred and
+twenty-four guns. On the other side, Zassulitch waited for him with
+only twenty-three thousand men, and with a long stretch of river to
+guard. And Calloway had got hold of some important inside information
+that he knew would bring the _Enterprise_ staff around a cablegram as
+thick as flies around a Park Row lemonade stand. If he could only get
+that message past the censor--the new censor who had arrived and
+taken his post that day!
+
+Calloway did the obviously proper thing. He lit his pipe and sat down
+on a gun carriage to think it over. And there we must leave him; for
+the rest of the story belongs to Vesey, a sixteen-dollar-a-week
+reporter on the _Enterprise_.
+
+
+Calloway's cablegram was handed to the managing editor at four
+o'clock in the afternoon. He read it three times; and then drew a
+pocket mirror from a pigeon-hole in his desk, and looked at his
+reflection carefully. Then he went over to the desk of Boyd, his
+assistant (he usually called Boyd when he wanted him), and laid the
+cablegram before him.
+
+"It's from Calloway," he said. "See what you make of it."
+
+The message was dated at Wi-ju, and these were the words of it:
+
+
+ Foregone preconcerted rash witching goes muffled rumour mine dark
+ silent unfortunate richmond existing great hotly brute select
+ mooted parlous beggars ye angel incontrovertible.
+
+
+Boyd read it twice.
+
+"It's either a cipher or a sunstroke," said he.
+
+"Ever hear of anything like a code in the office--a secret code?"
+asked the m. e., who had held his desk for only two years. Managing
+editors come and go.
+
+"None except the vernacular that the lady specials write in," said
+Boyd. "Couldn't be an acrostic, could it?"
+
+"I thought of that," said the m. e., "but the beginning letters
+contain only four vowels. It must be a code of some sort."
+
+"Try em in groups," suggested Boyd. "Let's see--'Rash witching
+goes'--not with me it doesn't. 'Muffled rumour mine'--must
+have an underground wire. 'Dark silent unfortunate richmond'--no
+reason why he should knock that town so hard. 'Existing great
+hotly'--no it doesn't pan out. I'll call Scott."
+
+The city editor came in a hurry, and tried his luck. A city editor
+must know something about everything; so Scott knew a little about
+cipher-writing.
+
+"It may be what is called an inverted alphabet cipher," said he.
+"I'll try that. 'R' seems to be the oftenest used initial letter,
+with the exception of 'm.' Assuming 'r' to mean 'e', the most
+frequently used vowel, we transpose the letters--so."
+
+Scott worked rapidly with his pencil for two minutes; and then showed
+the first word according to his reading--the word "Scejtzez."
+
+"Great!" cried Boyd. "It's a charade. My first is a Russian
+general. Go on, Scott."
+
+"No, that won't work," said the city editor. "It's undoubtedly a
+code. It's impossible to read it without the key. Has the office
+ever used a cipher code?"
+
+"Just what I was asking," said the m.e. "Hustle everybody up that
+ought to know. We must get at it some way. Calloway has evidently
+got hold of something big, and the censor has put the screws on, or
+he wouldn't have cabled in a lot of chop suey like this."
+
+Throughout the office of the _Enterprise_ a dragnet was sent, hauling
+in such members of the staff as would be likely to know of a code,
+past or present, by reason of their wisdom, information, natural
+intelligence, or length of servitude. They got together in a group
+in the city room, with the m. e. in the centre. No one had heard
+of a code. All began to explain to the head investigator that
+newspapers never use a code, anyhow--that is, a cipher code. Of
+course the Associated Press stuff is a sort of code--an abbreviation,
+rather--but--
+
+The m. e. knew all that, and said so. He asked each man how long he
+had worked on the paper. Not one of them had drawn pay from an
+_Enterprise_ envelope for longer than six years. Calloway had been on
+the paper twelve years.
+
+"Try old Heffelbauer," said the m. e. "He was here when Park Row was
+a potato patch."
+
+Heffelbauer was an institution. He was half janitor, half handy-man
+about the office, and half watchman--thus becoming the peer of
+thirteen and one-half tailors. Sent for, he came, radiating his
+nationality.
+
+"Heffelbauer," said the m. e., "did you ever hear of a code belonging
+to the office a long time ago--a private code? You know what a code
+is, don't you?"
+
+"Yah," said Heffelbauer. "Sure I know vat a code is. Yah, apout
+dwelf or fifteen year ago der office had a code. Der reborters in der
+city-room haf it here."
+
+"Ah!" said the m. e. "We're getting on the trail now. Where was it
+kept, Heffelbauer? What do you know about it?"
+
+"Somedimes," said the retainer, "dey keep it in der little room
+behind der library room."
+
+"Can you find it?" asked the m. e. eagerly. "Do you know where it is?"
+
+"Mein Gott!" said Heffelbauer. "How long you dink a code live? Der
+reborters call him a maskeet. But von day he butt mit his head der
+editor, und--"
+
+"Oh, he's talking about a goat," said Boyd. "Get out, Heffelbauer."
+
+Again discomfited, the concerted wit and resource of the _Enterprise_
+huddled around Calloway's puzzle, considering its mysterious words
+in vain.
+
+Then Vesey came in.
+
+Vesey was the youngest reporter. He had a thirty-two-inch chest and
+wore a number fourteen collar; but his bright Scotch plaid suit gave
+him presence and conferred no obscurity upon his whereabouts. He
+wore his hat in such a position that people followed him about to see
+him take it off, convinced that it must be hung upon a peg driven
+into the back of his head. He was never without an immense, knotted,
+hard-wood cane with a German-silver tip on its crooked handle. Vesey
+was the best photograph hustler in the office. Scott said it was
+because no living human being could resist the personal triumph it
+was to hand his picture over to Vesey. Vesey always wrote his own
+news stories, except the big ones, which were sent to the rewrite
+men. Add to this fact that among all the inhabitants, temples, and
+groves of the earth nothing existed that could abash Vesey, and his
+dim sketch is concluded.
+
+Vesey butted into the circle of cipher readers very much as
+Heffelbauer's "code" would have done, and asked what was up. Some
+one explained, with the touch of half-familiar condescension that
+they always used toward him. Vesey reached out and took the
+cablegram from the m. e.'s hand. Under the protection of some
+special Providence, he was always doing appalling things like that,
+and coming, off unscathed.
+
+"It's a code," said Vesey. "Anybody got the key?"
+
+"The office has no code," said Boyd, reaching for the message. Vesey
+held to it.
+
+"Then old Calloway expects us to read it, anyhow," said he. "He's up
+a tree, or something, and he's made this up so as to get it by the
+censor. It's up to us. Gee! I wish they had sent me, too. Say--we
+can't afford to fall down on our end of it. 'Foregone, preconcerted
+rash, witching'--h'm."
+
+Vesey sat down on a table corner and began to whistle softly,
+frowning at the cablegram.
+
+"Let's have it, please," said the m. e. "We've got to get to work on
+it."
+
+"I believe I've got a line on it," said Vesey. "Give me ten
+minutes."
+
+He walked to his desk, threw his hat into a waste-basket, spread out
+flat on his chest like a gorgeous lizard, and started his pencil
+going. The wit and wisdom of the _Enterprise_ remained in a loose
+group, and smiled at one another, nodding their heads toward Vesey.
+Then they began to exchange their theories about the cipher.
+
+It took Vesey exactly fifteen minutes. He brought to the m. e. a pad
+with the code-key written on it.
+
+"I felt the swing of it as soon as I saw it," said Vesey. "Hurrah for
+old Calloway! He's done the Japs and every paper in town that prints
+literature instead of news. Take a look at that."
+
+Thus had Vesey set forth the reading of the code:
+
+ Foregone - conclusion
+ Preconcerted - arrangement
+ Rash - act
+ Witching - hour of midnight
+ Goes - without saying
+ Muffled - report
+ Rumour - hath it
+ Mine - host
+ Dark - horse
+ Silent - majority
+ Unfortunate - pedestrians*
+ Richmond - in the field
+ Existing - conditions
+ Great - White Way
+ Hotly - contested
+ Brute - force
+ Select - few
+ Mooted - question
+ Parlous - times
+ Beggars - description
+ Ye - correspondent
+ Angel - unawares
+ Incontrovertible - fact
+
+ *Mr. Vesey afterward explained that the logical journalistic
+ complement of the word "unfortunate" was once the word
+ "victim." But, since the automobile became so popular, the
+ correct following word is now "pedestrians." Of course, in
+ Calloway's code it meant infantry.
+
+"It's simply newspaper English," explained Vesey. "I've been
+reporting on the _Enterprise_ long enough to know it by heart. Old
+Calloway gives us the cue word, and we use the word that naturally
+follows it just as we use 'em in the paper. Read it over, and you'll
+see how pat they drop into their places. Now, here's the message he
+intended us to get."
+
+Vesey handed out another sheet of paper.
+
+ Concluded arrangement to act at hour of midnight
+ without saying. Report hath it that a large body of
+ cavalry and an overwhelming force of infantry will be
+ thrown into the field. Conditions white. Way contested
+ by only a small force. Question the Times description.
+ Its correspondent is unaware of the facts.
+
+"Great stuff!" cried Boyd excitedly. "Kuroki crosses the Yalu
+to-night and attacks. Oh, we won't do a thing to the sheets that make
+up with Addison's essays, real estate transfers, and bowling scores!"
+
+"Mr. Vesey," said the m. e., with his jollying-which-you-should-regard-
+as-a-favour manner, "you have cast a serious reflection upon the
+literary standards of the paper that employs you. You have also
+assisted materially in giving us the biggest 'beat' of the year. I
+will let you know in a day or two whether you are to be discharged or
+retained at a larger salary. Somebody send Ames to me."
+
+Ames was the king-pin, the snowy-petalled Marguerite, the star-bright
+looloo of the rewrite men. He saw attempted murder in the pains of
+green-apple colic, cyclones in the summer zephyr, lost children in
+every top-spinning urchin, an uprising of the down-trodden masses in
+every hurling of a derelict potato at a passing automobile. When not
+rewriting, Ames sat on the porch of his Brooklyn villa playing
+checkers with his ten-year-old son.
+
+Ames and the "war editor" shut themselves in a room. There was a map
+in there stuck full of little pins that represented armies and
+divisions. Their fingers had been itching for days to move those
+pins along the crooked line of the Yalu. They did so now; and in
+words of fire Ames translated Calloway's brief message into a front
+page masterpiece that set the world talking. He told of the secret
+councils of the Japanese officers; gave Kuroki's flaming speeches in
+full; counted the cavalry and infantry to a man and a horse;
+described the quick and silent building, of the bridge at Suikauchen,
+across which the Mikado's legions were hurled upon the surprised
+Zassulitch, whose troops were widely scattered along the river. And
+the battle!--well, you know what Ames can do with a battle if you give
+him just one smell of smoke for a foundation. And in the same story,
+with seemingly supernatural knowledge, he gleefully scored the most
+profound and ponderous paper in England for the false and misleading
+account of the intended movements of the Japanese First Army printed
+in its issue of _the same date_.
+
+Only one error was made; and that was the fault of the cable operator
+at Wi-ju. Calloway pointed it out after he came back. The word
+"great" in his code should have been "gage," and its complemental
+words "of battle." But it went to Ames "conditions white," and of
+course he took that to mean snow. His description of the Japanese
+army struggling through the snowstorm, blinded by the whirling flakes,
+was thrillingly vivid. The artists turned out some effective
+illustrations that made a hit as pictures of the artillery dragging
+their guns through the drifts. But, as the attack was made on the
+first day of May, "conditions white" excited some amusement. But it
+in made no difference to the _Enterprise_, anyway.
+
+It was wonderful. And Calloway was wonderful in having made the new
+censor believe that his jargon of words meant no more than a
+complaint of the dearth of news and a petition for more expense
+money. And Vesey was wonderful. And most wonderful of all are
+words, and how they make friends one with another, being oft
+associated, until not even obituary notices them do part.
+
+
+On the second day following, the city editor halted at Vesey's desk
+where the reporter was writing the story of a man who had broken his
+leg by falling into a coal-hole--Ames having failed to find a
+murder motive in it.
+
+"The old man says your salary is to be raised to twenty a week," said
+Scott.
+
+"All right," said Vesey. "Every little helps. Say--Mr. Scott,
+which would you say--'We can state without fear of successful
+contradiction,' or, 'On the whole it can be safely asserted'?"
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+A MATTER OF MEAN ELEVATION
+
+
+One winter the Alcazar Opera Company of New Orleans made a speculative
+trip along the Mexican, Central American and South American coasts.
+The venture proved a most successful one. The music-loving,
+impressionable Spanish-Americans deluged the company with dollars and
+"vivas." The manager waxed plump and amiable. But for the
+prohibitive climate he would have put forth the distinctive flower of
+his prosperity--the overcoat of fur, braided, frogged and opulent.
+Almost was he persuaded to raise the salaries of his company. But
+with a mighty effort he conquered the impulse toward such an
+unprofitable effervescence of joy.
+
+At Macuto, on the coast of Venezuela, the company scored its greatest
+success. Imagine Coney Island translated into Spanish and you will
+comprehend Macuto. The fashionable season is from November to March.
+Down from La Guayra and Caracas and Valencia and other interior towns
+flock the people for their holiday season. There are bathing and
+fiestas and bull fights and scandal. And then the people have a
+passion for music that the bands in the plaza and on the sea beach
+stir but do not satisfy. The coming of the Alcazar Opera Company
+aroused the utmost ardour and zeal among the pleasure seekers.
+
+The illustrious Guzman Blanco, President and Dictator of Venezuela,
+sojourned in Macuto with his court for the season. That potent ruler
+--who himself paid a subsidy of 40,000 pesos each year to grand opera
+in Caracas--ordered one of the Government warehouses to be cleared
+for a temporary theatre. A stage was quickly constructed and rough
+wooden benches made for the audience. Private boxes were added for
+the use of the President and the notables of the army and Government.
+
+The company remained in Macuto for two weeks. Each performance filled
+the house as closely as it could be packed. Then the music-mad people
+fought for room in the open doors and windows, and crowded about,
+hundreds deep, on the outside. Those audiences formed a brilliantly
+diversified patch of colour. The hue of their faces ranged from the
+clear olive of the pure-blood Spaniards down through the yellow and
+brown shades of the Mestizos to the coal-black Carib and the Jamaica
+Negro. Scattered among them were little groups of Indians with faces
+like stone idols, wrapped in gaudy fibre-woven blankets--Indians
+down from the mountain states of Zamora and Los Andes and Miranda to
+trade their gold dust in the coast towns.
+
+The spell cast upon these denizens of the interior fastnesses was
+remarkable. They sat in petrified ecstasy, conspicuous among the
+excitable Macutians, who wildly strove with tongue and hand to give
+evidence of their delight. Only once did the sombre rapture of these
+aboriginals find expression. During the rendition of "Faust," Guzman
+Blanco, extravagantly pleased by the "Jewel Song," cast upon the stage
+a purse of gold pieces. Other distinguished citizens followed his lead
+to the extent of whatever loose coin they had convenient, while some
+of the fair and fashionable seoras were moved, in imitation, to
+fling a jewel or a ring or two at the feet of the Marguerite--who
+was, according to the bills, Mlle. Nina Giraud. Then, from different
+parts of the house rose sundry of the stolid hillmen and cast upon the
+stage little brown and dun bags that fell with soft "thumps" and did
+not rebound. It was, no doubt, pleasure at the tribute to her art
+that caused Mlle. Giraud's eyes to shine so brightly when she opened
+these little deerskin bags in her dressing room and found them to
+contain pure gold dust. If so, the pleasure was rightly hers, for her
+voice in song, pure, strong and thrilling with the feeling of the
+emotional artist, deserved the tribute that it earned.
+
+But the triumph of the Alcazar Opera Company is not the theme--it
+but leans upon and colours it. There happened in Macuto a tragic
+thing, an unsolvable mystery, that sobered for a time the gaiety of
+the happy season.
+
+One evening between the short twilight and the time when she should
+have whirled upon the stage in the red and black of the ardent Carmen,
+Mlle. Nina Giraud disappeared from the sight and ken of 6,000 pairs
+of eyes and as many minds in Macuto. There was the usual turmoil and
+hurrying to seek her. Messengers flew to the little French-kept hotel
+where she stayed; others of the company hastened here or there where
+she might be lingering in some tienda or unduly prolonging her bath
+upon the beach. All search was fruitless. Mademoiselle had
+vanished.
+
+Half an hour passed and she did not appear. The dictator, unused to
+the caprices of prime donne, became impatient. He sent an aide from
+his box to say to the manager that if the curtain did not at once rise
+he would immediately hale the entire company to the calabosa, though
+it would desolate his heart, indeed, to be compelled to such an act.
+Birds in Macuto could be made to sing.
+
+The manager abandoned hope for the time of Mlle. Giraud. A member of
+the chorus, who had dreamed hopelessly for years of the blessed
+opportunity, quickly Carmenized herself and the opera went on.
+
+Afterward, when the lost cantatrice appeared not, the aid of the
+authorities was invoked. The President at once set the army, the
+police and all citizens to the search. Not one clue to Mlle. Giraud's
+disappearance was found. The Alcazar left to fill engagements farther
+down the coast.
+
+On the way back the steamer stopped at Macuto and the manager made
+anxious inquiry. Not a trace of the lady had been discovered. The
+Alcazar could do no more. The personal belongings of the missing lady
+were stored in the hotel against her possible later reappearance and
+the opera company continued upon its homeward voyage to New Orleans.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the camino real along the beach the two saddle mules and the four
+pack mules of Don Seor Johnny Armstrong stood, patiently awaiting the
+crack of the whip of the _arriero_, Luis. That would be the signal for
+the start on another long journey into the mountains. The pack mules
+were loaded with a varied assortment of hardware and cutlery. These
+articles Don Johnny traded to the interior Indians for the gold dust
+that they washed from the Andean streams and stored in quills and bags
+against his coming. It was a profitable business, and Seor Armstrong
+expected soon to be able to purchase the coffee plantation that he
+coveted.
+
+Armstrong stood on the narrow sidewalk, exchanging garbled Spanish
+with old Peralto, the rich native merchant who had just charged him
+four prices for half a gross of pot-metal hatchets, and abridged
+English with Rucker, the little German who was Consul for the United
+States.
+
+"Take with you, seor," said Peralto, "the blessings of the saints
+upon your journey."
+
+"Better try quinine," growled Rucker through his pipe. "Take two
+grains every night. And don't make your trip too long, Johnny,
+because we haf needs of you. It is ein villainous game dot Melville
+play of whist, and dere is no oder substitute. _Auf wiedersehen_, und
+keep your eyes dot mule's ears between when you on der edge of der
+brecipices ride."
+
+The bells of Luis's mule jingled and the pack train filed after the
+warning note. Armstrong, waved a good-bye and took his place at the
+tail of the procession. Up the narrow street they turned, and passed
+the two-story wooden Hotel Ingles, where Ives and Dawson and Richards
+and the rest of the chaps were dawdling on the broad piazza, reading
+week-old newspapers. They crowded to the railing and shouted many
+friendly and wise and foolish farewells after him. Across the plaza
+they trotted slowly past the bronze statue of Guzman Blanco, within
+its fence of bayoneted rifles captured from revolutionists, and out
+of the town between the rows of thatched huts swarming with the
+unclothed youth of Macuto. They plunged into the damp coolness of
+banana groves at length to emerge upon a bright stream, where brown
+women in scant raiment laundered clothes destructively upon the rocks.
+Then the pack train, fording the stream, attacked the sudden ascent,
+and bade adieu to such civilization as the coast afforded.
+
+For weeks Armstrong, guided by Luis, followed his regular route among
+the mountains. After he had collected an arroba of the precious
+metal, winning a profit of nearly $5,000, the heads of the lightened
+mules were turned down-trail again. Where the head of the Guarico
+River springs from a great gash in the mountain-side, Luis halted the
+train.
+
+"Half a day's journey from here, Seor," said he, "is the village of
+Tacuzama, which we have never visited. I think many ounces of gold may
+be procured there. It is worth the trial."
+
+Armstrong concurred, and they turned again upward toward Tacuzama.
+The trail was abrupt and precipitous, mounting through a dense
+forest. As night fell, dark and gloomy, Luis once more halted.
+Before them was a black chasm, bisecting the path as far as they could
+see.
+
+Luis dismounted. "There should be a bridge," he called, and ran along
+the cleft a distance. "It is here," he cried, and remounting, led the
+way. In a few moments Armstrong, heard a sound as though a thunderous
+drum were beating somewhere in the dark. It was the falling of the
+mules' hoofs upon the bridge made of strong hides lashed to poles and
+stretched across the chasm. Half a mile further was Tacuzama. The
+village was a congregation of rock and mud huts set in the
+profundity of an obscure wood. As they rode in a sound inconsistent
+with that brooding solitude met their ears. From a long, low mud hut
+that they were nearing rose the glorious voice of a woman in song.
+The words were English, the air familiar to Armstrong's memory, but
+not to his musical knowledge.
+
+He slipped from his mule and stole to a narrow window in one end of
+the house. Peering cautiously inside, he saw, within three feet of
+him, a woman of marvellous, imposing beauty, clothed in a splendid
+loose robe of leopard skins. The hut was packed close to the small
+space in which she stood with the squatting figures of Indians.
+
+The woman finished her song and seated herself close to the little
+window, as if grateful for the unpolluted air that entered it.
+When she had ceased several of the audience rose and cast little
+softly-falling bags at her feet. A harsh murmur--no doubt a
+barbarous kind of applause and comment--went through the grim
+assembly.
+
+Armstrong, was used to seizing opportunities promptly. Taking
+advantage of the noise he called to the woman in a low but distinct
+voice: "Do not turn your head this way, but listen. I am an American.
+If you need assistance tell me how I can render it. Answer as briefly
+as you can."
+
+The woman was worthy of his boldness. Only by a sudden flush of her
+pale cheek did she acknowledge understanding of his words. Then she
+spoke, scarcely moving her lips.
+
+"I am held a prisoner by these Indians. God knows I need help. In
+two hours come to the little hut twenty yards toward the Mountainside.
+There will be a light and a red curtain in the window. There is
+always a guard at the door, whom you will have to overcome. For the
+love of heaven, do not fail to come."
+
+The story seems to shrink from adventure and rescue and mystery. The
+theme is one too gentle for those brave and quickening tones. And yet
+it reaches as far back as time itself. It has been named
+"environment," which is as weak a word as any to express the
+unnameable kinship of man to nature, that queer fraternity that causes
+stones and trees and salt water and clouds to play upon our emotions.
+Why are we made serious and solemn and sublime by mountain heights,
+grave and contemplative by an abundance of overhanging trees,
+reduced to inconstancy and monkey capers by the ripples on a sandy
+beach? Did the protoplasm--but enough. The chemists are looking
+into the matter, and before long they will have all life in the table
+of the symbols.
+
+Briefly, then, in order to confine the story within scientific bounds,
+John Armstrong, went to the hut, choked the Indian guard and carried
+away Mlle. Giraud. With her was also conveyed a number of pounds of
+gold dust she had collected during her six months' forced engagement
+in Tacuzama. The Carabobo Indians are easily the most enthusiastic
+lovers of music between the equator and the French Opera House in New
+Orleans. They are also strong believers that the advice of Emerson
+was good when he said: "The thing thou wantest, O discontented man
+--take it, and pay the price." A number of them had attended the
+performance of the Alcazar Opera Company in Macuto, and found Mlle.
+Giraud's style and technique satisfactory. They wanted her, so they
+took her one evening suddenly and without any fuss. They treated her
+with much consideration, exacting only one song recital each day. She
+was quite pleased at being rescued by Mr. Armstrong. So much for
+mystery and adventure. Now to resume the theory of the protoplasm.
+
+John Armstrong and Mlle. Giraud rode among the Andean peaks, enveloped
+in their greatness and sublimity. The mightiest cousins, furthest
+removed, in nature's great family become conscious of the tie. Among
+those huge piles of primordial upheaval, amid those gigantic silences
+and elongated fields of distance the littlenesses of men are
+precipitated as one chemical throws down a sediment from another.
+They moved reverently, as in a temple. Their souls were uplifted in
+unison with the stately heights. They travelled in a zone of majesty
+and peace.
+
+To Armstrong the woman seemed almost a holy thing. Yet bathed in the
+white, still dignity of her martyrdom that purified her earthly beauty
+and gave out, it seemed, an aura of transcendent loveliness, in those
+first hours of companionship she drew from him an adoration that was
+half human love, half the worship of a descended goddess.
+
+Never yet since her rescue had she smiled. Over her dress she still
+wore the robe of leopard skins, for the mountain air was cold. She
+looked to be some splendid princess belonging to those wild and
+awesome altitudes. The spirit of the region chimed with hers. Her
+eyes were always turned upon the sombre cliffs, the blue gorges and
+the snow-clad turrets, looking a sublime melancholy equal to their
+own. At times on the journey she sang thrilling te deums and
+misereres that struck the true note of the hills, and made their
+route seem like a solemn march down a cathedral aisle. The rescued
+one spoke but seldom, her mood partaking of the hush of nature that
+surrounded them. Armstrong looked upon her as an angel. He could not
+bring himself to the sacrilege of attempting to woo her as other
+women may be wooed.
+
+On the third day they had descended as far as the _tierra templada_,
+the zona of the table lands and foot hills. The mountains were
+receding in their rear, but still towered, exhibiting yet impressively
+their formidable heads. Here they met signs of man. They saw the
+white houses of coffee plantations gleam across the clearings. They
+struck into a road where they met travellers and pack-mules. Cattle
+were grazing on the slopes. They passed a little village where the
+round-eyed _nios_ shrieked and called at sight of them.
+
+Mlle. Giraud laid aside her leopard-skin robe. It seemed to be a
+trifle incongruous now. In the mountains it had appeared fitting
+and natural. And if Armstrong was not mistaken she laid aside with
+it something of the high dignity of her demeanour. As the country
+became more populous and significant of comfortable life he saw, with
+a feeling of joy, that the exalted princess and priestess of the
+Andean peaks was changing to a woman--an earth woman, but no less
+enticing. A little colour crept to the surface of her marble cheek.
+She arranged the conventional dress that the removal of the robe now
+disclosed with the solicitous touch of one who is conscious of the
+eyes of others. She smoothed the careless sweep of her hair. A
+mundane interest, long latent in the chilling atmosphere of the
+ascetic peaks, showed in her eyes.
+
+This thaw in his divinity sent Armstrong's heart going faster. So
+might an Arctic explorer thrill at his first ken of green fields and
+liquescent waters. They were on a lower plane of earth and life and
+were succumbing to its peculiar, subtle influence. The austerity of
+the hills no longer thinned the air they breathed. About them was the
+breath of fruit and corn and builded homes, the comfortable smell of
+smoke and warm earth and the consolations man has placed between
+himself and the dust of his brother earth from which he sprung.
+While traversing those awful mountains, Mile. Giraud had seemed to
+be wrapped in their spirit of reverent reserve. Was this that same
+woman--now palpitating, warm, eager, throbbing with conscious life and
+charm, feminine to her finger-tips? Pondering over this, Armstrong
+felt certain misgivings intrude upon his thoughts. He wished he could
+stop there with this changing creature, descending no farther. Here
+was the elevation and environment to which her nature seemed to
+respond with its best. He feared to go down upon the man-dominated
+levels. Would her spirit not yield still further in that artificial
+zone to which they were descending?
+
+Now from a little plateau they saw the sea flash at the edge of the
+green lowlands. Mile. Giraud gave a little, catching sigh.
+
+"Oh! look, Mr. Armstrong, there is the sea! Isn't it lovely? I'm so
+tired of mountains." She heaved a pretty shoulder in a gesture of
+repugnance. "Those horrid Indians! Just think of what I suffered!
+Although I suppose I attained my ambition of becoming a stellar
+attraction, I wouldn't care to repeat the engagement. It was very
+nice of you to bring me away. Tell me, Mr. Armstrong--honestly, now
+--do I look such an awful, awful fright? I haven't looked into a
+mirror, you know, for months."
+
+Armstrong made answer according to his changed moods. Also he laid
+his hand upon hers as it rested upon the horn of her saddle. Luis was
+at the head of the pack train and could not see. She allowed it to
+remain there, and her eyes smiled frankly into his.
+
+Then at sundown they dropped upon the coast level under the palms and
+lemons among the vivid greens and scarlets and ochres of the _tierra
+caliente_. They rode into Macuto, and saw the line of volatile bathers
+frolicking in the surf. The mountains were very far away.
+
+Mlle. Giraud's eyes were shining with a joy that could not have
+existed under the chaperonage of the mountain-tops. There were other
+spirits calling to her--nymphs of the orange groves, pixies from the
+chattering surf, imps, born of the music, the perfumes, colours and
+the insinuating presence of humanity. She laughed aloud, musically,
+at a sudden thought.
+
+"Won't there be a sensation?" she called to Armstrong. "Don't I wish
+I had an engagement just now, though! What a picnic the press agent
+would have! 'Held a prisoner by a band of savage Indians subdued by
+the spell of her wonderful voice'--wouldn't that make great stuff?
+But I guess I quit the game winner, anyhow--there ought to be a
+couple of thousand dollars in that sack of gold dust I collected as
+encores, don't you think?"
+
+He left her at the door of the little Hotel de Buen Descansar, where
+she had stopped before. Two hours later he returned to the hotel. He
+glanced in at the open door of the little combined reception room and
+cafe.
+
+Half a dozen of Macuto's representative social and official
+_caballeros_ were distributed about the room. Seor Villablanca, the
+wealthy rubber concessionist, reposed his fat figure on two chairs,
+with an emollient smile beaming upon his chocolate-coloured face.
+Guilbert, the French mining engineer, leered through his polished
+nose-glasses. Colonel Mendez, of the regular army, in gold-laced
+uniform and fatuous grin, was busily extracting corks from champagne
+bottles. Other patterns of Macutian gallantry and fashion pranced and
+posed. The air was hazy with cigarette smoke. Wine dripped upon the
+floor.
+
+Perched upon a table in the centre of the room in an attitude of easy
+preminence was Mlle. Giraud. A chic costume of white lawn and cherry
+ribbons supplanted her travelling garb. There was a suggestion of
+lace, and a frill or two, with a discreet, small implication of
+hand-embroidered pink hosiery. Upon her lap rested a guitar. In her
+face was the light of resurrection, the peace of elysium attained
+through fire and suffering. She was singing to a lively accompaniment
+a little song:
+
+ "When you see de big round moon
+ Comin' up like a balloon,
+ Dis nigger skips fur to kiss de lips
+ Ob his stylish, black-faced coon."
+
+The singer caught sight of Armstrong.
+
+"Hi! there, Johnny," she called; "I've been expecting you for an
+hour. What kept you? Gee! but these smoked guys are the slowest you
+ever saw. They ain't on, at all. Come along in, and I'll make this
+coffee-coloured old sport with the gold epaulettes open one for you
+right off the ice."
+
+"Thank you," said Armstrong; "not just now, I believe. I've several
+things to attend to."
+
+He walked out and down the street, and met Rucker coming up from the
+Consulate.
+
+"Play you a game of billiards," said Armstrong. "I want something to
+take the taste of the sea level out of my mouth."
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+"GIRL"
+
+
+In gilt letters on the ground glass of the door of room No. 962 were
+the words: "Robbins & Hartley, Brokers." The clerks had gone. It was
+past five, and with the solid tramp of a drove of prize Percherons,
+scrub-women were invading the cloud-capped twenty-story office
+building. A puff of red-hot air flavoured with lemon peelings,
+soft-coal smoke and train oil came in through the half-open windows.
+
+Robbins, fifty, something of an overweight beau, and addicted to first
+nights and hotel palm-rooms, pretended to be envious of his partner's
+commuter's joys.
+
+"Going to be something doing in the humidity line to-night," he said.
+"You out-of-town chaps will be the people, with your katydids and
+moonlight and long drinks and things out on the front porch."
+
+Hartley, twenty-nine, serious, thin, good-looking, nervous, sighed
+and frowned a little.
+
+"Yes," said he, "we always have cool nights in Floralhurst, especially
+in the winter."
+
+A man with an air of mystery came in the door and went up to Hartley.
+
+"I've found where she lives," he announced in the portentous
+half-whisper that makes the detective at work a marked being to his
+fellow men.
+
+Hartley scowled him into a state of dramatic silence and quietude.
+But by that time Robbins had got his cane and set his tie pin to his
+liking, and with a debonair nod went out to his metropolitan
+amusements.
+
+"Here is the address," said the detective in a natural tone, being
+deprived of an audience to foil.
+
+Hartley took the leaf torn out of the sleuth's dingy memorandum book.
+On it were pencilled the words "Vivienne Arlington, No. 341 East
+----th Street, care of Mrs. McComus."
+
+"Moved there a week ago," said the detective. "Now, if you want any
+shadowing done, Mr. Hartley, I can do you as fine a job in that line
+as anybody in the city. It will be only $7 a day and expenses. Can
+send in a daily typewritten report, covering--"
+
+"You needn't go on," interrupted the broker. "It isn't a case of that
+kind. I merely wanted the address. How much shall I pay you?"
+
+"One day's work," said the sleuth. "A tenner will cover it."
+
+Hartley paid the man and dismissed him. Then he left the office and
+boarded a Broadway car. At the first large crosstown artery of travel
+he took an eastbound car that deposited him in a decaying avenue,
+whose ancient structures once sheltered the pride and glory of the
+town.
+
+Walking a few squares, he came to the building that he sought. It was
+a new flathouse, bearing carved upon its cheap stone portal its
+sonorous name, "The Vallambrosa." Fire-escapes zigzagged down its
+front--these laden with household goods, drying clothes, and
+squalling children evicted by the midsummer heat. Here and there a
+pale rubber plant peeped from the miscellaneous mass, as if wondering
+to what kingdom it belonged--vegetable, animal or artificial.
+
+Hartley pressed the "McComus" button. The door latch clicked
+spasmodically--now hospitably, now doubtfully, as though in
+anxiety whether it might be admitting friends or duns. Hartley
+entered and began to climb the stairs after the manner of those who
+seek their friends in city flat-houses--which is the manner of a boy
+who climbs an apple-tree, stopping when he comes upon what he wants.
+
+On the fourth floor he saw Vivienne standing in an open door. She
+invited him inside, with a nod and a bright, genuine smile. She
+placed a chair for him near a window, and poised herself gracefully
+upon the edge of one of those Jekyll-and-Hyde pieces of furniture that
+are masked and mysteriously hooded, unguessable bulks by day and
+inquisitorial racks of torture by night.
+
+Hartley cast a quick, critical, appreciative glance at her before
+speaking, and told himself that his taste in choosing had been
+flawless.
+
+Vivienne was about twenty-one. She was of the purest Saxon type. Her
+hair was a ruddy golden, each filament of the neatly gathered mass
+shining with its own lustre and delicate graduation of colour. In
+perfect harmony were her ivory-clear complexion and deep sea-blue eyes
+that looked upon the world with the ingenuous calmness of a mermaid or
+the pixie of an undiscovered mountain stream. Her frame was strong
+and yet possessed the grace of absolute naturalness. And yet with all
+her Northern clearness and frankness of line and colouring, there
+seemed to be something of the tropics in her--something of languor
+in the droop of her pose, of love of ease in her ingenious complacency
+of satisfaction and comfort in the mere act of breathing--something
+that seemed to claim for her a right as a perfect work of nature to
+exist and be admired equally with a rare flower or some beautiful,
+milk-white dove among its sober-hued companions.
+
+She was dressed in a white waist and dark skirt--that discreet
+masquerade of goose-girl and duchess.
+
+"Vivienne," said Hartley, looking at her pleadingly, "you did not
+answer my last letter. It was only by nearly a week's search that I
+found where you had moved to. Why have you kept me in suspense when
+you knew how anxiously I was waiting to see you and hear from you?"
+
+The girl looked out the window dreamily.
+
+"Mr. Hartley," she said hesitatingly, "I hardly know what to say to
+you. I realize all the advantages of your offer, and sometimes I feel
+sure that I could be contented with you. But, again, I am doubtful.
+I was born a city girl, and I am afraid to bind myself to a quiet
+suburban life."
+
+"My dear girl," said Hartley, ardently, "have I not told you that you
+shall have everything that your heart can desire that is in my power
+to give you? You shall come to the city for the theatres, for
+shopping and to visit your friends as often as you care to. You can
+trust me, can you not?"
+
+"To the fullest," she said, turning her frank eyes upon him with a
+smile. "I know you are the kindest of men, and that the girl you get
+will be a lucky one. I learned all about you when I was at the
+Montgomerys'."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Hartley, with a tender, reminiscent light in his eye;
+"I remember well the evening I first saw you at the Montgomerys'.
+Mrs. Montgomery was sounding your praises to me all the evening.
+And she hardly did you justice. I shall never forget that supper.
+Come, Vivienne, promise me. I want you. You'll never regret coming
+with me. No one else will ever give you as pleasant a home."
+
+The girl sighed and looked down at her folded hands.
+
+A sudden jealous suspicion seized Hartley.
+
+"Tell me, Vivienne," he asked, regarding her keenly, "is there
+another--is there some one else ?"
+
+A rosy flush crept slowly over her fair cheeks and neck.
+
+"You shouldn't ask that, Mr. Hartley," she said, in some confusion.
+"But I will tell you. There is one other--but he has no right--I
+have promised him nothing."
+
+"His name?" demanded Hartley, sternly.
+
+"Townsend."
+
+"Rafford Townsend!" exclaimed Hartley, with a grim tightening of his
+jaw. "How did that man come to know you? After all I've done for
+him--"
+
+"His auto has just stopped below," said Vivienne, bending over the
+window-sill. "He's coming for his answer. Oh I don't know what to
+do!"
+
+The bell in the flat kitchen whirred. Vivienne hurried to press the
+latch button.
+
+"Stay here," said Hartley. "I will meet him in the hall."
+
+Townsend, looking like a Spanish grandee in his light tweeds, Panama
+hat and curling black mustache, came up the stairs three at a time.
+He stopped at sight of Hartley and looked foolish.
+
+"Go back," said Hartley, firmly, pointing downstairs with his
+forefinger.
+
+"Hullo!" said Townsend, feigning surprise. "What's up? What are you
+doing here, old man?"
+
+"Go back," repeated Hartley, inflexibly. "The Law of the Jungle. Do
+you want the Pack to tear you in pieces? The kill is mine."
+
+"I came here to see a plumber about the bathroom connections," said
+Townsend, bravely.
+
+"All right," said Hartley. "You shall have that lying plaster to
+stick upon your traitorous soul. But, go back." Townsend went
+downstairs, leaving a bitter word to be wafted up the draught of the
+staircase. Hartley went back to his wooing.
+
+"Vivienne," said he, masterfully. "I have got to have you. I will
+take no more refusals or dilly-dallying."
+
+"When do you want me?" she asked.
+
+"Now. As soon as you can get ready."
+
+She stood calmly before him and looked him in the eye.
+
+"Do you think for one moment," she said, "that I would enter your home
+while Hloise is there?"
+
+Hartley cringed as if from an unexpected blow. He folded his arms and
+paced the carpet once or twice.
+
+"She shall go," he declared grimly. Drops stood upon his brow. "Why
+should I let that woman make my life miserable? Never have I seen one
+day of freedom from trouble since I have known her. You are right,
+Vivienne. Hloise must be sent away before I can take you home. But
+she shall go. I have decided. I will turn her from my doors."
+
+"When will you do this?" asked the girl.
+
+Hartley clinched his teeth and bent his brows together.
+
+"To-night," he said, resolutely. "I will send her away to-night."
+
+"Then," said Vivienne, "my answer is 'yes.' Come for me when you
+will."
+
+She looked into his eyes with a sweet, sincere light in her own.
+Hartley could scarcely believe that her surrender was true, it was
+so swift and complete.
+
+"Promise me," he said feelingly, "on your word and honour."
+
+"On my word and honour," repeated Vivienne, softly.
+
+At the door he turned and gazed at her happily, but yet as one who
+scarcely trusts the foundations of his joy.
+
+"To-morrow," he said, with a forefinger of reminder uplifted.
+
+"To-morrow," she repeated with a smile of truth and candour.
+
+In an hour and forty minutes Hartley stepped off the train at
+Floralhurst. A brisk walk of ten minutes brought him to the gate of a
+handsome two-story cottage set upon a wide and well-tended lawn.
+Halfway to the house he was met by a woman with jet-black braided hair
+and flowing white summer gown, who half strangled him without apparent
+cause.
+
+When they stepped into the hall she said:
+
+"Mamma's here. The auto is coming for her in half an hour. She came
+to dinner, but there's no dinner."
+
+"I've something to tell you," said Hartley. "I thought to break it to
+you gently, but since your mother is here we may as well out with it."
+
+He stooped and whispered something at her ear.
+
+His wife screamed. Her mother came running into the hall. The
+dark-haired woman screamed again--the joyful scream of a well-beloved
+and petted woman.
+
+"Oh, mamma!" she cried ecstatically, "what do you think? Vivienne is
+coming to cook for us! She is the one that stayed with the
+Montgomerys a whole year. And now, Billy, dear," she concluded, "you
+must go right down into the kitchen and discharge Hloise. She has
+been drunk again the whole day long."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW
+
+
+The season of irresponsibility is at hand. Come, let us twine round
+our brows wreaths of poison ivy (that is for idiocy), and wander hand
+in hand with sociology in the summer fields.
+
+Likely as not the world is flat. The wise men have tried to prove
+that it is round, with indifferent success. They pointed out to us a
+ship going to sea, and bade us observe that, at length, the convexity
+of the earth hid from our view all but the vessel's topmast. But we
+picked up a telescope and looked, and saw the decks and hull again.
+Then the wise men said: "Oh, pshaw! anyhow, the variation of the
+intersection of the equator and the ecliptic proves it." We could not
+see this through our telescope, so we remained silent. But it stands
+to reason that, if the world were round, the queues of Chinamen
+would stand straight up from their heads instead of hanging down their
+backs, as travellers assure us they do.
+
+Another hot-weather corroboration of the flat theory is the fact that
+all of life, as we know it, moves in little, unavailing circles.
+More justly than to anything else, it can be likened to the game
+of baseball. Crack! we hit the ball, and away we go. If we earn a
+run (in life we call it success) we get back to the home plate and
+sit upon a bench. If we are thrown out, we walk back to the home
+plate--and sit upon a bench.
+
+The circumnavigators of the alleged globe may have sailed the rim of a
+watery circle back to the same port again. The truly great return at
+the high tide of their attainments to the simplicity of a child. The
+billionaire sits down at his mahogany to his bowl of bread and milk.
+When you reach the end of your career, just take down the sign "Goal"
+and look at the other side of it. You will find "Beginning Point"
+there. It has been reversed while you were going around the track.
+
+But this is humour, and must be stopped. Let us get back to the
+serious questions that arise whenever Sociology turns summer boarder.
+You are invited to consider the scene of the story--wild, Atlantic
+waves, thundering against a wooded and rock-bound shore--in the
+Greater City of New York.
+
+The town of Fishampton, on the south shore of Long Island, is noted
+for its clam fritters and the summer residence of the Van Plushvelts.
+
+The Van Plushvelts have a hundred million dollars, and their name is a
+household word with tradesmen and photographers.
+
+On the fifteenth of June the Van Plushvelts boarded up the front door
+of their city house, carefully deposited their cat on the sidewalk,
+instructed the caretaker not to allow it to eat any of the ivy on the
+walls, and whizzed away in a 40-horse-power to Fishampton to stray
+alone in the shade--Amaryllis not being in their class. If you are a
+subscriber to the _Toadies' Magazine_, you have often--You say you are
+not? Well, you buy it at a news-stand, thinking that the newsdealer
+is not wise to you. But he knows about it all. HE knows--HE knows!
+I say that you have often seen in the _Toadies' Magazine_ pictures of
+the Van Plushvelts' summer home; so it will not be described here.
+Our business is with young Haywood Van Plushvelt, sixteen years old,
+heir to the century of millions, darling of the financial gods and
+great grandson of Peter Van Plushvelt, former owner of a particularly
+fine cabbage patch that has been ruined by an intrusive lot of
+downtown skyscrapers.
+
+One afternoon young Haywood Van Plushvelt strolled out between the
+granite gate posts of "Dolce far Niente"--that's what they called
+the place; and it was an improvement on dolce Far Rockaway, I can
+tell you.
+
+Haywood walked down into the village. He was human, after all, and
+his prospective millions weighed upon him. Wealth had wreaked upon
+him its direfullest. He was the product of private tutors. Even under
+his first hobby-horse had tan bark been strewn. He had been born with
+a gold spoon, lobster fork and fish-set in his mouth. For which I
+hope, later, to submit justification, I must ask your consideration of
+his haberdashery and tailoring.
+
+Young Fortunatus was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a
+neat, white straw hat, neat low-cut tan shoes, of the well-known
+"immaculate" trade mark, a neat, narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried
+a slender, neat, bamboo cane.
+
+Down Persimmon Street (there's never tree north of Hagerstown, Md.)
+came from the village "Smoky" Dodson, fifteen and a half, worst boy in
+Fishampton. "Smoky" was dressed in a ragged red sweater, wrecked and
+weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and trousers of the
+"serviceable" brand. Dust, clinging to the moisture induced by free
+exercise, darkened wide areas of his face. "Smoky" carried a baseball
+bat, and a league ball that advertised itself in the rotundity of his
+trousers pocket. Haywood stopped and passed the time of day.
+
+"Going to play ball?" he asked.
+
+"Smoky's" eyes and countenance confronted him with a frank
+blue-and-freckled scrutiny.
+
+"Me?" he said, with deadly mildness; "sure not. Can't you see I've
+got a divin' suit on? I'm goin' up in a submarine balloon to catch
+butterflies with a two-inch auger.
+
+"Excuse me," said Haywood, with the insulting politeness of his
+caste, "for mistaking you for a gentleman. I might have known
+better."
+
+"How might you have known better if you thought I was one?" said
+"Smoky," unconsciously a logician.
+
+"By your appearance," said Haywood. "No gentleman is dirty, ragged
+and a liar."
+
+"Smoky" hooted once like a ferry-boat, spat on his hand, got a firm
+grip on his baseball bat and then dropped it against the fence.
+
+"Say," said he, "I knows you. You're the pup that belongs in that
+swell private summer sanitarium for city-guys over there. I seen you
+come out of the gate. You can't bluff nobody because you're rich.
+And because you got on swell clothes. Arabella! Yah!"
+
+"Ragamuffin!" said Haywood.
+
+"Smoky" picked up a fence-rail splinter and laid it on his shoulder.
+
+"Dare you to knock it off," he challenged.
+
+"I wouldn't soil my hands with you," said the aristocrat.
+
+"'Fraid," said "Smoky" concisely. "Youse city-ducks ain't got the I
+sand. I kin lick you with one-hand."
+
+"I don't wish to have any trouble with you," said Haywood. "I asked
+you a civil question; and you replied, like a--like a--a cad."
+
+"Wot's a cad?" asked "Smoky."
+
+"A cad is a disagreeable person," answered Haywood, "who lacks manners
+and doesn't know his place. They sometimes play baseball."
+
+"I can tell you what a mollycoddle is," said "Smoky." "It's a monkey
+dressed up by its mother and sent out to pick daisies on the lawn."
+
+"When you have the honour to refer to the members of my family," said
+Haywood, with some dim ideas of a code in his mind, "you'd better
+leave the ladies out of your remarks."
+
+"Ho! ladies!" mocked the rude one. "I say ladies! I know what them
+rich women in the city does. They, drink cocktails and swear and give
+parties to gorillas. The papers say so."
+
+Then Haywood knew that it must be. He took off his coat, folded it
+neatly and laid it on the roadside grass, placed his hat upon it and
+began to unknot his blue silk tie.
+
+"Hadn't yer better ring fer yer maid, Arabella?" taunted "Smoky."
+"Wot yer going to do--go to bed?"
+
+"I'm going to give you a good trouncing," said the hero. He did not
+hesitate, although the enemy was far beneath him socially. He
+remembered that his father once thrashed a cabman, and the papers gave
+it two columns, first page. And the _Toadies' Magazine_ had a special
+article on Upper Cuts by the Upper Classes, and ran new pictures of
+the Van Plushvelt country seat, at Fishampton.
+
+"Wot's trouncing?" asked "Smoky," suspiciously. "I don't want your
+old clothes. I'm no--oh, you mean to scrap! My, my! I won't do a
+thing to mamma's pet. Criminy! I'd hate to be a hand-laundered thing
+like you.
+
+"Smoky" waited with some awkwardness for his adversary to prepare for
+battle. His own decks were always clear for action. When he should
+spit upon the palm of his terrible right it was equivalent to "You may
+fire now, Gridley."
+
+The hated patrician advanced, with his shirt sleeves neatly rolled up.
+"Smoky" waited, in an attitude of ease, expecting the affair to be
+conducted according to Fishampton's rules of war. These allowed
+combat to be prefaced by stigma, recrimination, epithet, abuse and
+insult gradually increasing in emphasis and degree. After a round of
+these "you're anothers" would come the chip knocked from the shoulder,
+or the advance across the "dare" line drawn with a toe on the ground.
+Next light taps given and taken, these also increasing in force until
+finally the blood was up and fists going at their best.
+
+But Haywood did not know Fishampton's rules. Noblesse oblige kept a
+faint smile on his face as he walked slowly up to "Smoky" and said:
+
+"Going to play ball?"
+
+"Smoky" quickly understood this to be a putting of the previous
+question, giving him the chance to make practical apology by answering
+it with civility and relevance.
+
+"Listen this time," said he. "I'm goin' skatin' on the river. Don't
+you see me automobile with Chinese lanterns on it standin' and waitin'
+for me?"
+
+Haywood knocked him down.
+
+"Smoky" felt wronged. To thus deprive him of preliminary wrangle and
+objurgation was to send an armoured knight full tilt against a
+crashing lance without permitting him first to caracole around the
+list to the flourish of trumpets. But he scrambled up and fell upon
+his foe, head, feet and fists.
+
+The fight lasted one round of an hour and ten minutes. It was
+lengthened until it was more like a war or a family feud than a fight.
+Haywood had learned some of the science of boxing and wrestling from
+his tutors, but these he discarded for the more instinctive methods of
+battle handed down by the cave-dwelling Van Plushvelts.
+
+So, when he found himself, during the mle, seated upon the kicking
+and roaring "Smoky's" chest, he improved the opportunity by vigorously
+kneading handfuls of sand and soil into his adversary's ears, eyes
+and mouth, and when "Smoky" got the proper leg hold and "turned" him,
+he fastened both hands in the Plushvelt hair and pounded the Plushvelt
+head against the lap of mother earth. Of course, the strife was not
+incessantly active. There were seasons when one sat upon the other,
+holding him down, while each blew like a grampus, spat out the more
+inconveniently large sections of gravel and earth and strove to subdue
+the spirit of his opponent with a frightful and soul-paralyzing glare.
+
+At last, it seemed that in the language of the ring, their efforts
+lacked steam. They broke away, and each disappeared in a cloud as he
+brushed away the dust of the conflict. As soon as his breath
+permitted, Haywood walked close to "Smoky" and said:
+
+"Going to play ball?"
+
+"Smoky" looked pensively at the sky, at his bat lying on the ground,
+and at the "leaguer" rounding his pocket.
+
+"Sure," he said, offhandedly. "The 'Yellowjackets' plays the 'Long
+Islands.' I'm cap'n of the 'Long Islands.'"
+
+"I guess I didn't mean to say you were ragged," said Haywood. "But
+you are dirty, you know."
+
+"Sure," said "Smoky." "Yer get that way knockin' around. Say, I
+don't believe them New York papers about ladies drinkin' and havin'
+monkeys dinin' at the table with 'em. I guess they're lies, like they
+print about people eatin' out of silver plates, and ownin' dogs that
+cost $100."
+
+"Certainly," said Haywood. "What do you play on your team?"
+
+"Ketcher. Ever play any?"
+
+"Never in my life," said Haywood. "I've never known any fellows
+except one or two of my cousins."
+
+"Jer like to learn? We're goin' to have a practice-game before the
+match. Wanter come along? I'll put yer in left-field, and yer won't
+be long ketchin' on."
+
+"I'd like it bully," said Haywood. "I've always wanted to play
+baseball."
+
+The ladies' maids of New York and the families of Western mine owners
+with social ambitions will remember well the sensation that was
+created by the report that the young multi-millionaire, Haywood Van
+Plushvelt, was playing ball with the village youths of Fishampton. It
+was conceded that the millennium of democracy had come. Reporters and
+photographers swarmed to the island. The papers printed half-page
+pictures of him as short-stop stopping a hot grounder. The _Toadies'
+Magazine_ got out a Bat and Ball number that covered the subject
+historically, beginning with the vampire bat and ending with the
+Patriarchs' ball--illustrated with interior views of the Van
+Plushvelt country seat. Ministers, educators and sociologists
+everywhere hailed the event as the tocsin call that proclaimed the
+universal brotherhood of man.
+
+One afternoon I was reclining under the trees near the shore at
+Fishampton in the esteemed company of an eminent, bald-headed young
+sociologist. By way of note it may be inserted that all sociologists
+are more or less bald, and exactly thirty-two. Look 'em over.
+
+The sociologist was citing the Van Plushvelt case as the most
+important "uplift" symptom of a generation, and as an excuse for his
+own existence.
+
+Immediately before us were the village baseball grounds. And now came
+the sportive youth of Fishampton and distributed themselves, shouting,
+about the diamond.
+
+"There," said the sociologist, pointing, "there is young Van
+Plushvelt."
+
+I raised myself (so far a cosycophant with Mary Ann) and gazed.
+
+Young Van Plushvelt sat upon the ground. He was dressed in a ragged
+red sweater, wrecked and weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and
+trousers of the "serviceable" brand. Dust clinging to the moisture
+induced by free exercise, darkened wide areas of his face.
+
+"That is he," repeated the sociologist. If he had said "him" I could
+have been less vindictive.
+
+On a bench, with an air, sat the young millionaire's chum.
+
+He was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a neat white straw
+hat, neat low-cut tan shoes, linen of the well-known "immaculate"
+trade mark, a neat, narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried a slender,
+neat bamboo cane.
+
+I laughed loudly and vulgarly.
+
+"What you want to do," said I to the sociologist, "is to establish a
+reformatory for the Logical Vicious Circle. Or else I've got wheels.
+It looks to me as if things are running round and round in circles
+instead of getting anywhere."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked the man of progress.
+
+"Why, look what he has done to 'Smoky'," I replied.
+
+"You will always be a fool," said my friend, the sociologist,
+getting up and walking away.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF
+
+
+It looked like a good thing: but wait till I tell you. We were down
+South, in Alabama--Bill Driscoll and myself--when this kidnapping
+idea struck us. It was, as Bill afterward expressed it, "during a
+moment of temporary mental apparition"; but we didn't find that out
+till later.
+
+There was a town down there, as flat as a flannel-cake, and called
+Summit, of course. It contained inhabitants of as undeleterious and
+self-satisfied a class of peasantry as ever clustered around a
+Maypole.
+
+Bill and me had a joint capital of about six hundred dollars, and
+we needed just two thousand dollars more to pull off a fraudulent
+town-lot scheme in Western Illinois with. We talked it over on the
+front steps of the hotel. Philoprogenitiveness, says we, is strong
+in semi-rural communities; therefore and for other reasons, a
+kidnapping project ought to do better there than in the radius of
+newspapers that send reporters out in plain clothes to stir up talk
+about such things. We knew that Summit couldn't get after us with
+anything stronger than constables and maybe some lackadaisical
+bloodhounds and a diatribe or two in the _Weekly Farmers' Budget_.
+So, it looked good.
+
+We selected for our victim the only child of a prominent citizen named
+Ebenezer Dorset. The father was respectable and tight, a mortgage
+fancier and a stern, upright collection-plate passer and forecloser.
+The kid was a boy of ten, with bas-relief freckles, and hair the
+colour of the cover of the magazine you buy at the news-stand when you
+want to catch a train. Bill and me figured that Ebenezer would melt
+down for a ransom of two thousand dollars to a cent. But wait till I
+tell you.
+
+About two miles from Summit was a little mountain, covered with a
+dense cedar brake. On the rear elevation of this mountain was a cave.
+There we stored provisions. One evening after sundown, we drove in a
+buggy past old Dorset's house. The kid was in the street, throwing
+rocks at a kitten on the opposite fence.
+
+"Hey, little boy!" says Bill, "would you like to have a bag of candy
+and a nice ride?"
+
+The boy catches Bill neatly in the eye with a piece of brick.
+
+"That will cost the old man an extra five hundred dollars," says Bill,
+climbing over the wheel.
+
+That boy put up a fight like a welter-weight cinnamon bear; but, at
+last, we got him down in the bottom of the buggy and drove away. We
+took him up to the cave and I hitched the horse in the cedar brake.
+After dark I drove the buggy to the little village, three miles away,
+where we had hired it, and walked back to the mountain.
+
+Bill was pasting court-plaster over the scratches and bruises on his
+features. There was a fire burning behind the big rock at the entrance
+of the cave, and the boy was watching a pot of boiling coffee, with
+two buzzard tail-feathers stuck in his red hair. He points a stick
+at me when I come up, and says:
+
+"Ha! cursed paleface, do you dare to enter the camp of Red Chief, the
+terror of the plains?
+
+"He's all right now," says Bill, rolling up his trousers and examining
+some bruises on his shins. "We're playing Indian. We're making
+Buffalo Bill's show look like magic-lantern views of Palestine in the
+town hall. I'm Old Hank, the Trapper, Red Chief's captive, and I'm to
+be scalped at daybreak. By Geronimo! that kid can kick hard."
+
+Yes, sir, that boy seemed to be having the time of his life. The fun
+of camping out in a cave had made him forget that he was a captive
+himself. He immediately christened me Snake-eye, the Spy, and
+announced that, when his braves returned from the warpath, I was to be
+broiled at the stake at the rising of the sun.
+
+Then we had supper; and he filled his mouth full of bacon and bread
+and gravy, and began to talk. He made a during-dinner speech
+something like this:
+
+"I like this fine. I never camped out before; but I had a pet 'possum
+once, and I was nine last birthday. I hate to go to school. Rats ate
+up sixteen of Jimmy Talbot's aunt's speckled hen's eggs. Are there
+any real Indians in these woods? I want some more gravy. Does the
+trees moving make the wind blow? We had five puppies. What makes your
+nose so red, Hank? My father has lots of money. Are the stars hot? I
+whipped Ed Walker twice, Saturday. I don't like girls. You dassent
+catch toads unless with a string. Do oxen make any noise? Why are
+oranges round? Have you got beds to sleep on in this cave? Amos Murray
+has got six toes. A parrot can talk, but a monkey or a fish can't.
+How many does it take to make twelve?"
+
+Every few minutes he would remember that he was a pesky redskin, and
+pick up his stick rifle and tiptoe to the mouth of the cave to rubber
+for the scouts of the hated paleface. Now and then he would let out a
+war-whoop that made Old Hank the Trapper shiver. That boy had Bill
+terrorized from the start.
+
+"Red Chief," says I to the kid, "would you like to go home?"
+
+"Aw, what for?" says he. "I don't have any fun at home. I hate to
+go to school. I like to camp out. You won't take me back home again,
+Snake-eye, will you?"
+
+"Not right away," says I. "We'll stay here in the cave a while."
+
+"All right!" says he. "That'll be fine. I never had such fun in all
+my life."
+
+We went to bed about eleven o'clock. We spread down some wide
+blankets and quilts and put Red Chief between us. We weren't afraid
+he'd run away. He kept us awake for three hours, jumping up and
+reaching for his rifle and screeching: "Hist! pard," in mine and
+Bill's ears, as the fancied crackle of a twig or the rustle of a leaf
+revealed to his young imagination the stealthy approach of the outlaw
+band. At last, I fell into a troubled sleep, and dreamed that I had
+been kidnapped and chained to a tree by a ferocious pirate with red
+hair.
+
+Just at daybreak, I was awakened by a series of awful screams from
+Bill. They weren't yells, or howls, or shouts, or whoops, or yawps,
+such as you'd expect from a manly set of vocal organs--they were
+simply indecent, terrifying, humiliating screams, such as women emit
+when they see ghosts or caterpillars. It's an awful thing to hear a
+strong, desperate, fat man scream incontinently in a cave at daybreak.
+
+I jumped up to see what the matter was. Red Chief was sitting on
+Bill's chest, with one hand twined in Bill's hair. In the other he
+had the sharp case-knife we used for slicing bacon; and he was
+industriously and realistically trying to take Bill's scalp, according
+to the sentence that had been pronounced upon him the evening before.
+
+I got the knife away from the kid and made him lie down again. But,
+from that moment, Bill's spirit was broken. He laid down on his side
+of the bed, but he never closed an eye again in sleep as long as that
+boy was with us. I dozed off for a while, but along toward sun-up I
+remembered that Red Chief had said I was to be burned at the stake
+at the rising of the sun. I wasn't nervous or afraid; but I sat up
+and lit my pipe and leaned against a rock.
+
+"What you getting up so soon for, Sam?" asked Bill.
+
+"Me?" says I. "Oh, I got a kind of a pain in my shoulder. I thought
+sitting up would rest it."
+
+"You're a liar!" says Bill. "You're afraid. You was to be burned at
+sunrise, and you was afraid he'd do it. And he would, too, if he
+could find a match. Ain't it awful, Sam? Do you think anybody will pay
+out money to get a little imp like that back home?"
+
+"Sure," said I. "A rowdy kid like that is just the kind that parents
+dote on. Now, you and the Chief get up and cook breakfast, while I go
+up on the top of this mountain and reconnoitre."
+
+I went up on the peak of the little mountain and ran my eye over the
+contiguous vicinity. Over toward Summit I expected to see the sturdy
+yeomanry of the village armed with scythes and pitchforks beating the
+countryside for the dastardly kidnappers. But what I saw was a
+peaceful landscape dotted with one man ploughing with a dun mule.
+Nobody was dragging the creek; no couriers dashed hither and yon,
+bringing tidings of no news to the distracted parents. There was a
+sylvan attitude of somnolent sleepiness pervading that section of the
+external outward surface of Alabama that lay exposed to my view.
+"Perhaps," says I to myself, "it has not yet been discovered that
+the wolves have borne away the tender lambkin from the fold. Heaven
+help the wolves!" says I, and I went down the mountain to breakfast.
+
+When I got to the cave I found Bill backed up against the side of it,
+breathing hard, and the boy threatening to smash him with a rock half
+as big as a cocoanut.
+
+"He put a red-hot boiled potato down my back," explained Bill, "and
+then mashed it with his foot; and I boxed his ears. Have you got a gun
+about you, Sam?"
+
+I took the rock away from the boy and kind of patched up the argument.
+"I'll fix you," says the kid to Bill. "No man ever yet struck the Red
+Chief but what he got paid for it. You better beware!"
+
+After breakfast the kid takes a piece of leather with strings wrapped
+around it out of his pocket and goes outside the cave unwinding it.
+
+"What's he up to now?" says Bill, anxiously. "You don't think he'll
+run away, do you, Sam?"
+
+"No fear of it," says I. "He don't seem to be much of a home body.
+But we've got to fix up some plan about the ransom. There don't seem
+to be much excitement around Summit on account of his disappearance;
+but maybe they haven't realized yet that he's gone. His folks may
+think he's spending the night with Aunt Jane or one of the neighbours.
+Anyhow, he'll be missed to-day. To-night we must get a message to his
+father demanding the two thousand dollars for his return."
+
+Just then we heard a kind Of war-whoop, such as David might have
+emitted when he knocked out the champion Goliath. It was a sling that
+Red Chief had pulled out of his pocket, and he was whirling it around
+his head.
+
+I dodged, and heard a heavy thud and a kind of a sigh from Bill, like
+a horse gives out when you take his saddle off. A niggerhead rock the
+size of an egg had caught Bill just behind his left ear. He loosened
+himself all over and fell in the fire across the frying pan of hot
+water for washing the dishes. I dragged him out and poured cold water
+on his head for half an hour.
+
+By and by, Bill sits up and feels behind his ear and says: "Sam, do
+you know who my favourite Biblical character is?"
+
+"Take it easy," says I. "You'll come to your senses presently."
+
+"King Herod," says he. "You won't go away and leave me here alone,
+will you, Sam?"
+
+I went out and caught that boy and shook him until his freckles
+rattled.
+
+"If you don't behave," says I, "I'll take you straight home. Now, are
+you going to be good, or not?"
+
+"I was only funning," says he sullenly. "I didn't mean to hurt Old
+Hank. But what did he hit me for? I'll behave, Snake-eye, if you
+won't send me home, and if you'll let me play the Black Scout to-day."
+
+"I don't know the game," says I. "That's for you and Mr. Bill to
+decide. He's your playmate for the day. I'm going away for a while,
+on business. Now, you come in and make friends with him and say you
+are sorry for hurting him, or home you go, at once."
+
+I made him and Bill shake hands, and then I took Bill aside and told
+him I was going to Poplar Cove, a little village three miles from the
+cave, and find out what I could about how the kidnapping had been
+regarded in Summit. Also, I thought it best to send a peremptory
+letter to old man Dorset that day, demanding the ransom and dictating
+how it should be paid.
+
+"You know, Sam," says Bill, "I've stood by you without batting an
+eye in earthquakes, fire and flood--in poker games, dynamite
+outrages, police raids, train robberies and cyclones. I never lost my
+nerve yet till we kidnapped that two-legged skyrocket of a kid. He's
+got me going. You won't leave me long with him, will you, Sam?"
+
+"I'll be back some time this afternoon," says I. "You must keep the
+boy amused and quiet till I return. And now we'll write the letter to
+old Dorset."
+
+Bill and I got paper and pencil and worked on the letter while Red
+Chief, with a blanket wrapped around him, strutted up and down,
+guarding the mouth of the cave. Bill begged me tearfully to make the
+ransom fifteen hundred dollars instead of two thousand. "I ain't
+attempting," says he, "to decry the celebrated moral aspect of
+parental affection, but we're dealing with humans, and it ain't human
+for anybody to give up two thousand dollars for that forty-pound chunk
+of freckled wildcat. I'm willing to take a chance at fifteen hundred
+dollars. You can charge the difference up to me."
+
+So, to relieve Bill, I acceded, and we collaborated a letter that ran
+this way:
+
+ _Ebenezer Dorset, Esq.:_
+
+ We have your boy concealed in a place far from Summit. It is useless
+ for you or the most skilful detectives to attempt to find him.
+ Absolutely, the only terms on which you can have him restored to you
+ are these: We demand fifteen hundred dollars in large bills for his
+ return; the money to be left at midnight to-night at the same spot
+ and in the same box as your reply--as hereinafter described. If
+ you agree to these terms, send your answer in writing by a solitary
+ messenger to-night at half-past eight o'clock. After crossing Owl
+ Creek, on the road to Poplar Cove, there are three large trees about
+ a hundred yards apart, close to the fence of the wheat field on the
+ right-hand side. At the bottom of the fence-post, opposite the
+ third tree, will be found a small pasteboard box.
+
+ The messenger will place the answer in this box and return
+ immediately to Summit.
+
+ If you attempt any treachery or fail to comply with our demand as
+ stated, you will never see your boy again.
+
+ If you pay the money as demanded, he will be returned to you safe
+ and well within three hours. These terms are final, and if you do
+ not accede to them no further communication will be attempted.
+
+ TWO DESPERATE MEN.
+
+I addressed this letter to Dorset, and put it in my pocket. As I was
+about to start, the kid comes up to me and says:
+
+"Aw, Snake-eye, you said I could play the Black Scout while you was
+gone."
+
+"Play it, of course," says I. "Mr. Bill will play with you. What
+kind of a game is it?"
+
+"I'm the Black Scout," says Red Chief, "and I have to ride to the
+stockade to warn the settlers that the Indians are coming. I'm tired
+of playing Indian myself. I want to be the Black Scout."
+
+"All right," says I. "It sounds harmless to me. I guess Mr. Bill will
+help you foil the pesky savages."
+
+"What am I to do?" asks Bill, looking at the kid suspiciously.
+
+"You are the hoss," says Black Scout. "Get down on your hands and
+knees. How can I ride to the stockade without a hoss?"
+
+"You'd better keep him interested," said I, "till we get the scheme
+going. Loosen up."
+
+Bill gets down on his all fours, and a look comes in his eye like a
+rabbit's when you catch it in a trap.
+
+"How far is it to the stockade, kid?" he asks, in a husky manner of
+voice.
+
+"Ninety miles," says the Black Scout. "And you have to hump yourself
+to get there on time. Whoa, now!"
+
+The Black Scout jumps on Bill's back and digs his heels in his side.
+
+"For Heaven's sake," says Bill, "hurry back, Sam, as soon as you can.
+I wish we hadn't made the ransom more than a thousand. Say, you quit
+kicking me or I'll get up and warm you good."
+
+I walked over to Poplar Cove and sat around the postoffice and
+store, talking with the chawbacons that came in to trade. One
+whiskerando says that he hears Summit is all upset on account of Elder
+Ebenezer Dorset's boy having been lost or stolen. That was all I
+wanted to know. I bought some smoking tobacco, referred casually to
+the price of black-eyed peas, posted my letter surreptitiously and
+came away. The postmaster said the mail-carrier would come by in an
+hour to take the mail on to Summit.
+
+When I got back to the cave Bill and the boy were not to be found. I
+explored the vicinity of the cave, and risked a yodel or two, but
+there was no response.
+
+So I lighted my pipe and sat down on a mossy bank to await
+developments.
+
+In about half an hour I heard the bushes rustle, and Bill wabbled out
+into the little glade in front of the cave. Behind him was the kid,
+stepping softly like a scout, with a broad grin on his face. Bill
+stopped, took off his hat and wiped his face with a red handkerchief.
+The kid stopped about eight feet behind him.
+
+"Sam," says Bill, "I suppose you'll think I'm a renegade, but I
+couldn't help it. I'm a grown person with masculine proclivities and
+habits of self-defense, but there is a time when all systems of
+egotism and predominance fail. The boy is gone. I have sent him
+home. All is off. There was martyrs in old times," goes on Bill,
+"that suffered death rather than give up the particular graft they
+enjoyed. None of 'em ever was subjugated to such supernatural
+tortures as I have been. I tried to be faithful to our articles of
+depredation; but there came a limit."
+
+"What's the trouble, Bill?" I asks him.
+
+"I was rode," says Bill, "the ninety miles to the stockade, not
+barring an inch. Then, when the settlers was rescued, I was given
+oats. Sand ain't a palatable substitute. And then, for an hour I
+had to try to explain to him why there was nothin' in holes, how
+a road can run both ways and what makes the grass green. I tell
+you, Sam, a human can only stand so much. I takes him by the neck
+of his clothes and drags him down the mountain. On the way he
+kicks my legs black-and-blue from the knees down; and I've got to
+have two or three bites on my thumb and hand cauterized.
+
+"But he's gone"--continues Bill--"gone home. I showed him the
+road to Summit and kicked him about eight feet nearer there at one
+kick. I'm sorry we lose the ransom; but it was either that or Bill
+Driscoll to the madhouse."
+
+Bill is puffing and blowing, but there is a look of ineffable peace
+and growing content on his rose-pink features.
+
+"Bill," says I, "there isn't any heart disease in your family, is
+there?
+
+"No," says Bill, "nothing chronic except malaria and accidents. Why?"
+
+"Then you might turn around," says I, "and have a took behind you."
+
+Bill turns and sees the boy, and loses his complexion and sits down
+plump on the round and begins to pluck aimlessly at grass and little
+sticks. For an hour I was afraid for his mind. And then I told him
+that my scheme was to put the whole job through immediately and that
+we would get the ransom and be off with it by midnight if old Dorset
+fell in with our proposition. So Bill braced up enough to give the
+kid a weak sort of a smile and a promise to play the Russian in a
+Japanese war with him is soon as he felt a little better.
+
+I had a scheme for collecting that ransom without danger of being
+caught by counterplots that ought to commend itself to professional
+kidnappers. The tree under which the answer was to be left--and the
+money later on--was close to the road fence with big, bare fields on
+all sides. If a gang of constables should be watching for any one to
+come for the note they could see him a long way off crossing the
+fields or in the road. But no, sirree! At half-past eight I was up in
+that tree as well hidden as a tree toad, waiting for the messenger to
+arrive.
+
+Exactly on time, a half-grown boy rides up the road on a bicycle,
+locates the pasteboard box at the foot of the fence-post, slips a
+folded piece of paper into it and pedals away again back toward
+Summit.
+
+I waited an hour and then concluded the thing was square. I slid down
+the tree, got the note, slipped along the fence till I struck the
+woods, and was back at the cave in another half an hour. I opened the
+note, got near the lantern and read it to Bill. It was written with a
+pen in a crabbed hand, and the sum and substance of it was this:
+
+ _Two Desperate Men.
+
+ Gentlemen:_ I received your letter to-day by post, in regard to the
+ ransom you ask for the return of my son. I think you are a little
+ high in your demands, and I hereby make you a counter-proposition,
+ which I am inclined to believe you will accept. You bring Johnny
+ home and pay me two hundred and fifty dollars in cash, and I agree
+ to take him off your hands. You had better come at night, for the
+ neighbours believe he is lost, and I couldn't be responsible for
+ what they would do to anybody they saw bringing him back. Very
+ respectfully,
+
+ EBENEZER DORSET.
+
+"Great pirates of Penzance!" says I; "of all the impudent--"
+
+But I glanced at Bill, and hesitated. He had the most appealing look
+in his eyes I ever saw on the face of a dumb or a talking brute.
+
+"Sam," says he, "what's two hundred and fifty dollars, after all?
+We've got the money. One more night of this kid will send me to a bed
+in Bedlam. Besides being a thorough gentleman, I think Mr. Dorset is
+a spendthrift for making us such a liberal offer. You ain't going
+to let the chance go, are you?"
+
+"Tell you the truth, Bill," says I, "this little he ewe lamb has
+somewhat got on my nerves too. We'll take him home, pay the ransom
+and make our get-away."
+
+We took him home that night. We got him to go by telling him that his
+father had bought a silver-mounted rifle and a pair of moccasins for
+him, and we were going to hunt bears the next day.
+
+It was just twelve o'clock when we knocked at Ebenezer's front door.
+Just at the moment when I should have been abstracting the fifteen
+hundred dollars from the box under the tree, according to the original
+proposition, Bill was counting out two hundred and fifty dollars into
+Dorset's hand.
+
+When the kid found out we were going to leave him at home he started
+up a howl like a calliope and fastened himself as tight as a leech to
+Bill's leg. His father peeled him away gradually, like a porous
+plaster.
+
+"How long can you hold him?" asks Bill.
+
+"I'm not as strong as I used to be," says old Dorset, "but I think I
+can promise you ten minutes."
+
+"Enough," says Bill. "In ten minutes I shall cross the Central,
+Southern and Middle Western States, and be legging it trippingly for
+the Canadian border."
+
+And, as dark as it was, and as fat as Bill was, and as good a runner
+as I am, he was a good mile and a half out of Summit before I could
+catch up with him.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+THE MARRY MONTH OF MAY
+
+
+Prithee, smite the poet in the eye when he would sing to you praises
+of the month of May. It is a month presided over by the spirits of
+mischief and madness. Pixies and flibbertigibbets haunt the budding
+woods: Puck and his train of midgets are busy in town and country.
+
+In May nature holds up at us a chiding finger, bidding us remember
+that we are not gods, but overconceited members of her own great
+family. She reminds us that we are brothers to the chowder-doomed
+clam and the donkey; lineal scions of the pansy and the chimpanzee,
+and but cousins-german to the cooing doves, the quacking ducks and the
+housemaids and policemen in the parks.
+
+In May Cupid shoots blindfolded--millionaires marry stenographers;
+wise professors woo white-aproned gum-chewers behind quick-lunch
+counters; schoolma'ams make big bad boys remain after school; lads
+with ladders steal lightly over lawns where Juliet waits in her
+trellissed window with her telescope packed; young couples out for a
+walk come home married; old chaps put on white spats and promenade
+near the Normal School; even married men, grown unwontedly tender and
+sentimental, whack their spouses on the back and growl: "How goes it,
+old girl:"
+
+This May, who is no goddess, but Circe, masquerading at the dance
+given in honour of the fair dbutante, Summer, puts the kibosh on us
+all.
+
+Old Mr. Coulson groaned a little, and then sat up straight in his
+invalid's chair. He had the gout very bad in one foot, a house near
+Gramercy Park, half a million dollars and a daughter. And he had a
+housekeeper, Mrs. Widdup. The fact and the name deserve a sentence
+each. They have it.
+
+When May poked Mr. Coulson he became elder brother to the turtle-dove.
+In the window near which he sat were boxes of jonquils, of hyacinths,
+geraniums and pansies. The breeze brought their odour into the room.
+Immediately there was a well-contested round between the breath of the
+flowers and the able and active effluvium from gout liniment. The
+liniment won easily; but not before the flowers got an uppercut to
+old Mr. Coulson's nose. The deadly work of the implacable, false
+enchantress May was done.
+
+Across the park to the olfactories of Mr. Coulson came other
+unmistakable, characteristic, copyrighted smells of spring that belong
+to the-big-city-above-the-Subway, alone. The smells of hot asphalt,
+underground caverns, gasoline, patchouli, orange peel, sewer gas,
+Albany grabs, Egyptian cigarettes, mortar and the undried ink on
+newspapers. The inblowing air was sweet and mild. Sparrows wrangled
+happily everywhere outdoors. Never trust May.
+
+Mr. Coulson twisted the ends of his white mustache, cursed his foot,
+and pounded a bell on the table by his side.
+
+In came Mrs. Widdup. She was comely to the eye, fair, flustered,
+forty and foxy.
+
+"Higgins is out, sir," she said, with a smile suggestive of vibratory
+massage. "He went to post a letter. Can I do anything for you, sir?"
+
+"It's time for my aconite," said old Mr. Coulson. "Drop it for me.
+The bottle's there. Three drops. In water. D---- that is, confound
+Higgins! There's nobody in this house cares if I die here in this
+chair for want of attention."
+
+Mrs. Widdup sighed deeply.
+
+"Don't be saying that, sir," she said. "There's them that would care
+more than any one knows. Thirteen drops, you said, sir?"
+
+"Three," said old man Coulson.
+
+He took his dose and then Mrs. Widdup's hand. She blushed. Oh, yes,
+it can be done. Just hold your breath and compress the diaphragm.
+
+"Mrs. Widdup," said Mr. Coulson, "the springtime's full upon us."
+
+"Ain't that right?" said Mrs. Widdup. "The air's real warm. And
+there's bock-beer signs on every corner. And the park's all yaller and
+pink and blue with flowers; and I have such shooting pains up my legs
+and body."
+
+"'In the spring,'" quoted Mr. Coulson, curling his mustache, "'a y----
+that is, a man's--fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.'"
+
+"Lawsy, now!" exclaimed Mrs. Widdup; "ain't that right? Seems like
+it's in the air."
+
+"'In the spring,'" continued old Mr. Coulson, "'a livelier iris shines
+upon the burnished dove.'"
+
+"They do be lively, the Irish," sighed Mrs. Widdup pensively.
+
+"Mrs. Widdup," said Mr. Coulson, making a face at a twinge of his gouty
+foot, "this would be a lonesome house without you. I'm an--that is,
+I'm an elderly man--but I'm worth a comfortable lot of money. If half
+a million dollars' worth of Government bonds and the true affection of
+a heart that, though no longer beating with the first ardour of youth,
+can still throb with genuine--"
+
+The loud noise of an overturned chair near the portires of the
+adjoining room interrupted the venerable and scarcely suspecting
+victim of May.
+
+In stalked Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson, bony, durable, tall,
+high-nosed, frigid, well-bred, thirty-five, in-the-neighbourhood-of-
+Gramercy-Parkish. She put up a lorgnette. Mrs. Widdup hastily
+stooped and arranged the bandages on Mr. Coulson's gouty foot.
+
+"I thought Higgins was with you," said Miss Van Meeker Constantia.
+
+"Higgins went out," explained her father, "and Mrs. Widdup answered
+the bell. That is better now, Mrs. Widdup, thank you. No; there is
+nothing else I require."
+
+The housekeeper retired, pink under the cool, inquiring stare of Miss
+Coulson.
+
+"This spring weather is lovely, isn't it, daughter?" said the old man,
+consciously conscious.
+
+"That's just it," replied Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson, somewhat
+obscurely. "When does Mrs. Widdup start on her vacation, papa?"
+
+"I believe she said a week from to-day," said Mr. Coulson.
+
+Miss Van Meeker Constantia stood for a minute at the window gazing,
+toward the little park, flooded with the mellow afternoon sunlight.
+With the eye of a botanist she viewed the flowers--most potent
+weapons of insidious May. With the cool pulses of a virgin of
+Cologne she withstood the attack of the ethereal mildness. The arrows
+of the pleasant sunshine fell back, frostbitten, from the cold panoply
+of her unthrilled bosom. The odour of the flowers waked no soft
+sentiments in the unexplored recesses of her dormant heart. The chirp
+of the sparrows gave her a pain. She mocked at May.
+
+But although Miss Coulson was proof against the season, she was
+keen enough to estimate its power. She knew that elderly men and
+thick-waisted women jumped as educated fleas in the ridiculous train
+of May, the merry mocker of the months. She had heard of foolish old
+gentlemen marrying their housekeepers before. What a humiliating
+thing, after all, was this feeling called love!
+
+The next morning at 8 o'clock, when the iceman called, the cook told
+him that Miss Coulson wanted to see him in the basement.
+
+"Well, ain't I the Olcott and Depew; not mentioning the first name at
+all?" said the iceman, admiringly, of himself.
+
+As a concession he rolled his sleeves down, dropped his icehooks on a
+syringa and went back. When Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson
+addressed him he took off his hat.
+
+"There is a rear entrance to this basement," said Miss Coulson, "which
+can be reached by driving into the vacant lot next door, where they
+are excavating for a building. I want you to bring in that way within
+two hours 1,000 pounds of ice. You may have to bring another man or
+two to help you. I will show you where I want it placed. I also want
+1,000 pounds a day delivered the same way for the next four days.
+Your company may charge the ice on our regular bill. This is for your
+extra trouble."
+
+Miss Coulson tendered a ten-dollar bill. The iceman bowed, and held
+his hat in his two hands behind him.
+
+"Not if you'll excuse me, lady. It'll be a pleasure to fix things up
+for you any way you please."
+
+Alas for May!
+
+About noon Mr. Coulson knocked two glasses off his table, broke the
+spring of his bell and yelled for Higgins at the same time.
+
+"Bring an axe," commanded Mr. Coulson, sardonically, "or send out
+for a quart of prussic acid, or have a policeman come in and shoot me.
+I'd rather that than be frozen to death."
+
+"It does seem to be getting cool, Sir," said Higgins. "I hadn't
+noticed it before. I'll close the window, Sir."
+
+"Do," said Mr. Coulson. "They call this spring, do they? If it keeps
+up long I'll go back to Palm Beach. House feels like a morgue."
+
+Later Miss Coulson dutifully came in to inquire how the gout was
+progressing.
+
+"'Stantia," said the old man, "how is the weather outdoors?"
+
+"Bright," answered Miss Coulson, "but chilly."
+
+"Feels like the dead of winter to me," said Mr. Coulson.
+
+"An instance," said Constantia, gazing abstractedly out the window,
+"of 'winter lingering in the lap of spring,' though the metaphor is
+not in the most refined taste."
+
+A little later she walked down by the side of the little park and on
+westward to Broadway to accomplish a little shopping.
+
+A little later than that Mrs. Widdup entered the invalid's room.
+
+"Did you ring, Sir?" she asked, dimpling in many places. "I asked
+Higgins to go to the drug store, and I thought I heard your bell."
+
+"I did not," said Mr. Coulson.
+
+"I'm afraid," said Mrs. Widdup, "I interrupted you sir, yesterday when
+you were about to say something."
+
+"How comes it, Mrs. Widdup," said old man Coulson sternly, "that I
+find it so cold in this house?"
+
+"Cold, Sir?" said the housekeeper, "why, now, since you speak of it
+it do seem cold in this room. But, outdoors it's as warm and fine
+as June, sir. And how this weather do seem to make one's heart jump
+out of one's shirt waist, sir. And the ivy all leaved out on the side
+of the house, and the hand-organs playing, and the children dancing on
+the sidewalk--'tis a great time for speaking out what's in the
+heart. You were saying yesterday, sir--"
+
+"Woman!" roared Mr. Coulson; "you are a fool. I pay you to take care
+of this house. I am freezing to death in my own room, and you come in
+and drivel to me about ivy and hand-organs. Get me an overcoat at
+once. See that all doors and windows are closed below. An old, fat,
+irresponsible, one-sided object like you prating about springtime
+and flowers in the middle of winter! When Higgins comes back, tell him
+to bring me a hot rum punch. And now get out!"
+
+But who shall shame the bright face of May? Rogue though she be and
+disturber of sane men's peace, no wise virgins cunning nor cold
+storage shall make her bow her head in the bright galaxy of months.
+
+Oh, yes, the story was not quite finished.
+
+A night passed, and Higgins helped old man Coulson in the morning to
+his chair by the window. The cold of the room was gone. Heavenly
+odours and fragrant mildness entered.
+
+In hurried Mrs. Widdup, and stood by his chair. Mr. Coulson reached
+his bony hand and grasped her plump one.
+
+"Mrs. Widdup," he said, "this house would be no home without you. I
+have half a million dollars. If that and the true affection of a
+heart no longer in its youthful prime, but still not cold, could--"
+
+"I found out what made it cold," said Mrs. Widdup, leanin' against his
+chair. "'Twas ice--tons of it--in the basement and in the furnace
+room, everywhere. I shut off the registers that it was coming through
+into your room, Mr. Coulson, poor soul! And now it's Maytime again."
+
+"A true heart," went on old man Coulson, a little wanderingly, "that
+the springtime has brought to life again, and--but what will my
+daughter say, Mrs. Widdup?"
+
+"Never fear, sir," said Mrs. Widdup, cheerfully. "Miss Coulson, she
+ran away with the iceman last night, sir!"
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+A TECHNICAL ERROR
+
+
+I never cared especially for feuds, believing them to be even more
+overrated products of our country than grapefruit, scrapple, or
+honeymoons. Nevertheless, if I may be allowed, I will tell you of an
+Indian Territory feud of which I was press-agent, camp-follower, and
+inaccessory during the fact.
+
+I was on a visit to Sam Durkee's ranch, where I had a great time
+falling off unmanicured ponies and waving my bare hand at the lower
+jaws of wolves about two miles away. Sam was a hardened person of
+about twenty-five, with a reputation for going home in the dark with
+perfect equanimity, though often with reluctance.
+
+Over in the Creek Nation was a family bearing the name of Tatum. I
+was told that the Durkees and Tatums had been feuding for years.
+Several of each family had bitten the grass, and it was expected that
+more Nebuchadnezzars would follow. A younger generation of each
+family was growing up, and the grass was keeping pace with them. But I
+gathered that they had fought fairly; that they had not lain in
+cornfields and aimed at the division of their enemies' suspenders in
+the back--partly, perhaps, because there were no cornfields, and
+nobody wore more than one suspender. Nor had any woman or child of
+either house ever been harmed. In those days--and you will find it
+so yet--their women were safe.
+
+Sam Durkee had a girl. (If it were an all-fiction magazine that I
+expect to sell this story to, I should say, "Mr. Durkee rejoiced in a
+fiance.") Her name was Ella Baynes. They appeared to be devoted to
+each other, and to have perfect confidence in each other, as all
+couples do who are and have or aren't and haven't. She was tolerably
+pretty, with a heavy mass of brown hair that helped her along. He
+introduced me to her, which seemed not to lessen her preference for
+him; so I reasoned that they were surely soul-mates.
+
+Miss Baynes lived in Kingfisher, twenty miles from the ranch. Sam
+lived on a gallop between the two places.
+
+One day there came to Kingfisher a courageous young man, rather small,
+with smooth face and regular features. He made many inquiries about
+the business of the town, and especially of the inhabitants
+cognominally. He said he was from Muscogee, and he looked it, with
+his yellow shoes and crocheted four-in-hand. I met him once when I
+rode in for the mail. He said his name was Beverly Travers, which
+seemed rather improbable.
+
+There were active times on the ranch, just then, and Sam was too busy
+to go to town often. As an incompetent and generally worthless guest,
+it devolved upon me to ride in for little things such as post cards,
+barrels of flour, baking-powder, smoking-tobacco, and--letters from
+Ella.
+
+One day, when I was messenger for half a gross of cigarette papers
+and a couple of wagon tires, I saw the alleged Beverly Travers in a
+yellow-wheeled buggy with Ella Baynes, driving about town as
+ostentatiously as the black, waxy mud would permit. I knew that
+this information would bring no balm of Gilead to Sam's soul, so I
+refrained from including it in the news of the city that I retailed
+on my return. But on the next afternoon an elongated ex-cowboy of
+the name of Simmons, an old-time pal of Sam's, who kept a feed store
+in Kingfisher, rode out to the ranch and rolled and burned many
+cigarettes before he would talk. When he did make oration, his words
+were these:
+
+"Say, Sam, there's been a description of a galoot miscallin' himself
+Bevel-edged Travels impairing the atmospheric air of Kingfisher for
+the past two weeks. You know who he was? He was not otherwise than
+Ben Tatum, from the Creek Nation, son of old Gopher Tatum that your
+Uncle Newt shot last February. You know what he done this morning?
+He killed your brother Lester--shot him in the co't-house yard."
+
+I wondered if Sam had heard. He pulled a twig from a mesquite bush,
+chewed it gravely, and said:
+
+"He did, did he? He killed Lester?"
+
+"The same," said Simmons. "And he did more. He run away with your
+girl, the same as to say Miss Ella Baynes. I thought you might like
+to know, so I rode out to impart the information."
+
+"I am much obliged, Jim," said Sam, taking the chewed twig from his
+mouth. "Yes, I'm glad you rode Out. Yes, I'm right glad."
+
+"Well, I'll be ridin' back, I reckon. That boy I left in the feed
+store don't know hay from oats. He shot Lester in the back."
+
+"Shot him in the back?"
+
+"Yes, while he was hitchin' his hoss."
+
+"I'm much obliged, Jim."
+
+"I kind of thought you'd like to know as soon as you could."
+
+"Come in and have some coffee before you ride back, Jim?"
+
+"Why, no, I reckon not; I must get back to the store."
+
+"And you say--"
+
+"Yes, Sam. Everybody seen 'em drive away together in a buckboard,
+with a big bundle, like clothes, tied up in the back of it. He was
+drivin' the team he brought over with him from Muscogee. They'll be
+hard to overtake right away."
+
+"And which--"
+
+"I was goin' on to tell you. They left on the Guthrie road; but
+there's no tellin' which forks they'll take--you know that."
+
+"All right, Jim; much obliged."
+
+"You're welcome, Sam."
+
+Simmons rolled a cigarette and stabbed his pony with both heels.
+Twenty yards away he reined up and called back:
+
+"You don't want no--assistance, as you might say?"
+
+"Not any, thanks."
+
+"I didn't think you would. Well, so long!"
+
+Sam took out and opened a bone-handled pocket-knife and scraped a
+dried piece of mud from his left boot. I thought at first he was
+going to swear a vendetta on the blade of it, or recite "The Gipsy's
+Curse." The few feuds I had ever seen or read about usually opened
+that way. This one seemed to be presented with a new treatment.
+Thus offered on the stage, it would have been hissed off, and one of
+Belasco's thrilling melodramas demanded instead.
+
+"I wonder," said Sam, with a profoundly thoughtful expression, "if the
+cook has any cold beans left over!"
+
+He called Wash, the Negro cook, and finding that he had some, ordered
+him to heat up the pot and make some strong coffee. Then we went into
+Sam's private room, where he slept, and kept his armoury, dogs, and the
+saddles of his favourite mounts. He took three or four six-shooters
+out of a bookcase and began to look them over, whistling "The Cowboy's
+Lament" abstractedly. Afterward he ordered the two best horses on the
+ranch saddled and tied to the hitching-post.
+
+Now, in the feud business, in all sections of the country, I have
+observed that in one particular there is a delicate but strict
+etiquette belonging. You must not mention the word or refer to the
+subject in the presence of a feudist. It would be more reprehensible
+than commenting upon the mole on the chin of your rich aunt. I found,
+later on, that there is another unwritten rule, but I think that
+belongs solely to the West.
+
+It yet lacked two hours to supper-time; but in twenty minutes Sam and
+I were plunging deep into the reheated beans, hot coffee, and cold
+beef.
+
+"Nothing like a good meal before a long ride," said Sam. "Eat hearty."
+
+I had a sudden suspicion.
+
+"Why did you have two horses saddled?" I asked.
+
+"One, two--one, two," said Sam. "You can count, can't you?"
+
+His mathematics carried with it a momentary qualm and a lesson. The
+thought had not occurred to him that the thought could possibly occur
+to me not to ride at his side on that red road to revenge and justice.
+It was the higher calculus. I was booked for the trail. I began to
+eat more beans.
+
+In an hour we set forth at a steady gallop eastward. Our horses were
+Kentucky-bred, strengthened by the mesquite grass of the west. Ben
+Tatum's steeds may have been swifter, and he had a good lead; but if
+he had heard the punctual thuds of the hoofs of those trailers of
+ours, born in the heart of feudland, he might have felt that
+retribution was creeping up on the hoof-prints of his dapper nags.
+
+I knew that Ben Tatum's card to play was flight--flight until he
+came within the safer territory of his own henchmen and supporters.
+He knew that the man pursuing him would follow the trail to any end
+where it might lead.
+
+During the ride Sam talked of the prospect for rain, of the price of
+beef, and of the musical glasses. You would have thought he had never
+had a brother or a sweetheart or an enemy on earth. There are some
+subjects too big even for the words in the "Unabridged." Knowing
+this phase of the feud code, but not having practised it sufficiently,
+I overdid the thing by telling some slightly funny anecdotes. Sam
+laughed at exactly the right place--laughed with his mouth. When I
+caught sight of his mouth, I wished I had been blessed with enough
+sense of humour to have suppressed those anecdotes.
+
+Our first sight of them we had in Guthrie. Tired and hungry, we
+stumbled, unwashed, into a little yellow-pine hotel and sat at a
+table. In the opposite corner we saw the fugitives. They were bent
+upon their meal, but looked around at times uneasily.
+
+The girl was dressed in brown--one of these smooth, half-shiny,
+silky-looking affairs with lace collar and cuffs, and what I believe
+they call an accordion-plaited skirt. She wore a thick brown veil down
+to her nose, and a broad-brimmed straw hat with some kind of feathers
+adorning it. The man wore plain, dark clothes, and his hair was
+trimmed very short. He was such a man as you might see anywhere.
+
+There they were--the murderer and the woman he had stolen. There we
+were--the rightful avenger, according to the code, and the
+supernumerary who writes these words.
+
+For one time, at least, in the heart of the supernumerary there rose
+the killing instinct. For one moment he joined the force of
+combatants--orally.
+
+"What are you waiting for, Sam?" I said in a whisper. "Let him have
+it now!"
+
+Sam gave a melancholy sigh.
+
+"You don't understand; but _he_ does," he said. "_He_ knows. Mr.
+Tenderfoot, there's a rule out here among white men in the Nation that
+you can't shoot a man when he's with a woman. I never knew it to be
+broke yet. You _can't_ do it. You've got to get him in a gang of men or
+by himself. That's why. He knows it, too. We all know. So, that's
+Mr. Ben Tatum! One of the 'pretty men'! I'll cut him out of the herd
+before they leave the hotel, and regulate his account!"
+
+After supper the flying pair disappeared quickly. Although Sam haunted
+lobby and stairway and halls half the night, in some mysterious way
+the fugitives eluded him; and in the morning the veiled lady in the
+brown dress with the accordion-plaited skirt and the dapper young man
+with the close-clipped hair, and the buckboard with the prancing nags,
+were gone.
+
+
+It is a monotonous story, that of the ride; so it shall be
+curtailed. Once again we overtook them on a road. We were about
+fifty yards behind. They turned in the buckboard and looked at us;
+then drove on without whipping up their horses. Their safety no
+longer lay in speed. Ben Tatum knew. He knew that the only rock of
+safety left to him was the code. There is no doubt that, had he
+been alone, the matter would have been settled quickly with Sam
+Durkee in the usual way; but he had something at his side that
+kept still the trigger-finger of both. It seemed likely that he
+was no coward.
+
+So, you may perceive that woman, on occasions, may postpone instead of
+precipitating conflict between man and man. But not willingly or
+consciously. She is oblivious of codes.
+
+Five miles farther, we came upon the future great Western city of
+Chandler. The horses of pursuers and pursued were starved and weary.
+There was one hotel that offered danger to man and entertainment to
+beast; so the four of us met again in the dining room at the ringing
+of a bell so resonant and large that it had cracked the welkin long
+ago. The dining room was not as large as the one at Guthrie.
+
+Just as we were eating apple pie--how Ben Davises and tragedy
+impinge upon each other!--I noticed Sam looking with keen
+intentness at our quarry where they were seated at a table across the
+room. The girl still wore the brown dress with lace collar and cuffs,
+and the veil drawn down to her nose. The man bent over his plate,
+with his close cropped head held low.
+
+"There's a code," I heard Sam say, either to me or to himself, "that
+won't let you shoot a man in the company of a woman; but, by thunder,
+there ain't one to keep you from killing a woman in the company of a
+man!"
+
+And, quicker than my mind could follow his argument, he whipped a
+Colt's automatic from under his left arm and pumped six bullets into
+the body that the brown dress covered--the brown dress with the lace
+collar and cuffs and the accordion-plaited skirt.
+
+The young person in the dark sack suit, from whose head and from whose
+life a woman's glory had been clipped, laid her head on her arms
+stretched upon the table; while people came running to raise Ben Tatum
+from the floor in his feminine masquerade that had given Sam the
+opportunity to set aside, technically, the obligations of the code.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE
+
+
+Few young couples in the Big-City-of-Bluff began their married
+existence with greater promise of happiness than did Mr. and Mrs.
+Claude Turpin. They felt no especial animosity toward each other;
+they were comfortably established in a handsome apartment house that
+had a name and accommodations like those of a sleeping-car; they were
+living as expensively as the couple on the next floor above who had
+twice their income; and their marriage had occurred on a wager, a
+ferry-boat and first acquaintance, thus securing a sensational
+newspaper notice with their names attached to pictures of the Queen of
+Roumania and M. Santos-Dumont.
+
+Turpin's income was $200 per month. On pay day, after calculating the
+amounts due for rent, instalments on furniture and piano, gas, and
+bills owed to the florist, confectioner, milliner, tailor, wine
+merchant and cab company, the Turpins would find that they still had
+$200 left to spend. How to do this is one of the secrets of
+metropolitan life.
+
+The domestic life of the Turpins was a beautiful picture to see. But
+you couldn't gaze upon it as you could at an oleograph of "Don't Wake
+Grandma," or "Brooklyn by Moonlight."
+
+You had to blink when looked at it; and you heard a fizzing sound just
+like the machine with a "scope" at the end of it. Yes; there wasn't
+much repose about the picture of the Turpins' domestic life. It was
+something like "Spearing Salmon in the Columbia River," or "Japanese
+Artillery in Action."
+
+Every day was just like another; as the days are in New York. In the
+morning Turpin would take bromo-seltzer, his pocket change from under
+the clock, his hat, no breakfast and his departure for the office. At
+noon Mrs. Turpin would get out of bed and humour, put on a kimono,
+airs, and the water to boil for coffee.
+
+Turpin lunched downtown. He came home at 6 to dress for dinner. They
+always dined out. They strayed from the chop-house to chop-sueydom,
+from terrace to table d'hte, from rathskeller to roadhouse, from caf
+to casino, from Maria's to the Martha Washington. Such is domestic
+life in the great city. Your vine is the mistletoe; your fig tree
+bears dates. Your household gods are Mercury and John Howard Payne.
+For the wedding march you now hear only "Come with the Gypsy Bride."
+You rarely dine at the same place twice in succession. You tire of
+the food; and, besides, you want to give them time for the question of
+that souvenir silver sugar bowl to blow over.
+
+The Turpins were therefore happy. They made many warm and delightful
+friends, some of whom they remembered the next day. Their home life
+was an ideal one, according to the rules and regulations of the Book
+of Bluff.
+
+There came a time when it dawned upon Turpin that his wife was getting
+away with too much money. If you belong to the near-swell class in the
+Big City, and your income is $200 per month, and you find at the end
+of the month, after looking over the bills for current expenses, that
+you, yourself, have spent $150, you very naturally wonder what has
+become of the other $50. So you suspect your wife. And perhaps you
+give her a hint that something needs explanation.
+
+"I say, Vivien," said Turpin, one afternoon when they were enjoying in
+rapt silence the peace and quiet of their cozy apartment, "you've been
+creating a hiatus big enough for a dog to crawl through in this
+month's honorarium. You haven't been paying your dressmaker
+anything on account, have you?"
+
+There was a moment's silence. No sounds could be heard except the
+breathing of the fox terrier, and the subdued, monotonous sizzling of
+Vivien's fulvous locks against the insensate curling irons. Claude
+Turpin, sitting upon a pillow that he had thoughtfully placed upon the
+convolutions of the apartment sofa, narrowly watched the riante,
+lovely face of his wife.
+
+"Claudie, dear," said she, touching her finger to her ruby tongue and
+testing the unresponsive curling irons, "you do me an injustice. Mme.
+Toinette has not seen a cent of mine since the day you paid your
+tailor ten dollars on account."
+
+Turpin's suspicions were allayed for the time. But one day soon there
+came an anonymous letter to him that read:
+
+
+ "Watch your wife. She is blowing in your money secretly. I was
+ a sufferer just as you are. The place is No. 345 Blank Street.
+ A word to the wise, etc.
+ A MAN WHO KNOWS"
+
+
+Turpin took this letter to the captain of police of the precinct that
+he lived in.
+
+"My precinct is as clean as a hound's tooth," said the captain. "The
+lid's shut down as close there as it is over the eye of a Williamsburg
+girl when she's kissed at a party. But if you think there's anything
+queer at the address, I'll go there with ye."
+
+On the next afternoon at 3, Turpin and the captain crept softly up the
+stairs of No. 345 Blank Street. A dozen plain-clothes men, dressed in
+full police uniforms, so as to allay suspicion, waited in the hall
+below.
+
+At the top of the stairs was a door, which was found to be locked.
+The captain took a key from his pocket and unlocked it. The two men
+entered.
+
+They found themselves in a large room, occupied by twenty or twenty-
+five elegantly clothed ladies. Racing charts hung against the walls,
+a ticker clicked in one corner; with a telephone receiver to his ear a
+man was calling out the various positions of the horses in a very
+exciting race. The occupants of the room looked up at the intruders;
+but, as if reassured by the sight of the captain's uniform, they
+reverted their attention to the man at the telephone.
+
+"You see," said the captain to Turpin, "the value of an anonymous
+letter! No high-minded and self-respecting gentleman should
+consider one worthy of notice. Is your wife among this assembly, Mr.
+Turpin?"
+
+"She is not," said Turpin.
+
+"And if she was," continued the captain, "would she be within the
+reach of the tongue of slander? These ladies constitute a Browning
+Society. They meet to discuss the meaning of the great poet. The
+telephone is connected with Boston, whence the parent society
+transmits frequently its interpretations of the poems. Be ashamed of
+yer suspicions, Mr. Turpin."
+
+"Go soak your shield," said Turpin. "Vivien knows how to take care of
+herself in a pool-room. She's not dropping anything on the ponies.
+There must be something queer going on here."
+
+"Nothing but Browning," said the captain. "Hear that?"
+
+"Thanatopsis by a nose," drawled the man at the telephone.
+
+"That's not Browning; that's Longfellow," said Turpin, who sometimes
+read books.
+
+"Back to the pasture!" exclaimed the captain. "Longfellow made the
+pacing-to-wagon record of 7.53 'way back in 1868."
+
+"I believe there's something queer about this joint," repeated Turpin.
+
+"I don't see it," said the captain.
+
+"I know it looks like a pool-room, all right," persisted Turpin, "but
+that's all a blind. Vivien has been dropping a lot of coin somewhere.
+I believe there's some under-handed work going on here."
+
+A number of racing sheets were tacked close together, covering a large
+space on one of the walls. Turpin, suspicious, tore several of them
+down. A door, previously hidden, was revealed. Turpin placed an
+ear to the crack and listened intently. He heard the soft hum of many
+voices, low and guarded laughter, and a sharp, metallic clicking and
+scraping as if from a multitude of tiny but busy objects.
+
+"My God! It is as I feared!" whispered Turpin to himself. "Summon
+your men at once!" he called to the captain. "She is in there, I
+know."
+
+At the blowing of the captain's whistle the uniformed plain-clothes
+men rushed up the stairs into the pool-room. When they saw the
+betting paraphernalia distributed around they halted, surprised and
+puzzled to know why they had been summoned.
+
+But the captain pointed to the locked door and bade them break it
+down. In a few moments they demolished it with the axes they carried.
+Into the other room sprang Claude Turpin, with the captain at his
+heels.
+
+The scene was one that lingered long in Turpin's mind. Nearly a score
+of women--women expensively and fashionably clothed, many beautiful
+and of refined appearance--had been seated at little marble-topped
+tables. When the police burst open the door they shrieked and ran
+here and there like gayly plumed birds that had been disturbed in a
+tropical grove. Some became hysterical; one or two fainted; several
+knelt at the feet of the officers and besought them for mercy on
+account of their families and social position.
+
+A man who had been seated behind a desk had seized a roll of currency
+as large as the ankle of a Paradise Roof Gardens chorus girl and
+jumped out of the window. Half a dozen attendants huddled at one end
+of the room, breathless from fear.
+
+Upon the tables remained the damning and incontrovertible evidences
+of the guilt of the habitues of that sinister room--dish after dish
+heaped high with ice cream, and surrounded by stacks of empty ones,
+scraped to the last spoonful.
+
+"Ladies," said the captain to his weeping circle of prisoners, "I'll
+not hold any of yez. Some of yez I recognize as having fine houses and
+good standing in the community, with hard-working husbands and childer
+at home. But I'll read ye a bit of a lecture before ye go. In the
+next room there's a 20-to-1 shot just dropped in under the wire three
+lengths ahead of the field. Is this the way ye waste your husbands'
+money instead of helping earn it? Home wid yez! The lid's on the
+ice-cream freezer in this precinct."
+
+Claude Turpin's wife was among the patrons of the raided room. He led
+her to their apartment in stem silence. There she wept so
+remorsefully and besought his forgiveness so pleadingly that he forgot
+his just anger, and soon he gathered his penitent golden-haired Vivien
+in his arms and forgave her.
+
+"Darling," she murmured, half sobbingly, as the moonlight drifted
+through the open window, glorifying her sweet, upturned face, "I know
+I done wrong. I will never touch ice cream again. I forgot you were
+not a millionaire. I used to go there every day. But to-day I felt
+some strange, sad presentiment of evil, and I was not myself. I ate
+only eleven saucers."
+
+"Say no more," said Claude, gently as he fondly caressed her waving
+curls.
+
+"And you are sure that you fully forgive me?" asked Vivien, gazing at
+him entreatingly with dewy eyes of heavenly blue.
+
+"Almost sure, little one," answered Claude, stooping and lightly
+touching her snowy forehead with his lips. "I'll let you know
+later on. I've got a month's salary down on Vanilla to win the
+three-year-old steeplechase to-morrow; and if the ice-cream hunch
+is to the good you are It again--see?"
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+THE WHIRLIGIG OF LIFE
+
+
+Justice-of-the-Peace Benaja Widdup sat in the door of his office
+smoking his elder-stem pipe. Half-way to the zenith the Cumberland
+range rose blue-gray in the afternoon haze. A speckled hen swaggered
+down the main street of the "settlement," cackling foolishly.
+
+Up the road came a sound of creaking axles, and then a slow cloud of
+dust, and then a bull-cart bearing Ransie Bilbro and his wife. The
+cart stopped at the Justice's door, and the two climbed down. Ransie
+was a narrow six feet of sallow brown skin and yellow hair. The
+imperturbability of the mountains hung upon him like a suit of armour.
+The woman was calicoed, angled, snuff-brushed, and weary with unknown
+desires. Through it all gleamed a faint protest of cheated youth
+unconscious of its loss.
+
+The Justice of the Peace slipped his feet into his shoes, for the sake
+of dignity, and moved to let them enter.
+
+"We-all," said the woman, in a voice like the wind blowing through pine
+boughs, "wants a divo'ce." She looked at Ransie to see if he noted any
+flaw or ambiguity or evasion or partiality or self-partisanship in her
+statement of their business.
+
+"A divo'ce," repeated Ransie, with a solemn nod. "We-all can't git
+along together nohow. It's lonesome enough fur to live in the
+mount'ins when a man and a woman keers fur one another. But when
+she's a-spittin' like a wildcat or a-sullenin' like a hoot-owl in the
+cabin, a man ain't got no call to live with her."
+
+"When he's a no-'count varmint," said the woman, "without any especial
+warmth, a-traipsin' along of scalawags and moonshiners and a-layin' on
+his back pizen 'ith co'n whiskey, and a-pesterin' folks with a pack o'
+hungry, triflin' houn's to feed!"
+
+"When she keeps a-throwin' skillet lids," came Ransie's antiphony,
+"and slings b'ilin' water on the best coon-dog in the Cumberlands, and
+sets herself agin' cookin' a man's victuals, and keeps him awake o'
+nights accusin' him of a sight of doin's!"
+
+"When he's al'ays a-fightin' the revenues, and gits a hard name in the
+mount'ins fur a mean man, who's gwine to be able fur to sleep o'
+nights?"
+
+The Justice of the Peace stirred deliberately to his duties. He
+placed his one chair and a wooden stool for his petitioners. He
+opened his book of statutes on the table and scanned the index.
+Presently he wiped his spectacles and shifted his inkstand.
+
+"The law and the statutes," said he, "air silent on the subjeck of
+divo'ce as fur as the jurisdiction of this co't air concerned. But,
+accordin' to equity and the Constitution and the golden rule, it's a
+bad barg'in that can't run both ways. If a justice of the peace can
+marry a couple, it's plain that he is bound to be able to divo'ce 'em.
+This here office will issue a decree of divo'ce and abide by the
+decision of the Supreme Co't to hold it good."
+
+Ransie Bilbro drew a small tobacco-bag from his trousers pocket. Out
+of this he shook upon the table a five-dollar note. "Sold a b'arskin
+and two foxes fur that," he remarked. "It's all the money we got."
+
+"The regular price of a divo'ce in this co't," said the Justice, "air
+five dollars." He stuffed the bill into the pocket of his homespun
+vest with a deceptive air of indifference. With much bodily toil
+and mental travail he wrote the decree upon half a sheet of foolscap,
+and then copied it upon the other. Ransie Bilbro and his wife
+listened to his reading of the document that was to give them freedom:
+
+"Know all men by these presents that Ransie Bilbro and his wife,
+Ariela Bilbro, this day personally appeared before me and promises
+that hereinafter they will neither love, honour, nor obey each other,
+neither for better nor worse, being of sound mind and body, and accept
+summons for divorce according to the peace and dignity of the State.
+Herein fail not, so help you God. Benaja Widdup, justice of the peace
+in and for the county of Piedmont, State of Tennessee."
+
+The Justice was about to hand one of the documents to Ransie. The
+voice of Ariela delayed the transfer. Both men looked at her. Their
+dull masculinity was confronted by something sudden and unexpected in
+the woman.
+
+"Judge, don't you give him that air paper yit. 'Tain't all settled,
+nohow. I got to have my rights first. I got to have my ali-money.
+'Tain't no kind of a way to do fur a man to divo'ce his wife 'thout
+her havin' a cent fur to do with. I'm a-layin' off to be a-goin' up
+to brother Ed's up on Hogback Mount'in. I'm bound fur to hev a pa'r
+of shoes and some snuff and things besides. Ef Rance kin affo'd a
+divo'ce, let him pay me ali-money."
+
+Ransie Bilbro was stricken to dumb perplexity. There had been no
+previous hint of alimony. Women were always bringing up startling and
+unlooked-for issues.
+
+Justice Benaja Widdup felt that the point demanded judicial decision.
+The authorities were also silent on the subject of alimony. But the
+woman's feet were bare. The trail to Hogback Mountain was steep and
+flinty.
+
+"Ariela Bilbro," he asked, in official tones, "how much did you 'low
+would be good and sufficient ali-money in the case befo' the co't."
+
+"I 'lowed," she answered, "fur the shoes and all, to say five dollars.
+That ain't much fur ali-money, but I reckon that'll git me to up
+brother Ed's."
+
+"The amount," said the Justice, "air not onreasonable. Ransie Bilbro,
+you air ordered by the co't to pay the plaintiff the sum of five
+dollars befo' the decree of divo'ce air issued."
+
+"I hain't no mo' money," breathed Ransie, heavily. "I done paid you
+all I had."
+
+"Otherwise," said the Justice, looking severely over his spectacles,
+"you air in contempt of co't."
+
+"I reckon if you gimme till to-morrow," pleaded the husband, "I mout
+be able to rake or scrape it up somewhars. I never looked for to be
+a-payin' no ali-money."
+
+"The case air adjourned," said Benaja Widdup, "till to-morrow, when
+you-all will present yo'selves and obey the order of the co't.
+Followin' of which the decrees of divo'ce will be delivered." He sat
+down in the door and began to loosen a shoestring.
+
+"We mout as well go down to Uncle Ziah's," decided Ransie, "and spend
+the night." He climbed into the cart on one side, and Ariela climbed
+in on the other. Obeying the flap of his rope, the little red bull
+slowly came around on a tack, and the cart crawled away in the nimbus
+arising from its wheels.
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup smoked his elder-stem pipe. Late
+in the afternoon he got his weekly paper, and read it until the
+twilight dimmed its lines. Then he lit the tallow candle on his
+table, and read until the moon rose, marking the time for supper. He
+lived in the double log cabin on the slope near the girdled poplar.
+Going home to supper he crossed a little branch darkened by a laurel
+thicket. The dark figure of a man stepped from the laurels and
+pointed a rifle at his breast. His hat was pulled down low, and
+something covered most of his face.
+
+"I want yo' money," said the figure, "'thout any talk. I'm gettin'
+nervous, and my finger's a-wabblin' on this here trigger."
+
+"I've only got f-f-five dollars," said the Justice, producing it
+from his vest pocket.
+
+"Roll it up," came the order, "and stick it in the end of this here
+gun-bar'l."
+
+The bill was crisp and new. Even fingers that were clumsy and
+trembling found little difficulty in making a spill of it and
+inserting it (this with less ease) into the muzzle of the rifle.
+
+"Now I reckon you kin be goin' along," said the robber.
+
+The Justice lingered not on his way.
+
+
+The next day came the little red bull, drawing the cart to the
+office door. Justice Benaja Widdup had his shoes on, for he was
+expecting the visit. In his presence Ransie Bilbro handed to his
+wife a five-dollar bill. The official's eye sharply viewed it.
+It seemed to curl up as though it had been rolled and inserted into
+the end of a gun-barrel. But the Justice refrained from comment.
+It is true that other bills might be inclined to curl. He handed
+each one a decree of divorce. Each stood awkwardly silent, slowly
+folding the guarantee of freedom. The woman cast a shy glance
+full of constraint at Ransie.
+
+"I reckon you'll be goin' back up to the cabin," she said, along 'ith
+the bull-cart. There's bread in the tin box settin' on the shelf. I
+put the bacon in the b'ilin'-pot to keep the hounds from gittin' it.
+Don't forget to wind the clock to-night."
+
+"You air a-goin' to your brother Ed's?" asked Ransie, with fine
+unconcern.
+
+"I was 'lowin' to get along up thar afore night. I ain't sayin' as
+they'll pester theyselves any to make me welcome, but I hain't nowhar
+else fur to go. It's a right smart ways, and I reckon I better be
+goin'. I'll be a-sayin' good-bye, Ranse--that is, if you keer fur to
+say so."
+
+"I don't know as anybody's a hound dog," said Ransie, in a martyr's
+voice, "fur to not want to say good-bye--'less you air so anxious to
+git away that you don't want me to say it."
+
+Ariela was silent. She folded the five-dollar bill and her decree
+carefully, and placed them in the bosom of her dress. Benaja Widdup
+watched the money disappear with mournful eyes behind his spectacles.
+
+And then with his next words he achieved rank (as his thoughts ran)
+with either the great crowd of the world's sympathizers or the little
+crowd of its great financiers.
+
+"Be kind o' lonesome in the old cabin to-night, Ranse," he said.
+
+Ransie Bilbro stared out at the Cumberlands, clear blue now in the
+sunlight. He did not look at Ariela.
+
+"I 'low it might be lonesome," he said; "but when folks gits mad and
+wants a divo'ce, you can't make folks stay."
+
+"There's others wanted a divo'ce," said Ariela, speaking to the wooden
+stool. "Besides, nobody don't want nobody to stay."
+
+"Nobody never said they didn't."
+
+"Nobody never said they did. I reckon I better start on now to
+brother Ed's."
+
+"Nobody can't wind that old clock."
+
+"Want me to go back along 'ith you in the cart and wind it fur you,
+Ranse?"
+
+The mountaineer's countenance was proof against emotion. But he
+reached out a big hand and enclosed Ariela's thin brown one. Her soul
+peeped out once through her impassive face, hallowing it.
+
+"Them hounds shan't pester you no more," said Ransie. "I reckon I
+been mean and low down. You wind that clock, Ariela."
+
+"My heart hit's in that cabin, Ranse," she whispered, "along 'ith you.
+I ai'nt a-goin' to git mad no more. Le's be startin', Ranse, so's we
+kin git home by sundown."
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup interposed as they started for the
+door, forgetting his presence.
+
+"In the name of the State of Tennessee," he said, "I forbid you-all to
+be a-defyin' of its laws and statutes. This co't is mo' than willin'
+and full of joy to see the clouds of discord and misunderstandin'
+rollin' away from two lovin' hearts, but it air the duty of the co't
+to p'eserve the morals and integrity of the State. The co't reminds
+you that you air no longer man and wife, but air divo'ced by regular
+decree, and as such air not entitled to the benefits and 'purtenances
+of the mattermonal estate."
+
+Ariela caught Ransie's arm. Did those words mean that she must lose
+him now when they had just learned the lesson of life?
+
+"But the co't air prepared," went on the Justice, "fur to remove the
+disabilities set up by the decree of divo'ce. The co't air on hand to
+perform the solemn ceremony of marri'ge, thus fixin' things up and
+enablin' the parties in the case to resume the honour'ble and
+elevatin' state of mattermony which they desires. The fee fur
+performin' said ceremony will be, in this case, to wit, five dollars."
+
+Ariela caught the gleam of promise in his words. Swiftly her hand went
+to her bosom. Freely as an alighting dove the bill fluttered to the
+Justice's table. Her sallow cheek coloured as she stood hand in hand
+with Ransie and listened to the reuniting words.
+
+Ransie helped her into the cart, and climbed in beside her. The
+little red bull turned once more, and they set out, hand-clasped, for
+the mountains.
+
+Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup sat in his door and took off his
+shoes. Once again he fingered the bill tucked down in his vest
+pocket. Once again he smoked his elder-stem pipe. Once again the
+speckled hen swaggered down the main street of the "settlement,"
+cackling foolishly.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+A SACRIFICE HIT
+
+
+The editor of the _Hearthstone Magazine_ has his own ideas about the
+selection of manuscript for his publication. His theory is no secret;
+in fact, he will expound it to you willingly sitting at his mahogany
+desk, smiling benignantly and tapping his knee gently with his
+gold-rimmed eye-glasses.
+
+"The _Hearthstone_," he will say, "does not employ a staff of
+readers. We obtain opinions of the manuscripts submitted to us
+directly from types of the various classes of our readers."
+
+That is the editor's theory; and this is the way he carries it out:
+
+When a batch of MSS. is received the editor stuffs every one of his
+pockets full of them and distributes them as he goes about during the
+day. The office employees, the hall porter, the janitor, the elevator
+man, messenger boys, the waiters at the caf where the editor has
+luncheon, the man at the news-stand where he buys his evening paper,
+the grocer and milkman, the guard on the 5.30 uptown elevated train,
+the ticket-chopper at Sixty ----th street, the cook and maid at his
+home--these are the readers who pass upon MSS. sent in to the
+_Hearthstone Magazine_. If his pockets are not entirely emptied by
+the time he reaches the bosom of his family the remaining ones are
+handed over to his wife to read after the baby goes to sleep. A few
+days later the editor gathers in the MSS. during his regular rounds
+and considers the verdict of his assorted readers.
+
+This system of making up a magazine has been very successful; and the
+circulation, paced by the advertising rates, is making a wonderful
+record of speed.
+
+The _Hearthstone_ Company also publishes books, and its imprint is to
+be found on several successful works--all recommended, says the
+editor, by the _Hearthstone's_ army of volunteer readers. Now and
+then (according to talkative members of the editorial staff) the
+_Hearthstone_ has allowed manuscripts to slip through its fingers on
+the advice of its heterogeneous readers, that afterward proved to be
+famous sellers when brought out by other houses.
+
+For instance (the gossips say), "The Rise and Fall of Silas Latham"
+was unfavourably passed upon by the elevator-man; the office-boy
+unanimously rejected "The Boss"; "In the Bishop's Carriage" was
+contemptuously looked upon by the street-car conductor; "The
+Deliverance" was turned down by a clerk in the subscription department
+whose wife's mother had just begun a two-months' visit at his home;
+"The Queen's Quair" came back from the janitor with the comment: "So
+is the book."
+
+But nevertheless the _Hearthstone_ adheres to its theory and system,
+and it will never lack volunteer readers; for each one of the widely
+scattered staff, from the young lady stenographer in the editorial
+office to the man who shovels in coal (whose adverse decision lost to
+the _Hearthstone_ Company the manuscript of "The Under World"), has
+expectations of becoming editor of the magazine some day.
+
+This method of the _Hearthstone_ was well known to Allen Slayton when
+he wrote his novelette entitled "Love Is All." Slayton had hung about
+the editorial offices of all the magazines so persistently that he was
+acquainted with the inner workings of every one in Gotham.
+
+He knew not only that the editor of the Hearthstone handed his MSS.
+around among different types of people for reading, but that the
+stories of sentimental love-interest went to Miss Puffkin, the
+editor's stenographer. Another of the editor's peculiar customs was to
+conceal invariably the name of the writer from his readers of MSS. so
+that a glittering name might not influence the sincerity of their
+reports.
+
+Slayton made "Love Is All" the effort of his life. He gave it six
+months of the best work of his heart and brain. It was a pure
+love-story, fine, elevated, romantic, passionate--a prose poem that
+set the divine blessing of love (I am transposing from the manuscript)
+high above all earthly gifts and honours, and listed it in the
+catalogue of heaven's choicest rewards. Slayton's literary ambition
+was intense. He would have sacrificed all other worldly possessions
+to have gained fame in his chosen art. He would almost have cut off
+his right hand, or have offered himself to the knife of the
+appendicitis fancier to have realized his dream of seeing one of his
+efforts published in the _Hearthstone_.
+
+Slayton finished "Love Is All," and took it to the _Hearthstone_ in
+person. The office of the magazine was in a large, conglomerate
+building, presided under by a janitor.
+
+As the writer stepped inside the door on his way to the elevator a
+potato masher flew through the hall, wrecking Slayton's hat, and
+smashing the glass of the door. Closely following in the wake of the
+utensil flew the janitor, a bulky, unwholesome man, suspenderless and
+sordid, panic-stricken and breathless. A frowsy, fat woman with
+flying hair followed the missile. The janitor's foot slipped on the
+tiled floor, he fell in a heap with an exclamation of despair. The
+woman pounced upon him and seized his hair. The man bellowed lustily.
+
+Her vengeance wreaked, the virago rose and stalked triumphant as
+Minerva, back to some cryptic domestic retreat at the rear. The
+janitor got to his feet, blown and humiliated.
+
+"This is married life," he said to Slayton, with a certain bruised
+humour. "That's the girl I used to lay awake of nights thinking
+about. Sorry about your hat, mister. Say, don't snitch to the tenants
+about this, will yer? I don't want to lose me job."
+
+Slayton took the elevator at the end of the hall and went up to the
+offices of the _Hearthstone_. He left the MS. of "Love Is All" with
+the editor, who agreed to give him an answer as to its availability
+at the end of a week.
+
+Slayton formulated his great winning scheme on his way down. It
+struck him with one brilliant flash, and he could not refrain from
+admiring his own genius in conceiving the idea. That very night he
+set about carrying it into execution.
+
+Miss Puffkin, the _Hearthstone_ stenographer, boarded in the same house
+with the author. She was an oldish, thin, exclusive, languishing,
+sentimental maid; and Slayton had been introduced to her some time
+before.
+
+The writer's daring and self-sacrificing project was this: He knew
+that the editor of the _Hearthstone_ relied strongly upon Miss
+Puffkin's judgment in the manuscript of romantic and sentimental
+fiction. Her taste represented the immense average of mediocre women
+who devour novels and stories of that type. The central idea and
+keynote of "Love Is All" was love at first sight--the enrapturing,
+irresistible, soul-thrilling feeling that compels a man or a woman
+to recognize his or her spirit-mate as soon as heart speaks to heart.
+Suppose he should impress this divine truth upon Miss Puffkin
+personally!--would she not surely indorse her new and rapturous
+sensations by recommending highly to the editor of the _Hearthstone_
+the novelette "Love Is All"?
+
+Slayton thought so. And that night he took Miss Puffkin to the
+theatre. The next night he made vehement love to her in the dim
+parlour of the boarding-house. He quoted freely from "Love Is All";
+and he wound up with Miss Puffkin's head on his shoulder, and visions
+of literary fame dancing in his head.
+
+But Slayton did not stop at love-making. This, he said to himself,
+was the turning point of his life; and, like a true sportsman, he
+"went the limit." On Thursday night he and Miss Puffkin walked over
+to the Big Church in the Middle of the Block and were married.
+
+Brave Slayton! Chteaubriand died in a garret, Byron courted a widow,
+Keats starved to death, Poe mixed his drinks, De Quincey hit the pipe,
+Ade lived in Chicago, James kept on doing it, Dickens wore white
+socks, De Maupassant wore a strait-jacket, Tom Watson became a
+Populist, Jeremiah wept, all these authors did these things for the
+sake of literature, but thou didst cap them all; thou marriedst a wife
+for to carve for thyself a niche in the temple of fame!
+
+On Friday morning Mrs. Slayton said she would go over to the
+_Hearthstone_ office, hand in one or two manuscripts that the editor
+had given to her to read, and resign her position as stenographer.
+
+"Was there anything--er--that--er--you particularly fancied
+in the stories you are going to turn in?" asked Slayton with a
+thumping heart.
+
+"There was one--a novelette, that I liked so much," said his wife. "I
+haven't read anything in years that I thought was half as nice and
+true to life."
+
+That afternoon Slayton hurried down to the _Hearthstone_ office. He
+felt that his reward was close at hand. With a novelette in the
+_Hearthstone_, literary reputation would soon be his.
+
+The office boy met him at the railing in the outer office. It was not
+for unsuccessful authors to hold personal colloquy with the editor
+except at rare intervals.
+
+Slayton, hugging himself internally, was nursing in his heart the
+exquisite hope of being able to crush the office boy with his
+forthcoming success.
+
+He inquired concerning his novelette. The office boy went into the
+sacred precincts and brought forth a large envelope, thick with more
+than the bulk of a thousand checks.
+
+"The boss told me to tell you he's sorry," said the boy, "but your
+manuscript ain't available for the magazine."
+
+Slayton stood, dazed. "Can you tell me," he stammered, "whether or
+no Miss Puff--that is my--I mean Miss Puffkin--handed in a novelette
+this morning that she had been asked to read?"
+
+"Sure she did," answered the office boy wisely. "I heard the old man
+say that Miss Puffkin said it was a daisy. The name of it was,
+'Married for the Mazuma, or a Working Girl's Triumph.'"
+
+"Say, you!" said the office boy confidentially, "your name's Slayton,
+ain't it? I guess I mixed cases on you without meanin' to do it. The
+boss give me some manuscript to hand around the other day and I got
+the ones for Miss Puffkin and the janitor mixed. I guess it's all
+right, though."
+
+And then Slayton looked closer and saw on the cover of his manuscript,
+under the title "Love Is All," the janitor's comment scribbled with a
+piece of charcoal:
+
+"The ---- you say!"
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+THE ROADS WE TAKE
+
+
+Twenty miles west of Tucson, the "Sunset Express" stopped at a tank to
+take on water. Besides the aqueous addition the engine of that famous
+flyer acquired some other things that were not good for it.
+
+While the fireman was lowering the feeding hose, Bob Tidball, "Shark"
+Dodson and a quarter-bred Creek Indian called John Big Dog climbed on
+the engine and showed the engineer three round orifices in pieces of
+ordnance that they carried. These orifices so impressed the engineer
+with their possibilities that he raised both hands in a gesture such
+as accompanies the ejaculation "Do tell!"
+
+At the crisp command of Shark Dodson, who was leader of the attacking
+force the engineer descended to the ground and uncoupled the engine
+and tender. Then John Big Dog, perched upon the coal, sportively held
+two guns upon the engine driver and the fireman, and suggested that
+they run the engine fifty yards away and there await further orders.
+
+Shark Dodson and Bob Tidball, scorning to put such low-grade ore as
+the passengers through the mill, struck out for the rich pocket of the
+express car. They found the messenger serene in the belief that the
+"Sunset Express" was taking on nothing more stimulating and dangerous
+than aqua pura. While Bob was knocking this idea out of his head with
+the butt-end of his six-shooter Shark Dodson was already dosing the
+express-car safe with dynamite.
+
+The safe exploded to the tune of $30,000, all gold and currency. The
+passengers thrust their heads casually out of the windows to look for
+the thunder-cloud. The conductor jerked at the bell-rope, which
+sagged down loose and unresisting, at his tug. Shark Dodson and Bob
+Tidball, with their booty in a stout canvas bag, tumbled out of the
+express car and ran awkwardly in their high-heeled boots to the
+engine.
+
+The engineer, sullenly angry but wise, ran the engine, according to
+orders, rapidly away from the inert train. But before this was
+accomplished the express messenger, recovered from Bob Tidball's
+persuader to neutrality, jumped out of his car with a Winchester rifle
+and took a trick in the game. Mr. John Big Dog, sitting on the coal
+tender, unwittingly made a wrong lead by giving an imitation of a
+target, and the messenger trumped him. With a ball exactly between
+his shoulder blades the Creek chevalier of industry rolled off to
+the ground, thus increasing the share of his comrades in the loot by
+one-sixth each.
+
+Two miles from the tank the engineer was ordered to stop.
+
+The robbers waved a defiant adieu and plunged down the steep slope
+into the thick woods that lined the track. Five minutes of crashing
+through a thicket of chaparral brought them to open woods, where three
+horses were tied to low-hanging branches. One was waiting for John
+Big Dog, who would never ride by night or day again. This animal the
+robbers divested of saddle and bridle and set free. They mounted the
+other two with the bag across one pommel, and rode fast and with
+discretion through the forest and up a primeval, lonely gorge. Here
+the animal that bore Bob Tidball slipped on a mossy boulder and broke
+a foreleg. They shot him through the head at once and sat down to
+hold a council of flight. Made secure for the present by the tortuous
+trail they had travelled, the question of time was no longer so big.
+Many miles and hours lay between them and the spryest posse that could
+follow. Shark Dodson's horse, with trailing rope and dropped bridle,
+panted and cropped thankfully of the grass along the stream in the
+gorge. Bob Tidball opened the sack, drew out double handfuls of the
+neat packages of currency and the one sack of gold and chuckled with
+the glee of a child.
+
+"Say, you old double-decked pirate," he called joyfully to Dodson,
+"you said we could do it--you got a head for financing that knocks
+the horns off of anything in Arizona."
+
+"What are we going to do about a hoss for you, Bob? We ain't got long
+to wait here. They'll be on our trail before daylight in the
+mornin'."
+
+"Oh, I guess that cayuse of yourn'll carry double for a while,"
+answered the sanguine Bob. "We'll annex the first animal we come
+across. By jingoes, we made a haul, didn't we? Accordin' to the
+marks on this money there's $30,000--$15,000 apiece!"
+
+"It's short of what I expected," said Shark Dodson, kicking softly at
+the packages with the toe of his boot. And then he looked pensively at
+the wet sides of his tired horse.
+
+"Old Bolivar's mighty nigh played out," he said, slowly. "I wish that
+sorrel of yours hadn't got hurt."
+
+"So do I," said Bob, heartily, "but it can't be helped. Bolivar's got
+plenty of bottom--he'll get us both far enough to get fresh mounts.
+Dang it, Shark, I can't help thinkin' how funny it is that an
+Easterner like you can come out here and give us Western fellows cards
+and spades in the desperado business. What part of the East was you
+from, anyway?"
+
+"New York State," said Shark Dodson, sitting down on a boulder and
+chewing a twig. "I was born on a farm in Ulster County. I ran away
+from home when I was seventeen. It was an accident my coming West. I
+was walkin' along the road with my clothes in a bundle, makin' for New
+York City. I had an idea of goin' there and makin' lots of money. I
+always felt like I could do it. I came to a place one evenin' where
+the road forked and I didn't know which fork to take. I studied about
+it for half an hour, and then I took the left-hand. That night I run
+into the camp of a Wild West show that was travellin' among the little
+towns, and I went West with it. I've often wondered if I wouldn't
+have turned out different if I'd took the other road."
+
+"Oh, I reckon you'd have ended up about the same," said Bob Tidball,
+cheerfully philosophical. "It ain't the roads we take; it's what's
+inside of us that makes us turn out the way we do."
+
+Shark Dodson got up and leaned against a tree.
+
+"I'd a good deal rather that sorrel of yourn hadn't hurt himself,
+Bob," he said again, almost pathetically.
+
+"Same here," agreed Bob; "he was sure a first-rate kind of a crowbait.
+But Bolivar, he'll pull us through all right. Reckon we'd better be
+movin' on, hadn't we, Shark? I'll bag this boodle ag'in and we'll hit
+the trail for higher timber."
+
+Bob Tidball replaced the spoil in the bag and tied the mouth of it
+tightly with a cord. When he looked up the most prominent object that
+he saw was the muzzle of Shark Dodson's .45 held upon him without a
+waver.
+
+"Stop your funnin'," said Bob, with a grin. "We got to be hittin' the
+breeze."
+
+"Set still," said Shark. "You ain't goin' to hit no breeze, Bob. I
+hate to tell you, but there ain't any chance for but one of us.
+Bolivar, he's plenty tired, and he can't carry double."
+
+"We been pards, me and you, Shark Dodson, for three year," Bob said
+quietly. "We've risked our lives together time and again. I've
+always give you a square deal, and I thought you was a man. I've
+heard some queer stories about you shootin' one or two men in a
+peculiar way, but I never believed 'em. Now if you're just havin' a
+little fun with me, Shark, put your gun up, and we'll get on Bolivar
+and vamose. If you mean to shoot--shoot, you blackhearted son of a
+tarantula!"
+
+Shark Dodson's face bore a deeply sorrowful look. "You don't know how
+bad I feel," he sighed, "about that sorrel of yourn breakin' his leg,
+Bob."
+
+The expression on Dodson's face changed in an instant to one of cold
+ferocity mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed
+itself for a moment like an evil face in the window of a reputable
+house.
+
+Truly Bob Tidball was never to "hit the breeze" again. The deadly .45
+of the false friend cracked and filled the gorge with a roar that the
+walls hurled back with indignant echoes. And Bolivar, unconscious
+accomplice, swiftly bore away the last of the holders-up of the
+"Sunset Express," not put to the stress of "carrying double."
+
+But as "Shark" Dodson galloped away the woods seemed to fade from his
+view; the revolver in his right hand turned to the curved arm of a
+mahogany chair; his saddle was strangely upholstered, and he opened
+his eyes and saw his feet, not in stirrups, but resting quietly on the
+edge of a quartered-oak desk.
+
+
+I am telling you that Dodson, of the firm of Dodson & Decker, Wall
+Street brokers, opened his eyes. Peabody, the confidential clerk, was
+standing by his chair, hesitating to speak. There was a confused hum
+of wheels below, and the sedative buzz of an electric fan.
+
+"Ahem! Peabody," said Dodson, blinking. "I must have fallen asleep.
+I had a most remarkable dream. What is it, Peabody?"
+
+"Mr. Williams, sir, of Tracy & Williams, is outside. He has come to
+settle his deal in X. Y. Z. The market caught him short, sir, if you
+remember."
+
+"Yes, I remember. What is X. Y. Z. quoted at to-day, Peabody?"
+
+"One eighty-five, sir."
+
+"Then that's his price."
+
+"Excuse me," said Peabody, rather nervously "for speaking of it, but
+I've been talking to Williams. He's an old friend of yours, Mr.
+Dodson, and you practically have a corner in X. Y. Z. I thought you
+might--that is, I thought you might not remember that he sold you
+the stock at 98. If he settles at the market price it will take every
+cent he has in the world and his home too to deliver the shares."
+
+The expression on Dodson's face changed in an instant to one of cold
+ferocity mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed
+itself for a moment like an evil face in the window of a reputable
+house.
+
+"He will settle at one eighty-five," said Dodson. "Bolivar cannot
+carry double."
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+A BLACKJACK BARGAINER
+
+
+The most disreputable thing in Yancey Goree's law office was Goree
+himself, sprawled in his creaky old arm-chair. The rickety little
+office, built of red brick, was set flush with the street--the main
+street of the town of Bethel.
+
+Bethel rested upon the foot-hills of the Blue Ridge. Above it the
+mountains were piled to the sky. Far below it the turbid Catawba
+gleamed yellow along its disconsolate valley.
+
+The June day was at its sultriest hour. Bethel dozed in the tepid
+shade. Trade was not. It was so still that Goree, reclining in his
+chair, distinctly heard the clicking of the chips in the grand-jury
+room, where the "court-house gang" was playing poker. From the open
+back door of the office a well-worn path meandered across the grassy
+lot to the court-house. The treading out of that path had cost Goree
+all he ever had--first inheritance of a few thousand dollars, next
+the old family home, and, latterly the last shreds of his self-respect
+and manhood. The "gang" had cleaned him out. The broken gambler had
+turned drunkard and parasite; he had lived to see this day come when
+the men who had stripped him denied him a seat at the game. His word
+was no longer to be taken. The daily bouts at cards had arranged
+itself accordingly, and to him was assigned the ignoble part of the
+onlooker. The sheriff, the county clerk, a sportive deputy, a gay
+attorney, and a chalk-faced man hailing "from the valley," sat at
+table, and the sheared one was thus tacitly advised to go and grow
+more wool.
+
+Soon wearying of his ostracism, Goree had departed for his office,
+muttering to himself as he unsteadily traversed the unlucky pathway.
+After a drink of corn whiskey from a demijohn under the table, he had
+flung himself into the chair, staring, in a sort of maudlin apathy,
+out at the mountains immersed in the summer haze. The little white
+patch he saw away up on the side of Blackjack was Laurel, the village
+near which he had been born and bred. There, also, was the birthplace
+of the feud between the Gorees and the Coltranes. Now no direct heir
+of the Gorees survived except this plucked and singed bird of
+misfortune. To the Coltranes, also, but one male supporter was left
+--Colonel Abner Coltrane, a man of substance and standing, a member
+of the State Legislature, and a contemporary with Goree's father. The
+feud had been a typical one of the region; it had left a red record of
+hate, wrong and slaughter.
+
+But Yancey Goree was not thinking of feuds. His befuddled brain was
+hopelessly attacking the problem of the future maintenance of himself
+and his favourite follies. Of late, old friends of the family had
+seen to it that he had whereof to eat and a place to sleep--but whiskey
+they would not buy for him, and he must have whiskey. His law business
+was extinct; no case had been intrusted to him in two years. He had
+been a borrower and a sponge, and it seemed that if he fell no lower
+it would be from lack of opportunity. One more chance--he was saying
+to himself--if he had one more stake at the game, he thought he could
+win; but he had nothing left to sell, and his credit was more than
+exhausted.
+
+He could not help smiling, even in his misery, as he thought of the
+man to whom, six months before, he had sold the old Goree homestead.
+There had come from "back yan'" in the mountains two of the strangest
+creatures, a man named Pike Garvey and his wife. "Back yan'," with a
+wave of the hand toward the hills, was understood among the
+mountaineers to designate the remotest fastnesses, the unplumbed
+gorges, the haunts of lawbreakers, the wolf's den, and the boudoir of
+the bear. In the cabin far up on Blackjack's shoulder, in the wildest
+part of these retreats, this odd couple had lived for twenty years.
+They had neither dog nor children to mitigate the heavy silence of the
+hills. Pike Garvey was little known in the settlements, but all who
+had dealt with him pronounced him "crazy as a loon." He acknowledged
+no occupation save that of a squirrel hunter, but he "moonshined"
+occasionally by way of diversion. Once the "revenues" had dragged him
+from his lair, fighting silently and desperately like a terrier, and
+he had been sent to state's prison for two years. Released, he popped
+back into his hole like an angry weasel.
+
+Fortune, passing over many anxious wooers, made a freakish flight into
+Blackjack's bosky pockets to smile upon Pike and his faithful partner.
+
+One day a party of spectacled, knickerbockered, and altogether absurd
+prospectors invaded the vicinity of the Garvey's cabin. Pike lifted
+his squirrel rifle off the hooks and took a shot at them at long range
+on the chance of their being revenues. Happily he missed, and the
+unconscious agents of good luck drew nearer, disclosing their
+innocence of anything resembling law or justice. Later on, they
+offered the Garveys an enormous quantity of ready, green, crisp money
+for their thirty-acre patch of cleared land, mentioning, as an excuse
+for such a mad action, some irrelevant and inadequate nonsense about a
+bed of mica underlying the said property.
+
+When the Garveys became possessed of so many dollars that they
+faltered in computing them, the deficiencies of life on Blackjack
+began to grow prominent. Pike began to talk of new shoes, a hogshead
+of tobacco to set in the corner, a new lock to his rifle; and, leading
+Martella to a certain spot on the mountain-side, he pointed out to her
+how a small cannon--doubtless a thing not beyond the scope of their
+fortune in price--might be planted so as to command and defend the
+sole accessible trail to the cabin, to the confusion of revenues and
+meddling strangers forever.
+
+But Adam reckoned without his Eve. These things represented to him
+the applied power of wealth, but there slumbered in his dingy cabin an
+ambition that soared far above his primitive wants. Somewhere in Mrs.
+Garvey's bosom still survived a spot of femininity unstarved by twenty
+years of Blackjack. For so long a time the sounds in her ears had
+been the scaly-barks dropping in the woods at noon, and the wolves
+singing among the rocks at night, and it was enough to have purged her
+of vanities. She had grown fat and sad and yellow and dull. But when
+the means came, she felt a rekindled desire to assume the perquisites
+of her sex--to sit at tea tables; to buy futile things; to whitewash
+the hideous veracity of life with a little form and ceremony. So she
+coldly vetoed Pike's proposed system of fortifications, and
+announced that they would descend upon the world, and gyrate socially.
+
+And thus, at length, it was decided, and the thing done. The village
+of Laurel was their compromise between Mrs. Garvey's preference for
+one of the large valley towns and Pike's hankering for primeval
+solitudes. Laurel yielded a halting round of feeble social
+distractions comportable with Martella's ambitions, and was not
+entirely without recommendation to Pike, its contiguity to the
+mountains presenting advantages for sudden retreat in case fashionable
+society should make it advisable.
+
+Their descent upon Laurel had been coincident with Yancey Goree's
+feverish desire to convert property into cash, and they bought the old
+Goree homestead, paying four thousand dollars ready money into the
+spendthrift's shaking hands.
+
+Thus it happened that while the disreputable last of the Gorees
+sprawled in his disreputable office, at the end of his row, spurned by
+the cronies whom he had gorged, strangers dwelt in the halls of his
+fathers.
+
+A cloud of dust was rolling, slowly up the parched street, with
+something travelling in the midst of it. A little breeze wafted the
+cloud to one side, and a new, brightly painted carryall, drawn by a
+slothful gray horse, became visible. The vehicle deflected from the
+middle of the street as it neared Goree's office, and stopped in the
+gutter directly in front of his door.
+
+On the front seat sat a gaunt, tall man, dressed in black broadcloth,
+his rigid hands incarcerated in yellow kid gloves. On the back seat
+was a lady who triumphed over the June heat. Her stout form was
+armoured in a skin-tight silk dress of the description known as
+"changeable," being a gorgeous combination of shifting hues. She sat
+erect, waving a much-ornamented fan, with her eyes fixed stonily far
+down the street. However Martella Garvey's heart might be rejoicing
+at the pleasures of her new life, Blackjack had done his work with her
+exterior. He had carved her countenance to the image of emptiness and
+inanity; had imbued her with the stolidity of his crags, and the
+reserve of his hushed interiors. She always seemed to hear, whatever
+her surroundings were, the scaly-barks falling and pattering down the
+mountain-side. She could always hear the awful silence of Blackjack
+sounding through the stillest of nights.
+
+Goree watched this solemn equipage, as it drove to his door, with only
+faint interest; but when the lank driver wrapped the reins about his
+whip, awkwardly descended, and stepped into the office, he rose
+unsteadily to receive him, recognizing Pike Garvey, the new, the
+transformed, the recently civilized.
+
+The mountaineer took the chair Goree offered him. They who cast doubts
+upon Garvey's soundness of mind had a strong witness in the man's
+countenance. His face was too long, a dull saffron in hue, and
+immobile as a statue's. Pale-blue, unwinking round eyes without
+lashes added to the singularity of his gruesome visage. Goree was at a
+loss to account for the visit.
+
+"Everything all right at Laurel, Mr. Garvey?" he inquired.
+
+"Everything all right, sir, and mighty pleased is Missis Garvey and me
+with the property. Missis Garvey likes yo' old place, and she likes
+the neighbourhood. Society is what she 'lows she wants, and she is
+gettin' of it. The Rogerses, the Hapgoods, the Pratts and the Troys
+hev been to see Missis Garvey, and she hev et meals to most of thar
+houses. The best folks hev axed her to differ'nt kinds of doin's. I
+cyan't say, Mr. Goree, that sech things suits me--fur me, give me
+them thar." Garvey's huge, yellow-gloved hand flourished in the
+direction of the mountains. "That's whar I b'long, 'mongst the wild
+honey bees and the b'ars. But that ain't what I come fur to say, Mr.
+Goree. Thar's somethin' you got what me and Missis Garvey wants to
+buy."
+
+"Buy!" echoed Goree. "From me?" Then he laughed harshly. "I reckon
+you are mistaken about that. I reckon you are mistaken about that. I
+sold out to you, as you yourself expressed it, 'lock, stock and
+barrel.' There isn't even a ramrod left to sell."
+
+"You've got it; and we 'uns want it. 'Take the money,' says Missis
+Garvey, 'and buy it fa'r and squar'.'"
+
+Goree shook his head. "The cupboard's bare," he said.
+
+"We've riz," pursued the mountaineer, undeflected from his object, "a
+heap. We was pore as possums, and now we could hev folks to dinner
+every day. We been recognized, Missis Garvey says, by the best
+society. But there's somethin' we need we ain't got. She says it
+ought to been put in the 'ventory ov the sale, but it tain't thar.
+'Take the money, then,' says she, 'and buy it fa'r and squar'."'
+
+"Out with it," said Goree, his racked nerves growing impatient.
+
+Garvey threw his slouch hat upon the table, and leaned forward, fixing
+his unblinking eyes upon Goree's.
+
+"There's a old feud," he said distinctly and slowly, "'tween you 'uns
+and the Coltranes."
+
+Goree frowned ominously. To speak of his feud to a feudist is a
+serious breach of the mountain etiquette. The man from "back yan'"
+knew it as well as the lawyer did.
+
+"Na offense," he went on "but purely in the way of business. Missis
+Garvey hev studied all about feuds. Most of the quality folks in the
+mountains hev 'em. The Settles and the Goforths, the Rankins and the
+Boyds, the Silers and the Galloways, hev all been cyarin' on feuds
+f'om twenty to a hundred year. The last man to drap was when yo'
+uncle, Jedge Paisley Goree, 'journed co't and shot Len Coltrane f'om
+the bench. Missis Garvey and me, we come f'om the po' white trash.
+Nobody wouldn't pick a feud with we 'uns, no mo'n with a fam'ly of
+tree-toads. Quality people everywhar, says Missis Garvey, has feuds.
+We 'uns ain't quality, but we're buyin' into it as fur as we can.
+'Take the money, then,' says Missis Garvey, 'and buy Mr. Goree's feud,
+fa'r and squar'.'"
+
+The squirrel hunter straightened a leg half across the room, drew a
+roll of bills from his pocket, and threw them on the table.
+
+"Thar's two hundred dollars, Mr. Goree; what you would call a fa'r
+price for a feud that's been 'lowed to run down like yourn hev.
+Thar's only you left to cyar' on yo' side of it, and you'd make mighty
+po' killin'. I'll take it off yo' hands, and it'll set me and Missis
+Garvey up among the quality. Thar's the money."
+
+The little roll of currency on the table slowly untwisted itself,
+writhing and jumping as its folds relaxed. In the silence that
+followed Garvey's last speech the rattling of the poker chips in the
+court-house could be plainly heard. Goree knew that the sheriff had
+just won a pot, for the subdued whoop with which he always greeted
+a victory floated across the square upon the crinkly heat waves.
+Beads of moisture stood on Goree's brow. Stooping, he drew the
+wicker-covered demijohn from under the table, and filled a tumbler
+from it.
+
+"A little corn liquor, Mr. Garvey? Of course you are joking about--
+what you spoke of? Opens quite a new market, doesn't it? Feuds.
+Prime, two-fifty to three. Feuds, slightly damaged--two hundred, I
+believe you said, Mr. Garvey?"
+
+Goree laughed self-consciously.
+
+The mountaineer took the glass Goree handed him, and drank the whisky
+without a tremor of the lids of his staring eyes. The lawyer
+applauded the feat by a look of envious admiration. He poured his own
+drink, and took it like a drunkard, by gulps, and with shudders at the
+smell and taste.
+
+"Two hundred," repeated Garvey. "Thar's the money."
+
+A sudden passion flared up in Goree's brain. He struck the table with
+his fist. One of the bills flipped over and touched his hand. He
+flinched as if something had stung him.
+
+"Do you come to me," he shouted, "seriously with such a ridiculous,
+insulting, darned-fool proposition?"
+
+"It's fa'r and squar'," said the squirrel hunter, but he reached out
+his hand as if to take back the money; and then Goree knew that his
+own flurry of rage had not been from pride or resentment, but from
+anger at himself, knowing that he would set foot in the deeper depths
+that were being opened to him. He turned in an instant from an
+outraged gentleman to an anxious chafferer recommending his goods.
+
+"Don't be in a hurry, Garvey," he said, his face crimson and his
+speech thick. "I accept your p-p-proposition, though it's dirt cheap
+at two hundred. A t-trade's all right when both p-purchaser and
+b-buyer are s-satisfied. Shall I w-wrap it up for you, Mr. Garvey?"
+
+Garvey rose, and shook out his broadcloth. "Missis Garvey will be
+pleased. You air out of it, and it stands Coltrane and Garvey. Just
+a scrap ov writin', Mr. Goree, you bein' a lawyer, to show we traded."
+
+Goree seized a sheet of paper and a pen. The money was clutched in
+his moist hand. Everything else suddenly seemed to grow trivial and
+light.
+
+"Bill of sale, by all means. 'Right, title, and interest in and to'
+. . . 'forever warrant and--' No, Garvey, we'll have to leave out that
+'defend,'" said Goree with a loud laugh. "You'll have to defend this
+title yourself."
+
+The mountaineer received the amazing screed that the lawyer handed
+him, folded it with immense labour, and laced it carefully in his
+pocket.
+
+Goree was standing near the window. "Step here," he said, raising his
+finger, "and I'll show you your recently purchased enemy. There he
+goes, down the other side of the street."
+
+The mountaineer crooked his long frame to look through the window in
+the direction indicated by the other. Colonel Abner Coltrane, an
+erect, portly gentleman of about fifty, wearing the inevitable long,
+double-breasted frock coat of the Southern lawmaker, and an old high
+silk hat, was passing on the opposite sidewalk. As Garvey looked,
+Goree glanced at his face. If there be such a thing as a yellow wolf,
+here was its counterpart. Garvey snarled as his unhuman eyes followed
+the moving figure, disclosing long, amber-coloured fangs.
+
+"Is that him? Why, that's the man who sent me to the pen'tentiary
+once!"
+
+"He used to be district attorney," said Goree carelessly. "And, by
+the way, he's a first-class shot."
+
+"I kin hit a squirrel's eye at a hundred yard," said Garvey. "So that
+thar's Coltrane! I made a better trade than I was thinkin'. I'll
+take keer ov this feud, Mr. Goree, better'n you ever did!"
+
+He moved toward the door, but lingered there, betraying a slight
+perplexity.
+
+"Anything else to-day?" inquired Goree with frothy sarcasm. "Any
+family traditions, ancestral ghosts, or skeletons in the closet?
+Prices as low as the lowest."
+
+"Thar was another thing," replied the unmoved squirrel hunter, "that
+Missis Garvey was thinkin' of. 'Tain't so much in my line as t'other,
+but she wanted partic'lar that I should inquire, and ef you was
+willin', 'pay fur it,' she says, 'fa'r and squar'.' Thar's a buryin'
+groun', as you know, Mr. Goree, in the yard of yo' old place, under
+the cedars. Them that lies thar is yo' folks what was killed by the
+Coltranes. The monyments has the names on 'em. Missis Garvey says a
+fam'ly buryin' groun' is a sho' sign of quality. She says ef we git
+the feud, thar's somethin' else ought to go with it. The names on
+them monyments is 'Goree,' but they can be changed to ourn by--"
+
+"Go! Go!" screamed Goree, his face turning purple. He stretched out
+both hands toward the mountaineer, his fingers hooked and shaking.
+"Go, you ghoul! Even a Ch-Chinaman protects the g-graves of his
+ancestors--go!"
+
+The squirrel hunter slouched out of the door to his carryall. While
+he was climbing over the wheel Goree was collecting, with feverish
+celerity, the money that had fallen from his hand to the floor. As
+the vehicle slowly turned about, the sheep, with a coat of newly
+grown wool, was hurrying, in indecent haste, along the path to the
+court-house.
+
+At three o'clock in the morning they brought him back to his office,
+shorn and unconscious. The sheriff, the sportive deputy, the county
+clerk, and the gay attorney carried him, the chalk-faced man "from the
+valley" acting as escort.
+
+"On the table," said one of them, and they deposited him there among
+the litter of his unprofitable books and papers.
+
+"Yance thinks a lot of a pair of deuces when he's liquored up," sighed
+the sheriff reflectively.
+
+"Too much," said the gay attorney. "A man has no business to play
+poker who drinks as much as he does. I wonder how much he dropped
+to-night."
+
+"Close to two hundred. What I wonder is whar he got it. Yance ain't
+had a cent fur over a month, I know."
+
+"Struck a client, maybe. Well, let's get home before daylight. He'll
+be all right when he wakes up, except for a sort of beehive about the
+cranium."
+
+The gang slipped away through the early morning twilight. The next
+eye to gaze upon the miserable Goree was the orb of day. He peered
+through the uncurtained window, first deluging the sleeper in a flood
+of faint gold, but soon pouring upon the mottled red of his flesh a
+searching, white, summer heat. Goree stirred, half unconsciously,
+among the table's dbris, and turned his face from the window. His
+movement dislodged a heavy law book, which crashed upon the floor.
+Opening his eyes, he saw, bending over him, a man in a black frock
+coat. Looking higher, he discovered a well-worn silk hat, and beneath
+it the kindly, smooth face of Colonel Abner Coltrane.
+
+A little uncertain of the outcome, the colonel waited for the other to
+make some sign of recognition. Not in twenty years had male members
+of these two families faced each other in peace. Goree's eyelids
+puckered as he strained his blurred sight toward this visitor, and
+then he smiled serenely.
+
+"Have you brought Stella and Lucy over to play?" he said calmly.
+
+"Do you know me, Yancey?" asked Coltrane.
+
+"Of course I do. You brought me a whip with a whistle in the end."
+
+So he had--twenty-four years ago; when Yancey's father was his best
+friend.
+
+Goree's eyes wandered about the room. The colonel understood. "Lie
+still, and I'll bring you some," said he. There was a pump in the yard
+at the rear, and Goree closed his eyes, listening with rapture to the
+click of its handle, and the bubbling of the falling stream. Coltrane
+brought a pitcher of the cool water, and held it for him to drink.
+Presently Goree sat up--a most forlorn object, his summer suit of flax
+soiled and crumpled, his discreditable head tousled and unsteady. He
+tried to wave one of his hands toward the colonel.
+
+"Ex-excuse--everything, will you?" he said. "I must have drunk too
+much whiskey last night, and gone to bed on the table." His brows
+knitted into a puzzled frown.
+
+"Out with the boys awhile?" asked Coltrane kindly.
+
+"No, I went nowhere. I haven't had a dollar to spend in the last two
+months. Struck the demijohn too often, I reckon, as usual."
+
+Colonel Coltrane touched him on the shoulder.
+
+"A little while ago, Yancey," he began, "you asked me if I had brought
+Stella and Lucy over to play. You weren't quite awake then, and must
+have been dreaming you were a boy again. You are awake now, and I
+want you to listen to me. I have come from Stella and Lucy to their
+old playmate, and to my old friend's son. They know that I am going
+to bring you home with me, and you will find them as ready with a
+welcome as they were in the old days. I want you to come to my house
+and stay until you are yourself again, and as much longer as you will.
+We heard of your being down in the world, and in the midst of
+temptation, and we agreed that you should come over and play at our
+house once more. Will you come, my boy? Will you drop our old family
+trouble and come with me?"
+
+"Trouble!" said Goree, opening his eyes wide. "There was never any
+trouble between us that I know of. I'm sure we've always been the
+best friends. But, good Lord, Colonel, how could I go to your home as
+I am--a drunken wretch, a miserable, degraded spendthrift and
+gambler--"
+
+He lurched from the table into his armchair, and began to weep maudlin
+tears, mingled with genuine drops of remorse and shame. Coltrane
+talked to him persistently and reasonably, reminding him of the
+simple mountain pleasures of which he had once been so fond, and
+insisting upon the genuineness of the invitation.
+
+Finally he landed Goree by telling him he was counting upon his help
+in the engineering and transportation of a large amount of felled
+timber from a high mountain-side to a waterway. He knew that Goree
+had once invented a device for this purpose--a series of slides and
+chutes upon which he had justly prided himself. In an instant the
+poor fellow, delighted at the idea of his being of use to any one, had
+paper spread upon the table, and was drawing rapid but pitifully shaky
+lines in demonstration of what he could and would do.
+
+The man was sickened of the husks; his prodigal heart was turning
+again toward the mountains. His mind was yet strangely clogged, and
+his thoughts and memories were returning to his brain one by one, like
+carrier pigeons over a stormy sea. But Coltrane was satisfied with
+the progress he had made.
+
+Bethel received the surprise of its existence that afternoon when a
+Coltrane and a Goree rode amicably together through the town. Side by
+side they rode, out from the dusty streets and gaping townspeople,
+down across the creek bridge, and up toward the mountain. The
+prodigal had brushed and washed and combed himself to a more decent
+figure, but he was unsteady in the saddle, and he seemed to be deep in
+the contemplation of some vexing problem. Coltrane left him in his
+mood, relying upon the influence of changed surroundings to restore
+his equilibrium.
+
+Once Goree was seized with a shaking fit, and almost came to a
+collapse. He had to dismount and rest at the side of the road. The
+colonel, foreseeing such a condition, had provided a small flask of
+whisky for the journey but when it was offered to him Goree refused it
+almost with violence, declaring he would never touch it again. By and
+by he was recovered, and went quietly enough for a mile or two. Then
+he pulled up his horse suddenly, and said:
+
+"I lost two hundred dollars last night, playing poker. Now, where did
+I get that money?"
+
+"Take it easy, Yancey. The mountain air will soon clear it up. We'll
+go fishing, first thing, at the Pinnacle Falls. The trout are jumping
+there like bullfrogs. We'll take Stella and Lucy along, and have a
+picnic on Eagle Rock. Have you forgotten how a hickory-cured-ham
+sandwich tastes, Yancey, to a hungry fisherman?"
+
+Evidently the colonel did not believe the story of his lost wealth; so
+Goree retired again into brooding silence.
+
+By late Afternoon they had travelled ten of the twelve miles between
+Bethel and Laurel. Half a mile this side of Laurel lay the old Goree
+place; a mile or two beyond the village lived the Coltranes. The road
+was now steep and laborious, but the compensations were many. The
+tilted aisles of the forest were opulent with leaf and bird and bloom.
+The tonic air put to shame the pharmacopia. The glades were dark
+with mossy shade, and bright with shy rivulets winking from the ferns
+and laurels. On the lower side they viewed, framed in the near
+foliage, exquisite sketches of the far valley swooning in its opal
+haze.
+
+Coltrane was pleased to see that his companion was yielding to the
+spell of the hills and woods. For now they had but to skirt the base
+of Painter's Cliff; to cross Elder Branch and mount the hill beyond,
+and Goree would have to face the squandered home of his fathers. Every
+rock he passed, every tree, every foot of the rocky way, was familiar
+to him. Though he had forgotten the woods, they thrilled him like the
+music of "Home, Sweet Home."
+
+They rounded the cliff, descended into Elder Branch, and paused there
+to let the horses drink and splash in the swift water. On the right
+was a rail fence that cornered there, and followed the road and
+stream. Inclosed by it was the old apple orchard of the home place;
+the house was yet concealed by the brow of the steep hill. Inside and
+along the fence, pokeberries, elders, sassafras, and sumac grew high
+and dense. At a rustle of their branches, both Goree and Coltrane
+glanced up, and saw a long, yellow, wolfish face above the fence,
+staring at them with pale, unwinking eyes. The head quickly
+disappeared; there was a violent swaying of the bushes, and an
+ungainly figure ran up through the apple orchard in the direction of
+the house, zig-zagging among the trees.
+
+"That's Garvey," said Coltrane; "the man you sold out to. There's no
+doubt but he's considerably cracked. I had to send him up for
+moonshining once, several years ago, in spite of the fact that I
+believed him irresponsible. Why, what's the matter, Yancey?"
+
+Goree was wiping his forehead, and his face had lost its colour. "Do
+I look queer, too?" he asked, trying to smile. "I'm just remembering
+a few more things." Some of the alcohol had evaporated from his brain.
+"I recollect now where I got that two hundred dollars."
+
+"Don't think of it," said Coltrane cheerfully. "Later on we'll figure
+it all out together."
+
+They rode out of the branch, and when they reached the foot of the
+hill Goree stopped again.
+
+"Did you ever suspect I was a very vain kind of fellow, Colonel?" he
+asked. "Sort of foolish proud about appearances?"
+
+The colonel's eyes refused to wander to the soiled, sagging suit of
+flax and the faded slouch hat.
+
+"It seems to me," he replied, mystified, but humouring him, "I
+remember a young buck about twenty, with the tightest coat, the
+sleekest hair, and the prancingest saddle horse in the Blue Ridge."
+
+"Right you are," said Goree eagerly. "And it's in me yet, though it
+don't show. Oh, I'm as vain as a turkey gobbler, and as proud as
+Lucifer. I'm going to ask you to indulge this weakness of mine in a
+little matter."
+
+"Speak out, Yancey. We'll create you Duke of Laurel and Baron of Blue
+Ridge, if you choose; and you shall have a feather out of Stella's
+peacock's tail to wear in your hat."
+
+"I'm in earnest. In a few minutes we'll pass the house up there on
+the hill where I was born, and where my people have lived for nearly a
+century. Strangers live there now--and look at me! I am about to
+show myself to them ragged and poverty-stricken, a wastrel and a
+beggar. Colonel Coltrane, I'm ashamed to do it. I want you to let me
+wear your coat and hat until we are out of sight beyond. I know you
+think it a foolish pride, but I want to make as good a showing as I
+can when I pass the old place."
+
+"Now, what does this mean?" said Coltrane to himself, as he
+compared his companion's sane looks and quiet demeanour with his
+strange request. But he was already unbuttoning the coat, assenting
+readily, as if the fancy were in no wise to be considered strange.
+
+The coat and hat fitted Goree well. He buttoned the former about him
+with a look of satisfaction and dignity. He and Coltrane were nearly
+the same size--rather tall, portly, and erect. Twenty-five years
+were between them, but in appearance they might have been brothers.
+Goree looked older than his age; his face was puffy and lined; the
+colonel had the smooth, fresh complexion of a temperate liver. He put
+on Goree's disreputable old flax coat and faded slouch hat.
+
+"Now," said Goree, taking up the reins, "I'm all right. I want you to
+ride about ten feet in the rear as we go by, Colonel, so that they can
+get a good look at me. They'll see I'm no back number yet, by any
+means. I guess I'll show up pretty well to them once more, anyhow.
+Let's ride on."
+
+He set out up the hill at a smart trot, the colonel following, as he
+had been requested.
+
+Goree sat straight in the saddle, with head erect, but his eyes were
+turned to the right, sharply scanning every shrub and fence and
+hiding-place in the old homestead yard. Once he muttered to himself,
+"Will the crazy fool try it, or did I dream half of it?"
+
+It was when he came opposite the little family burying ground that he
+saw what he had been looking for--a puff of white smoke, coming from
+the thick cedars in one corner. He toppled so slowly to the left that
+Coltrane had time to urge his horse to that side, and catch him with
+one arm.
+
+The squirrel hunter had not overpraised his aim. He had sent the
+bullet where he intended, and where Goree had expected that it would
+pass--through the breast of Colonel Abner Coltrane's black frock
+coat.
+
+Goree leaned heavily against Coltrane, but he did not fall. The
+horses kept pace, side by side, and the Colonel's arm kept him steady.
+The little white houses of Laurel shone through the trees, half a mile
+away. Goree reached out one hand and groped until it rested upon
+Coltrane's fingers, which held his bridle.
+
+"Good friend," he said, and that was all.
+
+Thus did Yancey Goree, as he rode past his old home, make, considering
+all things, the best showing that was in his power.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+THE SONG AND THE SERGEANT
+
+
+Half a dozen people supping at a table in one of the upper-Broadway
+all-night restaurants were making too much noise. Three times the
+manager walked past them with a politely warning glance; but their
+argument had waxed too warm to be quelled by a manager's gaze. It was
+midnight, and the restaurant was filled with patrons from the theatres
+of that district. Some among the dispersed audiences must have
+recognized among the quarrelsome sextet the faces of the players
+belonging to the Carroll Comedy Company.
+
+Four of the six made up the company. Another was the author of the
+comedietta, "A Gay Coquette," which the quartette of players had been
+presenting with fair success at several vaudeville houses in the city.
+The sixth at the table was a person inconsequent in the realm of art,
+but one at whose bidding many lobsters had perished.
+
+Loudly the six maintained their clamorous debate. No one of the Party
+was silent except when answers were stormed from him by the excited
+ones. That was the comedian of "A Gay Coquette." He was a young man
+with a face even too melancholy for his profession.
+
+The oral warfare of four immoderate tongues was directed at Miss
+Clarice Carroll, the twinkling star of the small aggregation.
+Excepting the downcast comedian, all members of the party united in
+casting upon her with vehemence the blame of some momentous
+misfortune. Fifty times they told her: "It is your fault, Clarice--it
+is you alone who spoilt the scene. It is only of late that you have
+acted this way. At this rate the sketch will have to be taken off."
+
+Miss Carroll was a match for any four. Gallic ancestry gave her a
+vivacity that could easily mount to fury. Her large eyes flashed a
+scorching denial at her accusers. Her slender, eloquent arms
+constantly menaced the tableware. Her high, clear soprano voice rose
+to what would have been a scream had it not possessed so pure a
+musical quality. She hurled back at the attacking four their
+denunciations in tones sweet, but of too great carrying power for a
+Broadway restaurant.
+
+Finally they exhausted her patience both as a woman and an artist.
+She sprang up like a panther, managed to smash half a dozen plates and
+glasses with one royal sweep of her arm, and defied her critics. They
+rose and wrangled more loudly. The comedian sighed and looked a
+trifle sadder and disinterested. The manager came tripping and
+suggested peace. He was told to go to the popular synonym for war so
+promptly that the affair might have happened at The Hague.
+
+Thus was the manager angered. He made a sign with his hand and a
+waiter slipped out of the door. In twenty minutes the party of six
+was in a police station facing a grizzled and philosophical desk
+sergeant.
+
+"Disorderly conduct in a restaurant," said the policeman who had
+brought the party in.
+
+The author of "A Gay Coquette" stepped to the front. He wore
+nose-glasses and evening clothes, even if his shoes had been tans
+before they met the patent-leather-polish bottle.
+
+"Mr. Sergeant," said he, out of his throat, like Actor Irving, "I
+would like to protest against this arrest. The company of actors who
+are performing in a little play that I have written, in company with a
+friend and myself were having a little supper. We became deeply
+interested in the discussion as to which one of the cast is
+responsible for a scene in the sketch that lately has fallen so flat
+that the piece is about to become a failure. We may have been rather
+noisy and intolerant of interruption by the restaurant people; but the
+matter was of considerable importance to all of us. You see that we
+are sober and are not the kind of people who desire to raise
+disturbances. I hope that the case will not be pressed and that we may
+be allowed to go."
+
+"Who makes the charge?" asked the sergeant.
+
+"Me," said a white-aproned voice in the rear. "De restaurant sent me
+to. De gang was raisin' a rough-house and breakin' dishes."
+
+"The dishes were paid for," said the playwright. "They were not broken
+purposely. In her anger, because we remonstrated with her for
+spoiling the scene, Miss--"
+
+"It's not true, sergeant," cried the clear voice of Miss Clarice
+Carroll. In a long coat of tan silk and a red-plumed hat, she
+bounded before the desk.
+
+"It's not my fault," she cried indignantly. "How dare they say such
+a thing! I've played the title rle ever since it was staged, and if
+you want to know who made it a success, ask the public--that's all."
+
+"What Miss Carroll says is true in part," said the author. "For five
+months the comedietta was a drawing-card in the best houses. But
+during the last two weeks it has lost favour. There is one scene in
+it in which Miss Carroll made a big hit. Now she hardly gets a hand
+out of it. She spoils it by acting it entirely different from her old
+way."
+
+"It is not my fault," reiterated the actress.
+
+"There are only two of you on in the scene," argued the playwright
+hotly, "you and Delmars, here--"
+
+"Then it's his fault," declared Miss Carroll, with a lightning glance
+of scorn from her dark eyes. The comedian caught it, and gazed with
+increased melancholy at the panels of the sergeant's desk.
+
+The night was a dull one in that particular police station.
+
+The sergeant's long-blunted curiosity awoke a little.
+
+"I've heard you," he said to the author. And then he addressed the
+thin-faced and ascetic-looking lady of the company who played "Aunt
+Turnip-top" in the little comedy.
+
+"Who do you think spoils the scene you are fussing about?" he asked.
+
+"I'm no knocker," said that lady, "and everybody knows it. So, when I
+say that Clarice falls down every time in that scene I'm judging her
+art and not herself. She was great in it once. She does it something
+fierce now. It'll dope the show if she keeps it up."
+
+The sergeant looked at the comedian.
+
+"You and the lady have this scene together, I understand. I suppose
+there's no use asking you which one of you queers it?"
+
+The comedian avoided the direct rays from the two fixed stars of Miss
+Carroll's eyes.
+
+"I don't know," he said, looking down at his patent-leather toes.
+
+"Are you one of the actors?" asked the sergeant of a dwarfish youth
+with a middle-aged face.
+
+"Why, say!" replied the last Thespian witness, "you don't notice any
+tin spear in my hands, do you? You haven't heard me shout: 'See, the
+Emperor comes!' since I've been in here, have you? I guess I'm on the
+stage long enough for 'em not to start a panic by mistaking me for a
+thin curl of smoke rising above the footlights."
+
+"In your opinion, if you've got one," said the sergeant, "is the frost
+that gathers on the scene in question the work of the lady or the
+gentleman who takes part in it?"
+
+The middle-aged youth looked pained.
+
+"I regret to say," he answered, "that Miss Carroll seems to have
+lost her grip on that scene. She's all right in the rest of the
+play, but--but I tell you, sergeant, she can do it--she has done
+it equal to any of 'em--and she can do it again."
+
+Miss Carroll ran forward, glowing and palpitating.
+
+"Thank you, Jimmy, for the first good word I've had in many a day,"
+she cried. And then she turned her eager face toward the desk.
+
+"I'll show you, sergeant, whether I am to blame. I'll show them
+whether I can do that scene. Come, Mr. Delmars; let us begin. You
+will let us, won't you, sergeant?"
+
+"How long will it take?" asked the sergeant, dubiously.
+
+"Eight minutes," said the playwright. "The entire play consumes but
+thirty."
+
+"You may go ahead," said the sergeant. "Most of you seem to side
+against the little lady. Maybe she had a right to crack up a saucer
+or two in that restaurant. We'll see how she does the turn before we
+take that up."
+
+The matron of the police station had been standing near, listening to
+the singular argument. She came nigher and stood near the sergeant's
+chair. Two or three of the reserves strolled in, big and yawning.
+
+"Before beginning the scene," said the playwright, "and assuming that
+you have not seen a production of 'A Gay Coquette,' I will make a
+brief but necessary explanation. It is a musical-farce-comedy--
+burlesque-comedietta. As the title implies, Miss Carroll's rle is
+that of a gay, rollicking, mischievous, heartless coquette. She
+sustains that character throughout the entire comedy part of the
+production. And I have designed the extravaganza features so that she
+may preserve and present the same coquettish idea.
+
+"Now, the scene in which we take exception to Miss Carroll's acting is
+called the 'gorilla dance.' She is costumed to represent a wood nymph,
+and there is a great song-and-dance scene with a gorilla--played by
+Mr. Delmars, the comedian. A tropical-forest stage is set.
+
+"That used to get four and five recalls. The main thing was the
+acting and the dance--it was the funniest thing in New York for five
+months. Delmars's song, 'I'll Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home,' while he
+and Miss Carroll were cutting hide-and-seek capers among the tropical
+plants, was a winner."
+
+"What's the trouble with the scene now?" asked the sergeant.
+
+"Miss Carroll spoils it right in the middle of it," said the
+playwright wrathfully.
+
+With a wide gesture of her ever-moving arms the actress waved back the
+little group of spectators, leaving a space in front of the desk for
+the scene of her vindication or fall. Then she whipped off her long
+tan cloak and tossed it across the arm of the policeman who still
+stood officially among them.
+
+Miss Carroll had gone to supper well cloaked, but in the costume of
+the tropic wood nymph. A skirt of fern leaves touched her knee; she
+was like a humming-bird--green and golden and purple.
+
+And then she danced a fluttering, fantastic dance, so agile and light
+and mazy in her steps that the other three members of the Carroll
+Comedy Company broke into applause at the art of it.
+
+And at the proper time Delmars leaped out at her side, mimicking
+the uncouth, hideous bounds of the gorilla so funnily that the
+grizzled sergeant himself gave a short laugh like the closing of a
+padlock. They danced together the gorilla dance, and won a hand from
+all.
+
+Then began the most fantastic part of the scene--the wooing of the
+nymph by the gorilla. It was a kind of dance itself--eccentric and
+prankish, with the nymph in coquettish and seductive retreat, followed
+by the gorilla as he sang "I'll Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home."
+
+The song was a lyric of merit. The words were non-sense, as befitted
+the play, but the music was worthy of something better. Delmars
+struck into it in a rich tenor that owned a quality that shamed the
+flippant words.
+
+During one verse of the song the wood nymph performed the grotesque
+evolutions designed for the scene. At the middle of the second verse
+she stood still, with a strange look on her face, seeming to gaze
+dreamily into the depths of the scenic forest. The gorilla's last
+leap had brought him to her feet, and there he knelt, holding her
+hand, until he had finished the haunting-lyric that was set in the
+absurd comedy like a diamond in a piece of putty.
+
+When Delmars ceased Miss Carroll started, and covered a sudden flow of
+tears with both hands.
+
+"There!" cried the playwright, gesticulating with violence; "there
+you have it, sergeant. For two weeks she has spoiled that scene in
+just that manner at every performance. I have begged her to consider
+that it is not Ophelia or Juliet that she is playing. Do you wonder
+now at our impatience? Tears for the gorilla song! The play is lost!"
+
+Out of her bewitchment, whatever it was, the wood nymph flared
+suddenly, and pointed a desperate finger at Delmars.
+
+"It is you--you who have done this," she cried wildly. "You never
+sang that song that way until lately. It is your doing."
+
+"I give it up," said the sergeant.
+
+And then the gray-haired matron of the police station came forward
+from behind the sergeant's chair.
+
+"Must an old woman teach you all?" she said. She went up to Miss
+Carroll and took her hand.
+
+"The man's wearing his heart out for you, my dear. Couldn't you tell
+it the first note you heard him sing? All of his monkey flip-flops
+wouldn't have kept it from me. Must you be deaf as well as blind?
+That's why you couldn't act your part, child. Do you love him or must
+he be a gorilla for the rest of his days?"
+
+Miss Carroll whirled around and caught Delmars with a lightning glance
+of her eye. He came toward her, melancholy.
+
+"Did you hear, Mr. Delmars?" she asked, with a catching breath.
+
+"I did," said the comedian. "It is true. I didn't think there was
+any use. I tried to let you know with the song."
+
+"Silly!" said the matron; "why didn't you speak?"
+
+"No, no," cried the wood nymph, "his way was the best. I didn't know,
+but--it was just what I wanted, Bobby."
+
+She sprang like a green grasshopper; and the comedian opened his arms,
+and--smiled.
+
+"Get out of this," roared the desk sergeant to the waiting waiter from
+the restaurant. "There's nothing doing here for you."
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+ONE DOLLAR'S WORTH
+
+
+The judge of the United States court of the district lying along the
+Rio Grande border found the following letter one morning in his mail:
+
+
+ JUDGE:
+ When you sent me up for four years you made a talk.
+ Among other hard things, you called me a rattlesnake.
+ Maybe I am one--anyhow, you hear me rattling now.
+ One year after I got to the pen, my daughter died of--
+ well, they said it was poverty and the disgrace together.
+ You've got a daughter, Judge, and I'm going to make
+ you know how it feels to lose one. And I'm going to
+ bite that district attorney that spoke against me. I'm
+ free now, and I guess I've turned to rattlesnake all right.
+ I feel like one. I don't say much, but this is my rattle.
+ Look out when I strike.
+ Yours respectfully,
+ RATTLESNAKE.
+
+
+Judge Derwent threw the letter carelessly aside. It was nothing new
+to receive such epistles from desperate men whom he had been called
+upon to judge. He felt no alarm. Later on he showed the letter to
+Littlefield, the young district attorney, for Littlefield's name was
+included in the threat, and the judge was punctilious in matters
+between himself and his fellow men.
+
+Littlefield honoured the rattle of the writer, as far as it concerned
+himself, with a smile of contempt; but he frowned a little over the
+reference to the Judge's daughter, for he and Nancy Derwent were to be
+married in the fall.
+
+Littlefield went to the clerk of the court and looked over the records
+with him. They decided that the letter might have been sent by Mexico
+Sam, a half-breed border desperado who had been imprisoned for
+manslaughter four years before. Then official duties crowded the
+matter from his mind, and the rattle of the revengeful serpent was
+forgotten.
+
+Court was in session at Brownsville. Most of the cases to be tried
+were charges of smuggling, counterfeiting, post-office robberies, and
+violations of Federal laws along the border. One case was that of a
+young Mexican, Rafael Ortiz, who had been rounded up by a clever
+deputy marshal in the act of passing a counterfeit silver dollar. He
+had been suspected of many such deviations from rectitude, but this
+was the first time that anything provable had been fixed upon him.
+Ortiz languished cozily in jail, smoking brown cigarettes and waiting
+for trial. Kilpatrick, the deputy, brought the counterfeit dollar and
+handed it to the district attorney in his office in the court-house.
+The deputy and a reputable druggist were prepared to swear that Ortiz
+paid for a bottle of medicine with it. The coin was a poor
+counterfeit, soft, dull-looking, and made principally of lead. It was
+the day before the morning on which the docket would reach the case of
+Ortiz, and the district attorney was preparing himself for trial.
+
+"Not much need of having in high-priced experts to prove the coin's
+queer, is there, Kil?" smiled Littlefield, as he thumped the dollar
+down upon the table, where it fell with no more ring than would have
+come from a lump of putty.
+
+"I guess the Greaser's as good as behind the bars," said the deputy,
+easing up his holsters. "You've got him dead. If it had been just
+one time, these Mexicans can't tell good money from bad; but this
+little yaller rascal belongs to a gang of counterfeiters, I know.
+This is the first time I've been able to catch him doing the trick.
+He's got a girl down there in them Mexican jacals on the river bank.
+I seen her one day when I was watching him. She's as pretty as a red
+heifer in a flower bed."
+
+Littlefield shoved the counterfeit dollar into his pocket, and slipped
+his memoranda of the case into an envelope. Just then a bright,
+winsome face, as frank and jolly as a boy's, appeared in the doorway,
+and in walked Nancy Derwent.
+
+"Oh, Bob, didn't court adjourn at twelve to-day until to-morrow?" she
+asked of Littlefield.
+
+"It did," said the district attorney, "and I'm very glad of it. I've
+got a lot of rulings to look up, and--"
+
+"Now, that's just like you. I wonder you and father don't turn
+to law books or rulings or something! I want you to take me out
+plover-shooting this afternoon. Long Prairie is just alive with them.
+Don't say no, please! I want to try my new twelve-bore hammerless.
+I've sent to the livery stable to engage Fly and Bess for the
+buckboard; they stand fire so nicely. I was sure you would go."
+
+They were to be married in the fall. The glamour was at its
+height. The plovers won the day--or, rather, the afternoon--over
+the calf-bound authorities. Littlefield began to put his papers
+away.
+
+There was a knock at the door. Kilpatrick answered it. A beautiful,
+dark-eyed girl with a skin tinged with the faintest lemon colour
+walked into the room. A black shawl was thrown over her head and
+wound once around her neck.
+
+She began to talk in Spanish, a voluble, mournful stream of melancholy
+music. Littlefield did not understand Spanish. The deputy did, and
+he translated her talk by portions, at intervals holding up his hand
+to check the flow of her words.
+
+"She came to see you, Mr. Littlefield. Her name's Joya Trevias. She
+wants to see you about--well, she's mixed up with that Rafael Ortiz.
+She's his--she's his girl. She says he's innocent. She says she
+made the money and got him to pass it. Don't you believe her, Mr.
+Littlefield. That's the way with these Mexican girls; they'll lie,
+steal, or kill for a fellow when they get stuck on him. Never trust a
+woman that's in love!"
+
+"Mr. Kilpatrick!"
+
+Nancy Derwent's indignant exclamation caused the deputy to flounder
+for a moment in attempting to explain that he had misquoted his own
+sentiments, and then he went on with the translation:
+
+"She says she's willing to take his place in the jail if you'll let
+him out. She says she was down sick with the fever, and the doctor
+said she'd die if she didn't have medicine. That's why he passed the
+lead dollar on the drug store. She says it saved her life. This
+Rafael seems to be her honey, all right; there's a lot of stuff in her
+talk about love and such things that you don't want to hear."
+
+It was an old story to the district attorney.
+
+"Tell her," said he, "that I can do nothing. The case comes up in the
+morning, and he will have to make his fight before the court."
+
+Nancy Derwent was not so hardened. She was looking with sympathetic
+interest at Joya Trevias and at Littlefield alternately. The deputy
+repeated the district attorney's words to the girl. She spoke a
+sentence or two in a low voice, pulled her shawl closely about her
+face, and left the room.
+
+"What did she say then?" asked the district attorney.
+
+"Nothing special," said the deputy. "She said: 'If the life of the
+one'--let's see how it went--'_Si la vida de ella a quien tu amas_
+--if the life of the girl you love is ever in danger, remember Rafael
+Ortiz.'"
+
+Kilpatrick strolled out through the corridor in the direction of the
+marshal's office.
+
+"Can't you do anything for them, Bob?" asked Nancy. "It's such a
+little thing--just one counterfeit dollar--to ruin the happiness
+of two lives! She was in danger of death, and he did it to save her.
+Doesn't the law know the feeling of pity?"
+
+"It hasn't a place in jurisprudence, Nan," said Littlefield,
+"especially _in re_ the district attorney's duty. I'll promise you
+that the prosecution will not be vindictive; but the man is as good as
+convicted when the case is called. Witnesses will swear to his passing
+the bad dollar which I have in my pocket at this moment as 'Exhibit
+A.' There are no Mexicans on the jury, and it will vote Mr. Greaser
+guilty without leaving the box."
+
+
+The plover-shooting was fine that afternoon, and in the excitement of
+the sport the case of Rafael and the grief of Joya Trevias was
+forgotten. The district attorney and Nancy Derwent drove out from
+the town three miles along a smooth, grassy road, and then struck
+across a rolling prairie toward a heavy line of timber on Piedra
+Creek. Beyond this creek lay Long Prairie, the favourite haunt of the
+plover. As they were nearing the creek they heard the galloping of a
+horse to their right, and saw a man with black hair and a swarthy face
+riding toward the woods at a tangent, as if he had come up behind
+them.
+
+"I've seen that fellow somewhere," said Littlefield, who had a memory
+for faces, "but I can't exactly place him. Some ranchman, I suppose,
+taking a short cut home."
+
+They spent an hour on Long Prairie, shooting from the buckboard.
+Nancy Derwent, an active, outdoor Western girl, was pleased with her
+twelve-bore. She had bagged within two brace of her companion's
+score.
+
+They started homeward at a gentle trot. When within a hundred yards
+of Piedra Creek a man rode out of the timber directly toward them.
+
+"It looks like the man we saw coming over," remarked Miss Derwent.
+
+As the distance between them lessened, the district attorney suddenly
+pulled up his team sharply, with his eyes fixed upon the advancing
+horseman. That individual had drawn a Winchester from its scabbard
+on his saddle and thrown it over his arm.
+
+"Now I know you, Mexico Sam!" muttered Littlefield to himself. "It
+was you who shook your rattles in that gentle epistle."
+
+Mexico Sam did not leave things long in doubt. He had a nice eye in
+all matters relating to firearms, so when he was within good rifle
+range, but outside of danger from No. 8 shot, he threw up his
+Winchester and opened fire upon the occupants of the buckboard.
+
+The first shot cracked the back of the seat within the two-inch space
+between the shoulders of Littlefield and Miss Derwent. The next went
+through the dashboard and Littlefield's trouser leg.
+
+The district attorney hustled Nancy out of the buck-board to the
+ground. She was a little pale, but asked no questions. She had the
+frontier instinct that accepts conditions in an emergency without
+superfluous argument. They kept their guns in hand, and Littlefield
+hastily gathered some handfuls of cartridges from the pasteboard box
+on the seat and crowded them into his pockets.
+
+"Keep behind the horses, Nan," he commanded. "That fellow is a ruffian
+I sent to prison once. He's trying to get even. He knows our shot
+won't hurt him at that distance."
+
+"All right, Bob," said Nancy steadily. "I'm not afraid. But you come
+close, too. Whoa, Bess; stand still, now!"
+
+She stroked Bess's mane. Littlefield stood with his gun ready,
+praying that the desperado would come within range.
+
+But Mexico Sam was playing his vendetta along safe lines. He was
+a bird of different feather from the plover. His accurate eye drew
+an imaginary line of circumference around the area of danger from
+bird-shot, and upon this line lie rode. His horse wheeled to the
+right, and as his victims rounded to the safe side of their equine
+breast-work he sent a ball through the district attorney's hat. Once
+he miscalculated in making a dtour, and over-stepped his margin.
+Littlefield's gun flashed, and Mexico Sam ducked his head to the
+harmless patter of the shot. A few of them stung his horse, which
+pranced promptly back to the safety line.
+
+The desperado fired again. A little cry came from Nancy Derwent.
+Littlefield whirled, with blazing eyes, and saw the blood trickling
+down her cheek.
+
+"I'm not hurt, Bob--only a splinter struck me. I think he hit one
+of the wheel-spokes."
+
+"Lord!" groaned Littlefield. "If I only had a charge of buckshot!"
+
+The ruffian got his horse still, and took careful aim. Fly gave a
+snort and fell in the harness, struck in the neck. Bess, now
+disabused of the idea that plover were being fired at, broke her
+traces and galloped wildly away. Mexican Sam sent a ball neatly
+through the fulness of Nancy Derwent's shooting jacket.
+
+"Lie down--lie down!" snapped Littlefield. "Close to the horse--flat
+on the ground--so." He almost threw her upon the grass against the
+back of the recumbent Fly. Oddly enough, at that moment the words
+of the Mexican girl returned to his mind:
+
+"If the life of the girl you love is ever in danger, remember Rafael
+Ortiz."
+
+Littlefield uttered an exclamation.
+
+"Open fire on him, Nan, across the horse's back. Fire as fast as you
+can! You can't hurt him, but keep him dodging shot for one minute
+while I try to work a little scheme."
+
+Nancy gave a quick glance at Littlefield, and saw him take out his
+pocket-knife and open it. Then she turned her face to obey orders,
+keeping up a rapid fire at the enemy.
+
+Mexico Sam waited patiently until this innocuous fusillade ceased.
+He had plenty of time, and he did not care to risk the chance of a
+bird-shot in his eye when it could be avoided by a little caution.
+He pulled his heavy Stetson low down over his face until the shots
+ceased. Then he drew a little nearer, and fired with careful aim at
+what he could see of his victims above the fallen horse.
+
+Neither of them moved. He urged his horse a few steps nearer. He
+saw the district attorney rise to one knee and deliberately level
+his shotgun. He pulled his hat down and awaited the harmless rattle
+of the tiny pellets.
+
+The shotgun blazed with a heavy report. Mexico Sam sighed, turned
+limp all over, and slowly fell from his horse--a dead rattlesnake.
+
+
+At ten o'clock the next morning court opened, and the case of the
+United States versus Rafael Ortiz was called. The district attorney,
+with his arm in a sling, rose and addressed the court.
+
+"May it please your honour," he said, "I desire to enter a _nolle
+pros._ in this case. Even though the defendant should be guilty,
+there is not sufficient evidence in the hands of the government to
+secure a conviction. The piece of counterfeit coin upon the
+identity of which the case was built is not now available as
+evidence. I ask, therefore, that the case be stricken off."
+
+At the noon recess Kilpatrick strolled into the district attorney's
+office.
+
+"I've just been down to take a squint at old Mexico Sam," said the
+deputy. "They've got him laid out. Old Mexico was a tough outfit, I
+reckon. The boys was wonderin' down there what you shot him with.
+Some said it must have been nails. I never see a gun carry anything
+to make holes like he had."
+
+"I shot him," said the district attorney, "with Exhibit A of your
+counterfeiting case. Lucky thing for me--and somebody else--that
+it was as bad money as it was! It sliced up into slugs very nicely.
+Say, Kil, can't you go down to the jacals and find where that Mexican
+girl lives? Miss Derwent wants to know."
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+A NEWSPAPER STORY
+
+
+At 8 A. M. it lay on Giuseppi's news-stand, still damp from the
+presses. Giuseppi, with the cunning of his ilk, philandered on the
+opposite corner, leaving his patrons to help themselves, no doubt on
+a theory related to the hypothesis of the watched pot.
+
+This particular newspaper was, according to its custom and design, an
+educator, a guide, a monitor, a champion and a household counsellor
+and _vade mecum_.
+
+From its many excellencies might be selected three editorials. One
+was in simple and chaste but illuminating language directed to
+parents and teachers, deprecating corporal punishment for children.
+
+Another was an accusive and significant warning addressed to a
+notorious labour leader who was on the point of instigating his
+clients to a troublesome strike.
+
+The third was an eloquent demand that the police force be sustained
+and aided in everything that tended to increase its efficiency as
+public guardians and servants.
+
+Besides these more important chidings and requisitions upon the store
+of good citizenship was a wise prescription or form of procedure laid
+out by the editor of the heart-to-heart column in the specific case
+of a young man who had complained of the obduracy of his lady love,
+teaching him how he might win her.
+
+Again, there was, on the beauty page, a complete answer to a young
+lady inquirer who desired admonition toward the securing of bright
+eyes, rosy cheeks and a beautiful countenance.
+
+One other item requiring special cognizance was a brief "personal,"
+running thus:
+
+
+ DEAR JACK:--Forgive me. You were right. Meet me corner Madison and
+ ----th at 8.30 this morning. We leave at noon. PENITENT.
+
+
+At 8 o'clock a young man with a haggard look and the feverish gleam of
+unrest in his eye dropped a penny and picked up the top paper as he
+passed Giuseppi's stand. A sleepless night had left him a late riser.
+There was an office to be reached by nine, and a shave and a hasty cup
+of coffee to be crowded into the interval.
+
+He visited his barber shop and then hurried on his way. He pocketed
+his paper, meditating a belated perusal of it at the luncheon hour.
+At the next corner it fell from his pocket, carrying with it his pair
+of new gloves. Three blocks he walked, missed the gloves and turned
+back fuming.
+
+Just on the half-hour he reached the corner where lay the gloves and
+the paper. But he strangely ignored that which he had come to seek.
+He was holding two little hands as tightly as ever he could and
+looking into two penitent brown eyes, while joy rioted in his heart.
+
+"Dear Jack," she said, "I knew you would be here on time."
+
+"I wonder what she means by that," he was saying to himself; "but it's
+all right, it's all right."
+
+A big wind puffed out of the west, picked up the paper from the
+sidewalk, opened it out and sent it flying and whirling down a side
+street. Up that street was driving a skittish bay to a spider-wheel
+buggy, the young man who had written to the heart-to-heart editor for
+a recipe that he might win her for whom he sighed.
+
+The wind, with a prankish flurry, flapped the flying newspaper against
+the face of the skittish bay. There was a lengthened streak of bay
+mingled with the red of running gear that stretched itself out for
+four blocks. Then a water-hydrant played its part in the cosmogony,
+the buggy became matchwood as foreordained, and the driver rested very
+quietly where he had been flung on the asphalt in front of a certain
+brownstone mansion.
+
+They came out and had him inside very promptly. And there was one who
+made herself a pillow for his head, and cared for no curious eyes,
+bending over and saying, "Oh, it was you; it was you all the time,
+Bobby! Couldn't you see it? And if you die, why, so must I, and--"
+
+But in all this wind we must hurry to keep in touch with our paper.
+
+Policeman O'Brine arrested it as a character dangerous to traffic.
+Straightening its dishevelled leaves with his big, slow fingers, he
+stood a few feet from the family entrance of the Shandon Bells Caf.
+One headline he spelled out ponderously: "The Papers to the Front in a
+Move to Help the Police."
+
+But, whisht! The voice of Danny, the head bartender, through the
+crack of the door: "Here's a nip for ye, Mike, ould man."
+
+Behind the widespread, amicable columns of the press Policeman O'Brine
+receives swiftly his nip of the real stuff. He moves away, stalwart,
+refreshed, fortified, to his duties. Might not the editor man view
+with pride the early, the spiritual, the literal fruit that had
+blessed his labours.
+
+Policeman O'Brine folded the paper and poked it playfully under the
+arm of a small boy that was passing. That boy was named Johnny, and he
+took the paper home with him. His sister was named Gladys, and she
+had written to the beauty editor of the paper asking for the
+practicable touchstone of beauty. That was weeks ago, and she had
+ceased to look for an answer. Gladys was a pale girl, with dull eyes
+and a discontented expression. She was dressing to go up to the
+avenue to get some braid. Beneath her skirt she pinned two leaves of
+the paper Johnny had brought. When she walked the rustling sound was
+an exact imitation of the real thing.
+
+On the street she met the Brown girl from the flat below and stopped
+to talk. The Brown girl turned green. Only silk at $5 a yard could
+make the sound that she heard when Gladys moved. The Brown girl,
+consumed by jealousy, said something spiteful and went her way, with
+pinched lips.
+
+Gladys proceeded toward the avenue. Her eyes now sparkled like
+jagerfonteins. A rosy bloom visited her cheeks; a triumphant, subtle,
+vivifying, smile transfigured her face. She was beautiful. Could the
+beauty editor have seen her then! There was something in her answer
+in the paper, I believe, about cultivating kind feelings toward others
+in order to make plain features attractive.
+
+The labour leader against whom the paper's solemn and weighty
+editorial injunction was laid was the father of Gladys and Johnny. He
+picked up the remains of the journal from which Gladys had ravished a
+cosmetic of silken sounds. The editorial did not come under his eye,
+but instead it was greeted by one of those ingenious and specious
+puzzle problems that enthrall alike the simpleton and the sage.
+
+The labour leader tore off half of the page, provided himself with
+table, pencil and paper and glued himself to his puzzle.
+
+Three hours later, after waiting vainly for him at the appointed
+place, other more conservative leaders declared and ruled in favour of
+arbitration, and the strike with its attendant dangers was averted.
+Subsequent editions of the paper referred, in coloured inks, to the
+clarion tone of its successful denunciation of the labour leader's
+intended designs.
+
+The remaining leaves of the active journal also went loyally to the
+proving of its potency.
+
+When Johnny returned from school he sought a secluded spot and removed
+the missing columns from the inside of his clothing, where they had
+been artfully distributed so as to successfully defend such areas as
+are generally attacked during scholastic castigations. Johnny
+attended a private school and had had trouble with his teacher. As
+has been said, there was an excellent editorial against corporal
+punishment in that morning's issue, and no doubt it had its effect.
+
+After this can any one doubt the power of the press?
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+TOMMY'S BURGLAR
+
+
+At ten o'clock P. M. Felicia, the maid, left by the basement door with
+the policeman to get a raspberry phosphate around the corner. She
+detested the policeman and objected earnestly to the arrangement.
+She pointed out, not unreasonably, that she might have been allowed to
+fall asleep over one of St. George Rathbone's novels on the third
+floor, but she was overruled. Raspberries and cops were not created
+for nothing.
+
+The burglar got into the house without much difficulty; because we
+must have action and not too much description in a 2,000-word story.
+
+In the dining room he opened the slide of his dark lantern. With a
+brace and centrebit he began to bore into the lock of the silver-closet.
+
+Suddenly a click was heard. The room was flooded with electric light.
+The dark velvet portires parted to admit a fair-haired boy of eight
+in pink pajamas, bearing a bottle of olive oil in his hand.
+
+"Are you a burglar?" he asked, in a sweet, childish voice.
+
+"Listen to that," exclaimed the man, in a hoarse voice. "Am I a
+burglar? Wot do you suppose I have a three-days' growth of bristly
+beard on my face for, and a cap with flaps? Give me the oil, quick,
+and let me grease the bit, so I won't wake up your mamma, who is lying
+down with a headache, and left you in charge of Felicia who has been
+faithless to her trust."
+
+"Oh, dear," said Tommy, with a sigh. "I thought you would be more
+up-to-date. This oil is for the salad when I bring lunch from the
+pantry for you. And mamma and papa have gone to the Metropolitan to
+hear De Reszke. But that isn't my fault. It only shows how long the
+story has been knocking around among the editors. If the author had
+been wise he'd have changed it to Caruso in the proofs."
+
+"Be quiet," hissed the burglar, under his breath. "If you raise an
+alarm I'll wring your neck like a rabbit's."
+
+"Like a chicken's," corrected Tommy. "You had that wrong. You don't
+wring rabbits' necks."
+
+"Aren't you afraid of me?" asked the burglar.
+
+"You know I'm not," answered Tommy. "Don't you suppose I know fact
+from fiction. If this wasn't a story I'd yell like an Indian when I
+saw you; and you'd probably tumble downstairs and get pinched on the
+sidewalk."
+
+"I see," said the burglar, "that you're on to your job. Go on with
+the performance."
+
+Tommy seated himself in an armchair and drew his toes up under him.
+
+"Why do you go around robbing strangers, Mr. Burglar? Have you no
+friends?"
+
+"I see what you're driving at," said the burglar, with a dark frown.
+"It's the same old story. Your innocence and childish insouciance is
+going to lead me back into an honest life. Every time I crack a crib
+where there's a kid around, it happens."
+
+"Would you mind gazing with wolfish eyes at the plate of cold beef
+that the butler has left on the dining table?" said Tommy. "I'm
+afraid it's growing late."
+
+The burglar accommodated.
+
+"Poor man," said Tommy. "You must be hungry. If you will please stand
+in a listless attitude I will get you something to eat."
+
+The boy brought a roast chicken, a jar of marmalade and a bottle of
+wine from the pantry. The burglar seized a knife and fork sullenly.
+
+"It's only been an hour," he grumbled, "since I had a lobster and a
+pint of musty ale up on Broadway. I wish these story writers would
+let a fellow have a pepsin tablet, anyhow, between feeds."
+
+"My papa writes books," remarked Tommy.
+
+The burglar jumped to his feet quickly.
+
+"You said he had gone to the opera," he hissed, hoarsely and with
+immediate suspicion.
+
+"I ought to have explained," said Tommy. "He didn't buy the tickets."
+The burglar sat again and toyed with the wishbone.
+
+"Why do you burgle houses?" asked the boy, wonderingly.
+
+"Because," replied the burglar, with a sudden flow of tears. "God
+bless my little brown-haired boy Bessie at home."
+
+"Ah," said Tommy, wrinkling his nose, "you got that answer in the
+wrong place. You want to tell your hard-luck story before you pull
+out the child stop."
+
+"Oh, yes," said the burglar, "I forgot. Well, once I lived in
+Milwaukee, and--"
+
+"Take the silver," said Tommy, rising from his chair.
+
+"Hold on," said the burglar. "But I moved away." I could find no
+other employment. For a while I managed to support my wife and
+child by passing confederate money; but, alas! I was forced to give
+that up because it did not belong to the union. I became desperate
+and a burglar."
+
+"Have you ever fallen into the hands of the police?" asked Tommy.
+
+"I said 'burglar,' not 'beggar,'" answered the cracksman.
+
+"After you finish your lunch," said Tommy, "and experience the usual
+change of heart, how shall we wind up the story?"
+
+"Suppose," said the burglar, thoughtfully, "that Tony Pastor turns out
+earlier than usual to-night, and your father gets in from 'Parsifal'
+at 10.30. I am thoroughly repentant because you have made me think of
+my own little boy Bessie, and--"
+
+"Say," said Tommy, "haven't you got that wrong?"
+
+"Not on your coloured crayon drawings by B. Cory Kilvert," said the
+burglar. "It's always a Bessie that I have at home, artlessly
+prattling to the pale-cheeked burglar's bride. As I was saying, your
+father opens the front door just as I am departing with admonitions
+and sandwiches that you have wrapped up for me. Upon recognizing me
+as an old Harvard classmate he starts back in--"
+
+"Not in surprise?" interrupted Tommy, with wide, open eyes.
+
+"He starts back in the doorway," continued the burglar. And then he
+rose to his feet and began to shout "Rah, rah, rah! rah, rah, rah!
+rah, rah, rah!"
+
+"Well," said Tommy, wonderingly, "that's, the first time I ever knew a
+burglar to give a college yell when he was burglarizing a house, even
+in a story."
+
+"That's one on you," said the burglar, with a laugh. "I was practising
+the dramatization. If this is put on the stage that college touch is
+about the only thing that will make it go."
+
+Tommy looked his admiration.
+
+"You're on, all right," he said.
+
+"And there's another mistake you've made," said the burglar. "You
+should have gone some time ago and brought me the $9 gold piece your
+mother gave you on your birthday to take to Bessie."
+
+"But she didn't give it to me to take to Bessie," said Tommy, pouting.
+
+"Come, come!" said the burglar, sternly. "It's not nice of you to
+take advantage because the story contains an ambiguous sentence. You
+know what I mean. It's mighty little I get out of these fictional
+jobs, anyhow. I lose all the loot, and I have to reform every time;
+and all the swag I'm allowed is the blamed little fol-de-rols and
+luck-pieces that you kids hand over. Why, in one story, all I got was
+a kiss from a little girl who came in on me when I was opening a safe.
+And it tasted of molasses candy, too. I've a good notion to tie this
+table cover over your head and keep on into the silver-closet."
+
+"Oh, no, you haven't," said Tommy, wrapping his arms around his knees.
+"Because if you did no editor would buy the story. You know you've
+got to preserve the unities."
+
+"So've you," said the burglar, rather glumly. "Instead of sitting here
+talking impudence and taking the bread out of a poor man's mouth, what
+you'd like to be doing is hiding under the bed and screeching at the
+top of your voice."
+
+"You're right, old man," said Tommy, heartily. "I wonder what they
+make us do it for? I think the S. P. C. C. ought to interfere. I'm
+sure it's neither agreeable nor usual for a kid of my age to butt in
+when a full-grown burglar is at work and offer him a red sled and a
+pair of skates not to awaken his sick mother. And look how they make
+the burglars act! You'd think editors would know--but what's the
+use?"
+
+The burglar wiped his hands on the tablecloth and arose with a yawn.
+
+"Well, let's get through with it," he said. "God bless you, my little
+boy! you have saved a man from committing a crime this night. Bessie
+shall pray for you as soon as I get home and give her her orders. I
+shall never burglarize another house--at least not until the June
+magazines are out. It'll be your little sister's turn then to run in
+on me while I am abstracting the U. S. 4 per cent. from the tea urn
+and buy me off with her coral necklace and a falsetto kiss."
+
+"You haven't got all the kicks coming to you," sighed Tommy, crawling
+out of his chair. "Think of the sleep I'm losing. But it's tough on
+both of us, old man. I wish you could get out of the story and really
+rob somebody. Maybe you'll have the chance if they dramatize us."
+
+"Never!" said the burglar, gloomily. "Between the box office and my
+better impulses that your leading juveniles are supposed to awaken
+and the magazines that pay on publication, I guess I'll always be
+broke."
+
+"I'm sorry," said Tommy, sympathetically. "But I can't help myself
+any more than you can. It's one of the canons of household fiction
+that no burglar shall be successful. The burglar must be foiled by
+a kid like me, or by a young lady heroine, or at the last moment by
+his old pal, Red Mike, who recognizes the house as one in which he
+used to be the coachman. You have got the worst end of it in any kind
+of a story."
+
+"Well, I suppose I must be clearing out now," said the burglar, taking
+up his lantern and bracebit.
+
+"You have to take the rest of this chicken and the bottle of wine with
+you for Bessie and her mother," said Tommy, calmly.
+
+"But confound it," exclaimed the burglar, in an annoyed tone, "they
+don't want it. I've got five cases of Chteau de Beychsvelle at home
+that was bottled in 1853. That claret of yours is corked. And you
+couldn't get either of them to look at a chicken unless it was stewed
+in champagne. You know, after I get out of the story I don't have so
+many limitations. I make a turn now and then."
+
+"Yes, but you must take them," said Tommy, loading his arms with the
+bundles.
+
+"Bless you, young master!" recited the burglar, obedient. "Second-Story
+Saul will never forget you. And now hurry and let me out, kid. Our
+2,000 words must be nearly up."
+
+Tommy led the way through the hall toward the front door. Suddenly
+the burglar stopped and called to him softly: "Ain't there a cop out
+there in front somewhere sparking the girl?"
+
+"Yes," said Tommy, "but what--"
+
+"I'm afraid he'll catch me," said the burglar. "You mustn't forget
+that this is fiction."
+
+"Great head!" said Tommy, turning. "Come out by the back door."
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+A CHAPARRAL CHRISTMAS GIFT
+
+
+The original cause of the trouble was about twenty years in growing.
+
+At the end of that time it was worth it.
+
+Had you lived anywhere within fifty miles of Sundown Ranch you would
+have heard of it. It possessed a quantity of jet-black hair, a pair
+of extremely frank, deep-brown eyes and a laugh that rippled across
+the prairie like the sound of a hidden brook. The name of it was
+Rosita McMullen; and she was the daughter of old man McMullen of the
+Sundown Sheep Ranch.
+
+There came riding on red roan steeds--or, to be more explicit, on a
+paint and a flea-bitten sorrel--two wooers. One was Madison Lane,
+and the other was the Frio Kid. But at that time they did not call him
+the Frio Kid, for he had not earned the honours of special
+nomenclature. His name was simply Johnny McRoy.
+
+It must not be supposed that these two were the sum of the agreeable
+Rosita's admirers. The bronchos of a dozen others champed their bits
+at the long hitching rack of the Sundown Ranch. Many were the
+sheeps'-eyes that were cast in those savannas that did not belong to
+the flocks of Dan McMullen. But of all the cavaliers, Madison Lane
+and Johnny McRoy galloped far ahead, wherefore they are to be
+chronicled.
+
+Madison Lane, a young cattleman from the Nueces country, won the race.
+He and Rosita were married one Christmas day. Armed, hilarious,
+vociferous, magnanimous, the cowmen and the sheepmen, laying aside
+their hereditary hatred, joined forces to celebrate the occasion.
+
+Sundown Ranch was sonorous with the cracking of jokes and sixshooters,
+the shine of buckles and bright eyes, the outspoken congratulations of
+the herders of kine.
+
+But while the wedding feast was at its liveliest there descended upon
+it Johnny McRoy, bitten by jealousy, like one possessed.
+
+"I'll give you a Christmas present," he yelled, shrilly, at the door,
+with his .45 in his hand. Even then he had some reputation as an
+offhand shot.
+
+His first bullet cut a neat underbit in Madison Lane's right ear. The
+barrel of his gun moved an inch. The next shot would have been the
+bride's had not Carson, a sheepman, possessed a mind with triggers
+somewhat well oiled and in repair. The guns of the wedding party had
+been hung, in their belts, upon nails in the wall when they sat at
+table, as a concession to good taste. But Carson, with great
+promptness, hurled his plate of roast venison and frijoles at McRoy,
+spoiling his aim. The second bullet, then, only shattered the white
+petals of a Spanish dagger flower suspended two feet above Rosita's
+head.
+
+The guests spurned their chairs and jumped for their weapons. It was
+considered an improper act to shoot the bride and groom at a wedding.
+In about six seconds there were twenty or so bullets due to be
+whizzing in the direction of Mr. McRoy.
+
+"I'll shoot better next time," yelled Johnny; "and there'll be a next
+time." He backed rapidly out the door.
+
+Carson, the sheepman, spurred on to attempt further exploits by the
+success of his plate-throwing, was first to reach the door. McRoy's
+bullet from the darkness laid him low.
+
+The cattlemen then swept out upon him, calling for vengeance, for,
+while the slaughter of a sheepman has not always lacked condonement,
+it was a decided misdemeanour in this instance. Carson was
+innocent; he was no accomplice at the matrimonial proceedings; nor had
+any one heard him quote the line "Christmas comes but once a year" to
+the guests.
+
+But the sortie failed in its vengeance. McRoy was on his horse and
+away, shouting back curses and threats as he galloped into the
+concealing chaparral.
+
+That night was the birthnight of the Frio Kid. He became the "bad
+man" of that portion of the State. The rejection of his suit by Miss
+McMullen turned him to a dangerous man. When officers went after him
+for the shooting of Carson, he killed two of them, and entered upon
+the life of an outlaw. He became a marvellous shot with either hand.
+He would turn up in towns and settlements, raise a quarrel at the
+slightest opportunity, pick off his man and laugh at the officers
+of the law. He was so cool, so deadly, so rapid, so inhumanly
+blood-thirsty that none but faint attempts were ever made to capture
+him. When he was at last shot and killed by a little one-armed Mexican
+who was nearly dead himself from fright, the Frio Kid had the deaths
+of eighteen men on his head. About half of these were killed in fair
+duels depending upon the quickness of the draw. The other half were
+men whom he assassinated from absolute wantonness and cruelty.
+
+Many tales are told along the border of his impudent courage and
+daring. But he was not one of the breed of desperadoes who have
+seasons of generosity and even of softness. They say he never had
+mercy on the object of his anger. Yet at this and every Christmastide
+it is well to give each one credit, if it can be done, for whatever
+speck of good he may have possessed. If the Frio Kid ever did a
+kindly act or felt a throb of generosity in his heart it was once at
+such a time and season, and this is the way it happened.
+
+
+One who has been crossed in love should never breathe the odour from
+the blossoms of the ratama tree. It stirs the memory to a dangerous
+degree.
+
+One December in the Frio country there was a ratama tree in full
+bloom, for the winter had been as warm as springtime. That way rode
+the Frio Kid and his satellite and co-murderer, Mexican Frank. The kid
+reined in his mustang, and sat in his saddle, thoughtful and grim,
+with dangerously narrowing eyes. The rich, sweet scent touched him
+somewhere beneath his ice and iron.
+
+"I don't know what I've been thinking about, Mex," he remarked in his
+usual mild drawl, "to have forgot all about a Christmas present I got
+to give. I'm going to ride over to-morrow night and shoot Madison
+Lane in his own house. He got my girl--Rosita would have had me if
+he hadn't cut into the game. I wonder why I happened to overlook it
+up to now?"
+
+"Ah, shucks, Kid," said Mexican, "don't talk foolishness. You know
+you can't get within a mile of Mad Lane's house to-morrow night. I
+see old man Allen day before yesterday, and he says Mad is going to
+have Christmas doings at his house. You remember how you shot up the
+festivities when Mad was married, and about the threats you made?
+Don't you suppose Mad Lane'll kind of keep his eye open for a certain
+Mr. Kid? You plumb make me tired, Kid, with such remarks."
+
+"I'm going," repeated the Frio Kid, without heat, "to go to Madison
+Lane's Christmas doings, and kill him. I ought to have done it a long
+time ago. Why, Mex, just two weeks ago I dreamed me and Rosita was
+married instead of her and him; and we was living in a house, and I
+could see her smiling at me, and--oh! h----l, Mex, he got her; and
+I'll get him--yes, sir, on Christmas Eve he got her, and then's when
+I'll get him."
+
+"There's other ways of committing suicide," advised Mexican. "Why
+don't you go and surrender to the sheriff?"
+
+"I'll get him," said the Kid.
+
+Christmas Eve fell as balmy as April. Perhaps there was a hint of
+far-away frostiness in the air, but it tingles like seltzer, perfumed
+faintly with late prairie blossoms and the mesquite grass.
+
+When night came the five or six rooms of the ranch-house were
+brightly lit. In one room was a Christmas tree, for the Lanes had a
+boy of three, and a dozen or more guests were expected from the nearer
+ranches.
+
+At nightfall Madison Lane called aside Jim Belcher and three other
+cowboys employed on his ranch.
+
+"Now, boys," said Lane, "keep your eyes open. Walk around the house
+and watch the road well. All of you know the 'Frio Kid,' as they call
+him now, and if you see him, open fire on him without asking any
+questions. I'm not afraid of his coming around, but Rosita is. She's
+been afraid he'd come in on us every Christmas since we were married."
+
+The guests had arrived in buckboards and on horseback, and were making
+themselves comfortable inside.
+
+The evening went along pleasantly. The guests enjoyed and praised
+Rosita's excellent supper, and afterward the men scattered in groups
+about the rooms or on the broad "gallery," smoking and chatting.
+
+The Christmas tree, of course, delighted the youngsters, and above all
+were they pleased when Santa Claus himself in magnificent white beard
+and furs appeared and began to distribute the toys.
+
+"It's my papa," announced Billy Sampson, aged six. "I've seen him wear
+'em before."
+
+Berkly, a sheepman, an old friend of Lane, stopped Rosita as she was
+passing by him on the gallery, where he was sitting smoking.
+
+"Well, Mrs. Lane," said he, "I suppose by this Christmas you've
+gotten over being afraid of that fellow McRoy, haven't you? Madison
+and I have talked about it, you know."
+
+"Very nearly," said Rosita, smiling, "but I am still nervous
+sometimes. I shall never forget that awful time when he came so near
+to killing us."
+
+"He's the most cold-hearted villain in the world," said Berkly. "The
+citizens all along the border ought to turn out and hunt him down like
+a wolf."
+
+"He has committed awful crimes," said Rosita, "but--I--don't--know.
+I think there is a spot of good somewhere in everybody. He was not
+always bad--that I know."
+
+Rosita turned into the hallway between the rooms. Santa Claus, in
+muffling whiskers and furs, was just coming through.
+
+"I heard what you said through the window, Mrs. Lane," he said. "I
+was just going down in my pocket for a Christmas present for your
+husband. But I've left one for you, instead. It's in the room to
+your right."
+
+"Oh, thank you, kind Santa Claus," said Rosita, brightly.
+
+Rosita went into the room, while Santa Claus stepped into the cooler
+air of the yard.
+
+She found no one in the room but Madison.
+
+"Where is my present that Santa said he left for me in here?" she
+asked.
+
+"Haven't seen anything in the way of a present," said her husband,
+laughing, "unless he could have meant me."
+
+
+The next day Gabriel Radd, the foreman of the X O Ranch, dropped into
+the post-office at Loma Alta.
+
+"Well, the Frio Kid's got his dose of lead at last," he remarked to
+the postmaster.
+
+"That so? How'd it happen?"
+
+"One of old Sanchez's Mexican sheep herders did it!--think of it!
+the Frio Kid killed by a sheep herder! The Greaser saw him riding
+along past his camp about twelve o'clock last night, and was so
+skeered that he up with a Winchester and let him have it. Funniest
+part of it was that the Kid was dressed all up with white Angora-skin
+whiskers and a regular Santy Claus rig-out from head to foot. Think
+of the Frio Kid playing Santy!"
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+A LITTLE LOCAL COLOUR
+
+
+I mentioned to Rivington that I was in search of characteristic New
+York scenes and incidents--something typical, I told him, without
+necessarily having to spell the first syllable with an "i."
+
+"Oh, for your writing business," said Rivington; "you couldn't have
+applied to a better shop. What I don't know about little old New York
+wouldn't make a sonnet to a sunbonnet. I'll put you right in the
+middle of so much local colour that you won't know whether you are a
+magazine cover or in the erysipelas ward. When do you want to begin?"
+
+Rivington is a young-man-about-town and a New Yorker by birth,
+preference and incommutability.
+
+I told him that I would be glad to accept his escort and guardianship
+so that I might take notes of Manhattan's grand, gloomy and peculiar
+idiosyncrasies, and that the time of so doing would be at his own
+convenience.
+
+"We'll begin this very evening," said Rivington, himself interested,
+like a good fellow. "Dine with me at seven, and then I'll steer you
+up against metropolitan phases so thick you'll have to have a
+kinetoscope to record 'em."
+
+So I dined with Rivington pleasantly at his club, in Forty-eleventh
+street, and then we set forth in pursuit of the elusive tincture of
+affairs.
+
+As we came out of the club there stood two men on the sidewalk near
+the steps in earnest conversation.
+
+"And by what process of ratiocination," said one of them, "do you
+arrive at the conclusion that the division of society into producing
+and non-possessing classes predicates failure when compared with
+competitive systems that are monopolizing in tendency and result
+inimically to industrial evolution?"
+
+"Oh, come off your perch!" said the other man, who wore glasses.
+"Your premises won't come out in the wash. You wind-jammers who apply
+bandy-legged theories to concrete categorical syllogisms send logical
+conclusions skallybootin' into the infinitesimal ragbag. You can't
+pull my leg with an old sophism with whiskers on it. You quote Marx
+and Hyndman and Kautsky--what are they?--shines! Tolstoi?--his
+garret is full of rats. I put it to you over the home-plate that the
+idea of a cooperative commonwealth and an abolishment of competitive
+systems simply takes the rag off the bush and gives me hyperesthesia
+of the roopteetoop! The skookum house for yours!"
+
+I stopped a few yards away and took out my little notebook.
+
+"Oh, come ahead," said Rivington, somewhat nervously; "you don't
+want to listen to that."
+
+"Why, man," I whispered, "this is just what I do want to hear. These
+slang types are among your city's most distinguishing features. Is
+this the Bowery variety? I really must hear more of it."
+
+"If I follow you," said the man who had spoken first, "you do not
+believe it possible to reorganize society on the basis of common
+interest?"
+
+"Shinny on your own side!" said the man with glasses. "You never
+heard any such music from my foghorn. What I said was that I did not
+believe it practicable just now. The guys with wads are not in the
+frame of mind to slack up on the mazuma, and the man with the portable
+tin banqueting canister isn't exactly ready to join the Bible class.
+You can bet your variegated socks that the situation is all
+spifflicated up from the Battery to breakfast! What the country needs
+is for some bully old bloke like Cobden or some wise guy like old Ben
+Franklin to sashay up to the front and biff the nigger's head with
+the baseball. Do you catch my smoke? What?"
+
+Rivington pulled me by the arm impatiently.
+
+"Please come on," he said. "Let's go see something. This isn't what
+you want."
+
+"Indeed, it is," I said resisting. "This tough talk is the very stuff
+that counts. There is a picturesqueness about the speech of the lower
+order of people that is quite unique. Did you say that this is the
+Bowery variety of slang?"
+
+"Oh, well," said Rivington, giving it up, "I'll tell you straight.
+That's one of our college professors talking. He ran down for a day or
+two at the club. It's a sort of fad with him lately to use slang in
+his conversation. He thinks it improves language. The man he is
+talking to is one of New York's famous social economists. Now will
+you come on. You can't use that, you know."
+
+"No," I agreed; "I can't use that. Would you call that typical of New
+York?"
+
+"Of course not," said Rivington, with a sigh of relief. "I'm glad you
+see the difference. But if you want to hear the real old tough Bowery
+slang I'll take you down where you'll get your fill of it."
+
+"I would like it," I said; "that is, if it's the real thing. I've
+often read it in books, but I never heard it. Do you think it will be
+dangerous to go unprotected among those characters?"
+
+"Oh, no," said Rivington; "not at this time of night. To tell the
+truth, I haven't been along the Bowery in a long time, but I know it
+as well as I do Broadway. We'll look up some of the typical Bowery
+boys and get them to talk. It'll be worth your while. They talk a
+peculiar dialect that you won't hear anywhere else on earth."
+
+Rivington and I went east in a Forty-second street car and then south
+on the Third avenue line.
+
+At Houston street we got off and walked.
+
+"We are now on the famous Bowery," said Rivington; "the Bowery
+celebrated in song and story."
+
+We passed block after block of "gents'" furnishing stores--the
+windows full of shirts with prices attached and cuffs inside. In
+other windows were neckties and no shirts. People walked up and down
+the sidewalks.
+
+"In some ways," said I, "this reminds me of Kokomono, Ind., during
+the peach-crating season."
+
+Rivington was nettled.
+
+"Step into one of these saloons or vaudeville shows," said he, "with a
+large roll of money, and see how quickly the Bowery will sustain its
+reputation."
+
+"You make impossible conditions," said I, coldly.
+
+By and by Rivington stopped and said we were in the heart of the
+Bowery. There was a policeman on the corner whom Rivington knew.
+
+"Hallo, Donahue!" said my guide. "How goes it? My friend and I are
+down this way looking up a bit of local colour. He's anxious to meet
+one of the Bowery types. Can't you put us on to something genuine in
+that line--something that's got the colour, you know?"
+
+Policeman Donahue turned himself about ponderously, his florid face
+full of good-nature. He pointed with his club down the street.
+
+"Sure!" he said huskily. "Here comes a lad now that was born on the
+Bowery and knows every inch of it. If he's ever been above Bleecker
+street he's kept it to himself."
+
+A man about twenty-eight or twenty-nine, with a smooth face, was
+sauntering toward us with his hands in his coat pockets. Policeman
+Donahue stopped him with a courteous wave of his club.
+
+"Evening, Kerry," he said. "Here's a couple of gents, friends of
+mine, that want to hear you spiel something about the Bowery. Can you
+reel 'em off a few yards?"
+
+"Certainly, Donahue," said the young man, pleasantly. "Good
+evening, gentlemen," he said to us, with a pleasant smile. Donahue
+walked off on his beat.
+
+"This is the goods," whispered Rivington, nudging me with his elbow.
+"Look at his jaw!"
+
+"Say, cull," said Rivington, pushing back his hat, "wot's doin'?
+Me and my friend's taking a look down de old line--see? De copper
+tipped us off dat you was wise to de bowery. Is dat right?"
+
+I could not help admiring Rivington's power of adapting himself to
+his surroundings.
+
+"Donahue was right," said the young man, frankly; "I was brought up
+on the Bowery. I have been news-boy, teamster, pugilist, member of
+an organized band of 'toughs,' bartender, and a 'sport' in various
+meanings of the word. The experience certainly warrants the
+supposition that I have at least a passing acquaintance with a few
+phases of Bowery life. I will be pleased to place whatever knowledge
+and experience I have at the service of my friend Donahue's friends."
+
+Rivington seemed ill at ease.
+
+"I say," he said--somewhat entreatingly, "I thought--you're not
+stringing us, are you? It isn't just the kind of talk we expected.
+You haven't even said 'Hully gee!' once. Do you really belong on the
+Bowery?"
+
+"I am afraid," said the Bowery boy, smilingly, "that at some time you
+have been enticed into one of the dives of literature and had the
+counterfeit coin of the Bowery passed upon you. The 'argot' to which
+you doubtless refer was the invention of certain of your literary
+'discoverers' who invaded the unknown wilds below Third avenue and
+put strange sounds into the mouths of the inhabitants. Safe in their
+homes far to the north and west, the credulous readers who were
+beguiled by this new 'dialect' perused and believed. Like Marco Polo
+and Mungo Park--pioneers indeed, but ambitious souls who could not
+draw the line of demarcation between discovery and invention--the
+literary bones of these explorers are dotting the trackless wastes of
+the subway. While it is true that after the publication of the
+mythical language attributed to the dwellers along the Bowery certain
+of its pat phrases and apt metaphors were adopted and, to a limited
+extent, used in this locality, it was because our people are prompt in
+assimilating whatever is to their commercial advantage. To the
+tourists who visited our newly discovered clime, and who expected a
+realization of their literary guide books, they supplied the demands
+of the market.
+
+"But perhaps I am wandering from the question. In what way can I
+assist you, gentlemen? I beg you will believe that the hospitality of
+the street is extended to all. There are, I regret to say, many
+catchpenny places of entertainment, but I cannot conceive that they
+would entice you."
+
+I felt Rivington lean somewhat heavily against me. "Say!" he
+remarked, with uncertain utterance; "come and have a drink with us."
+
+"Thank you, but I never drink. I find that alcohol, even in the
+smallest quantities, alters the perspective. And I must preserve my
+perspective, for I am studying the Bowery. I have lived in it nearly
+thirty years, and I am just beginning to understand its heartbeats.
+It is like a great river fed by a hundred alien streams. Each influx
+brings strange seeds on its flood, strange silt and weeds, and now and
+then a flower of rare promise. To construe this river requires a man
+who can build dykes against the overflow, who is a naturalist, a
+geologist, a humanitarian, a diver and a strong swimmer. I love my
+Bowery. It was my cradle and is my inspiration. I have published one
+book. The critics have been kind. I put my heart in it. I am writing
+another, into which I hope to put both heart and brain. Consider me
+your guide, gentlemen. Is there anything I can take you to see, any
+place to which I can conduct you?"
+
+I was afraid to look at Rivington except with one eye.
+
+"Thanks," said Rivington. "We were looking up . . . that is . . . my
+friend . . . confound it; it's against all precedent, you know . . .
+awfully obliged . . . just the same."
+
+"In case," said our friend, "you would like to meet some of our Bowery
+young men I would be pleased to have you visit the quarters of our
+East Side Kappa Delta Phi Society, only two blocks east of here."
+
+"Awfully sorry," said Rivington, "but my friend's got me on the jump
+to-night. He's a terror when he's out after local colour. Now,
+there's nothing I would like better than to drop in at the Kappa Delta
+Phi, but--some other time!"
+
+We said our farewells and boarded a home-bound car. We had a rabbit on
+upper Broadway, and then I parted with Rivington on a street corner.
+
+"Well, anyhow," said he, braced and recovered, "it couldn't have
+happened anywhere but in little old New York."
+
+Which to say the least, was typical of Rivington.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+GEORGIA'S RULING
+
+
+If you should chance to visit the General Land Office, step into the
+draughtsmen's room and ask to be shown the map of Salado County. A
+leisurely German--possibly old Kampfer himself--will bring it to
+you. It will be four feet square, on heavy drawing-cloth. The
+lettering and the figures will be beautifully clear and distinct. The
+title will be in splendid, undecipherable German text, ornamented with
+classic Teutonic designs--very likely Ceres or Pomona leaning
+against the initial letters with cornucopias venting grapes and
+wieners. You must tell him that this is not the map you wish to see;
+that he will kindly bring you its official predecessor. He will then
+say, "Ach, so!" and bring out a map half the size of the first, dim,
+old, tattered, and faded.
+
+By looking carefully near its northwest corner you will presently come
+upon the worn contours of Chiquito River, and, maybe, if your eyes are
+good, discern the silent witness to this story.
+
+
+The Commissioner of the Land Office was of the old style; his
+antique courtesy was too formal for his day. He dressed in fine
+black, and there was a suggestion of Roman drapery in his long
+coat-skirts. His collars were "undetached" (blame haberdashery
+for the word); his tie was a narrow, funereal strip, tied in the
+same knot as were his shoe-strings. His gray hair was a trifle
+too long behind, but he kept it smooth and orderly. His face was
+clean-shaven, like the old statesmen's. Most people thought it a
+stern face, but when its official expression was off, a few had
+seen altogether a different countenance. Especially tender and
+gentle it had appeared to those who were about him during the last
+illness of his only child.
+
+The Commissioner had been a widower for years, and his life, outside
+his official duties, had been so devoted to little Georgia that people
+spoke of it as a touching and admirable thing. He was a reserved man,
+and dignified almost to austerity, but the child had come below it all
+and rested upon his very heart, so that she scarcely missed the
+mother's love that had been taken away. There was a wonderful
+companionship between them, for she had many of his own ways, being
+thoughtful and serious beyond her years.
+
+One day, while she was lying with the fever burning brightly in her
+checks, she said suddenly:
+
+"Papa, I wish I could do something good for a whole lot of children!"
+
+"What would you like to do, dear?" asked the Commissioner. "Give
+them a party?"
+
+"Oh, I don't mean those kind. I mean poor children who haven't homes,
+and aren't loved and cared for as I am. I tell you what, papa!"
+
+"What, my own child?"
+
+"If I shouldn't get well, I'll leave them you--not _give_ you, but
+just lend you, for you must come to mamma and me when you die too. If
+you can find time, wouldn't you do something to help them, if I ask
+you, papa?"
+
+"Hush, hush dear, dear child," said the Commissioner, holding her hot
+little hand against his cheek; "you'll get well real soon, and you and
+I will see what we can do for them together."
+
+But in whatsoever paths of benevolence, thus vaguely premeditated, the
+Commissioner might tread, he was not to have the company of his
+beloved. That night the little frail body grew suddenly too tired to
+struggle further, and Georgia's exit was made from the great stage
+when she had scarcely begun to speak her little piece before the
+footlights. But there must be a stage manager who understands. She
+had given the cue to the one who was to speak after her.
+
+A week after she was laid away, the Commissioner reappeared at the
+office, a little more courteous, a little paler and sterner, with the
+black frock-coat hanging a little more loosely from his tall figure.
+
+His desk was piled with work that had accumulated during the four
+heartbreaking weeks of his absence. His chief clerk had done what he
+could, but there were questions of law, of fine judicial decisions
+to be made concerning the issue of patents, the marketing and
+leasing of school lands, the classification into grazing,
+agricultural, watered, and timbered, of new tracts to be opened to
+settlers.
+
+The Commissioner went to work silently and obstinately, putting
+back his grief as far as possible, forcing his mind to attack the
+complicated and important business of his office. On the second day
+after his return he called the porter, pointed to a leather-covered
+chair that stood near his own, and ordered it removed to a lumber-room
+at the top of the building. In that chair Georgia would always sit
+when she came to the office for him of afternoons.
+
+As time passed, the Commissioner seemed to grow more silent, solitary,
+and reserved. A new phase of mind developed in him. He could not
+endure the presence of a child. Often when a clattering youngster
+belonging to one of the clerks would come chattering into the big
+business-room adjoining his little apartment, the Commissioner would
+steal softly and close the door. He would always cross the street to
+avoid meeting the school-children when they came dancing along in
+happy groups upon the sidewalk, and his firm mouth would close into a
+mere line.
+
+It was nearly three months after the rains had washed the last dead
+flower-petals from the mound above little Georgia when the "land-shark"
+firm of Hamlin and Avery filed papers upon what they considered the
+"fattest" vacancy of the year.
+
+It should not be supposed that all who were termed "land-sharks"
+deserved the name. Many of them were reputable men of good business
+character. Some of them could walk into the most august councils of
+the State and say: "Gentlemen, we would like to have this, and that,
+and matters go thus." But, next to a three years' drought and the
+boll-worm, the Actual Settler hated the Land-shark. The land-shark
+haunted the Land Office, where all the land records were kept, and
+hunted "vacancies"--that is, tracts of unappropriated public
+domain, generally invisible upon the official maps, but actually
+existing "upon the ground." The law entitled any one possessing
+certain State scrip to file by virtue of same upon any land not
+previously legally appropriated. Most of the scrip was now in the
+hands of the land-sharks. Thus, at the cost of a few hundred dollars,
+they often secured lands worth as many thousands. Naturally, the
+search for "vacancies" was lively.
+
+But often--very often--the land they thus secured, though legally
+"unappropriated," would be occupied by happy and contented settlers,
+who had laboured for years to build up their homes, only to discover
+that their titles were worthless, and to receive peremptory notice to
+quit. Thus came about the bitter and not unjustifiable hatred felt by
+the toiling settlers toward the shrewd and seldom merciful speculators
+who so often turned them forth destitute and homeless from their
+fruitless labours. The history of the state teems with their
+antagonism. Mr. Land-shark seldom showed his face on "locations" from
+which he should have to eject the unfortunate victims of a monstrously
+tangled land system, but let his emissaries do the work. There was
+lead in every cabin, moulded into balls for him; many of his brothers
+had enriched the grass with their blood. The fault of it all lay far
+back.
+
+When the state was young, she felt the need of attracting newcomers,
+and of rewarding those pioneers already within her borders. Year
+after year she issued land scrip--Headrights, Bounties, Veteran
+Donations, Confederates; and to railroads, irrigation companies,
+colonies, and tillers of the soil galore. All required of the grantee
+was that he or it should have the scrip properly surveyed upon the
+public domain by the county or district surveyor, and the land thus
+appropriated became the property of him or it, or his or its heirs and
+assigns, forever.
+
+In those days--and here is where the trouble began--the state's
+domain was practically inexhaustible, and the old surveyors, with
+princely--yea, even Western American--liberality, gave good
+measure and over-flowing. Often the jovial man of metes and bounds
+would dispense altogether with the tripod and chain. Mounted on a pony
+that could cover something near a "vara" at a step, with a pocket
+compass to direct his course, he would trot out a survey by counting
+the beat of his pony's hoofs, mark his corners, and write out his
+field notes with the complacency produced by an act of duty well
+performed. Sometimes--and who could blame the surveyor?--when
+the pony was "feeling his oats," he might step a little higher and
+farther, and in that case the beneficiary of the scrip might get a
+thousand or two more acres in his survey than the scrip called for.
+But look at the boundless leagues the state had to spare! However, no
+one ever had to complain of the pony under-stepping. Nearly every
+old survey in the state contained an excess of land.
+
+In later years, when the state became more populous, and land values
+increased, this careless work entailed incalculable trouble, endless
+litigation, a period of riotous land-grabbing, and no little
+bloodshed. The land-sharks voraciously attacked these excesses in
+the old surveys, and filed upon such portions with new scrip as
+unappropriated public domain. Wherever the identifications of the
+old tracts were vague, and the corners were not to be clearly
+established, the Land Office would recognize the newer locations as
+valid, and issue title to the locators. Here was the greatest
+hardship to be found. These old surveys, taken from the pick of the
+land, were already nearly all occupied by unsuspecting and peaceful
+settlers, and thus their titles were demolished, and the choice was
+placed before them either to buy their land over at a double price or
+to vacate it, with their families and personal belongings,
+immediately. Land locators sprang up by hundreds. The country was
+held up and searched for "vacancies" at the point of a compass.
+Hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of splendid acres were wrested
+from their innocent purchasers and holders. There began a vast hegira
+of evicted settlers in tattered wagons; going nowhere, cursing
+injustice, stunned, purposeless, homeless, hopeless. Their children
+began to look up to them for bread, and cry.
+
+
+It was in consequence of these conditions that Hamilton and Avery
+had filed upon a strip of land about a mile wide and three miles long,
+comprising about two thousand acres, it being the excess over
+complement of the Elias Denny three-league survey on Chiquito River,
+in one of the middle-western counties. This two-thousand-acre body
+of land was asserted by them to be vacant land, and improperly
+considered a part of the Denny survey. They based this assertion and
+their claim upon the land upon the demonstrated facts that the
+beginning corner of the Denny survey was plainly identified; that its
+field notes called to run west 5,760 varas, and then called for
+Chiquito River; thence it ran south, with the meanders--and so on--
+and that the Chiquito River was, on the ground, fully a mile farther
+west from the point reached by course and distance. To sum up: there
+were two thousand acres of vacant land between the Denny survey proper
+and Chiquito River.
+
+One sweltering day in July the Commissioner called for the papers in
+connection with this new location. They were brought, and heaped, a
+foot deep, upon his desk--field notes, statements, sketches,
+affidavits, connecting lines--documents of every description that
+shrewdness and money could call to the aid of Hamlin and Avery.
+
+The firm was pressing the Commissioner to issue a patent upon their
+location. They possesed inside information concerning a new
+railroad that would probably pass somewhere near this land.
+
+The General Land Office was very still while the Commissioner was
+delving into the heart of the mass of evidence. The pigeons could
+be heard on the roof of the old, castle-like building, cooing and
+fretting. The clerks were droning everywhere, scarcely pretending
+to earn their salaries. Each little sound echoed hollow and loud
+from the bare, stone-flagged floors, the plastered walls, and the
+iron-joisted ceiling. The impalpable, perpetual limestone dust that
+never settled, whitened a long streamer of sunlight that pierced the
+tattered window-awning.
+
+It seemed that Hamlin and Avery had builded well. The Denny survey was
+carelessly made, even for a careless period. Its beginning corner
+was identical with that of a well-defined old Spanish grant, but its
+other calls were sinfully vague. The field notes contained no other
+object that survived--no tree, no natural object save Chiquito
+River, and it was a mile wrong there. According to precedent, the
+Office would be justified in giving it its complement by course and
+distance, and considering the remainder vacant instead of a mere
+excess.
+
+The Actual Settler was besieging the office with wild protests _in re_.
+Having the nose of a pointer and the eye of a hawk for the land-shark,
+he had observed his myrmidons running the lines upon his ground.
+Making inquiries, he learned that the spoiler had attacked his home,
+and he left the plough in the furrow and took his pen in hand.
+
+One of the protests the Commissioner read twice. It was from a woman,
+a widow, the granddaughter of Elias Denny himself. She told how her
+grandfather had sold most of the survey years before at a trivial
+price--land that was now a principality in extent and value. Her
+mother had also sold a part, and she herself had succeeded to this
+western portion, along Chiquito River. Much of it she had been forced
+to part with in order to live, and now she owned only about three
+hundred acres, on which she had her home. Her letter wound up rather
+pathetically:
+
+"I've got eight children, the oldest fifteen years. I work all day
+and half the night to till what little land I can and keep us in
+clothes and books. I teach my children too. My neighbours is all
+poor and has big families. The drought kills the crops every two or
+three years and then we has hard times to get enough to eat. There is
+ten families on this land what the land-sharks is trying to rob us of,
+and all of them got titles from me. I sold to them cheap, and they
+aint paid out yet, but part of them is, and if their land should be
+took from them I would die. My grandfather was an honest man, and he
+helped to build up this state, and he taught his children to be
+honest, and how could I make it up to them who bought from me? Mr.
+Commissioner, if you let them land-sharks take the roof from over my
+children and the little from them as they has to live on, whoever
+again calls this state great or its government just will have a lie in
+their mouths"
+
+The Commissioner laid this letter aside with a sigh. Many, many such
+letters he had received. He had never been hurt by them, nor had he
+ever felt that they appealed to him personally. He was but the
+state's servant, and must follow its laws. And yet, somehow, this
+reflection did not always eliminate a certain responsible feeling that
+hung upon him. Of all the state's officers he was supremest in his
+department, not even excepting the Governor. Broad, general land laws
+he followed, it was true, but he had a wide latitude in particular
+ramifications. Rather than law, what he followed was Rulings:
+Office Rulings and precedents. In the complicated and new questions
+that were being engendered by the state's development the
+Commissioner's ruling was rarely appealed from. Even the courts
+sustained it when its equity was apparent.
+
+The Commissioner stepped to the door and spoke to a clerk in the other
+room--spoke as he always did, as if he were addressing a prince of
+the blood:
+
+"Mr. Weldon, will you be kind enough to ask Mr. Ashe, the state
+school-land appraiser, to please come to my office as soon as
+convenient?"
+
+Ashe came quickly from the big table where he was arranging his
+reports.
+
+"Mr. Ashe," said the Commissioner, "you worked along the Chiquito
+River, in Salado County, during your last trip, I believe. Do you
+remember anything of the Elias Denny three-league survey?"
+
+"Yes, sir, I do," the blunt, breezy, surveyor answered. "I crossed it
+on my way to Block H, on the north side of it. The road runs with the
+Chiquito River, along the valley. The Denny survey fronts three miles
+on the Chiquito."
+
+"It is claimed," continued the commissioner, "that it fails to reach
+the river by as much as a mile."
+
+The appraiser shrugged his shoulder. He was by birth and instinct an
+Actual Settler, and the natural foe of the land-shark.
+
+"It has always been considered to extend to the river," he said,
+dryly.
+
+"But that is not the point I desired to discuss," said the
+Commissioner. "What kind of country is this valley portion of (let us
+say, then) the Denny tract?"
+
+The spirit of the Actual Settler beamed in Ashe's face.
+
+"Beautiful," he said, with enthusiasm. "Valley as level as this
+floor, with just a little swell on, like the sea, and rich as cream.
+Just enough brakes to shelter the cattle in winter. Black loamy soil
+for six feet, and then clay. Holds water. A dozen nice little houses
+on it, with windmills and gardens. People pretty poor, I guess--too
+far from market--but comfortable. Never saw so many kids in my
+life."
+
+"They raise flocks?" inquired the Commissioner.
+
+"Ho, ho! I mean two-legged kids," laughed the surveyor; "two-legged,
+and bare-legged, and tow-headed."
+
+"Children! oh, children!" mused the Commissioner, as though a new
+view had opened to him; "they raise children!
+
+"It's a lonesome country, Commissioner," said the surveyor. "Can you
+blame 'em?"
+
+"I suppose," continued the Commissioner, slowly, as one carefully
+pursues deductions from a new, stupendous theory, "not all of them are
+tow-headed. It would not be unreasonable, Mr. Ashe, I conjecture, to
+believe that a portion of them have brown, or even black, hair."
+
+"Brown and black, sure," said Ashe; "also red."
+
+"No doubt," said the Commissioner. "Well, I thank you for your
+courtesy in informing me, Mr. Ashe. I will not detain you any longer
+from your duties."
+
+Later, in the afternoon, came Hamlin and Avery, big, handsome, genial,
+sauntering men, clothed in white duck and low-cut shoes. They
+permeated the whole office with an aura of debonair prosperity. They
+passed among the clerks and left a wake of abbreviated given names and
+fat brown cigars.
+
+These were the aristocracy of the land-sharks, who went in for big
+things. Full of serene confidence in themselves, there was no
+corporation, no syndicate, no railroad company or attorney general
+too big for them to tackle. The peculiar smoke of their rare, fat
+brown cigars was to be perceived in the sanctum of every department of
+state, in every committee-room of the Legislature, in every bank
+parlour and every private caucus-room in the state Capital. Always
+pleasant, never in a hurry, in seeming to possess unlimited leisure,
+people wondered when they gave their attention to the many audacious
+enterprises in which they were known to be engaged.
+
+By and by the two dropped carelessly into the Commissioner's room
+and reclined lazily in the big, leather-upholstered arm-chairs. They
+drawled a good-natured complaint of the weather, and Hamlin told the
+Commissioner an excellent story he had amassed that morning from
+the Secretary of State.
+
+But the Commissioner knew why they were there. He had half promised
+to render a decision that day upon their location.
+
+The chief clerk now brought in a batch of duplicate certificates for
+the Commissioner to sign. As he traced his sprawling signature,
+"Hollis Summerfield, Comr. Genl. Land Office," on each one, the chief
+clerk stood, deftly removing them and applying the blotter.
+
+"I notice," said the chief clerk, "you've been going through that
+Salado County location. Kampfer is making a new map of Salado, and
+I believe is platting in that section of the county now."
+
+"I will see it," said the Commissioner. A few moments later he went to
+the draughtsmen's room.
+
+As he entered he saw five or six of the draughtsmen grouped about
+Kampfer's desk, gargling away at each other in pectoral German, and
+gazing at something thereupon. At the Commissioner's approach they
+scattered to their several places. Kampfer, a wizened little German,
+with long, frizzled ringlets and a watery eye, began to stammer
+forth some sort of an apology, the Commissioner thought, for the
+congregation of his fellows about his desk.
+
+"Never mind," said the Commissioner, "I wish to see the map you are
+making"; and, passing around the old German, seated himself upon the
+high draughtsman's stool. Kampfer continued to break English in
+trying to explain.
+
+"Herr Gommissioner, I assure you blenty sat I haf not it bremeditated
+--sat it wass--sat it itself make. Look you! from se field notes
+wass it blatted--blease to observe se calls: South, 10 degrees west
+1,050 varas; south, 10 degrees east 300 varas; south, 100; south, 9
+west, 200; south, 40 degrees west 400--and so on. Herr Gommissioner,
+nefer would I have--"
+
+The Commissioner raised one white hand, silently, Kampfer dropped his
+pipe and fled.
+
+With a hand at each side of his face, and his elbows resting upon the
+desk, the Commissioner sat staring at the map which was spread and
+fastened there--staring at the sweet and living profile of little
+Georgia drawn thereupon--at her face, pensive, delicate, and
+infantile, outlined in a perfect likeness.
+
+When his mind at length came to inquire into the reason of it, he
+saw that it must have been, as Kampfer had said, unpremeditated. The
+old draughtsman had been platting in the Elias Denny survey, and
+Georgia's likeness, striking though it was, was formed by nothing more
+than the meanders of Chiquito River. Indeed, Kampfer's blotter,
+whereon his preliminary work was done, showed the laborious tracings
+of the calls and the countless pricks of the compasses. Then, over
+his faint pencilling, Kampfer had drawn in India ink with a full, firm
+pen the similitude of Chiquito River, and forth had blossomed
+mysteriously the dainty, pathetic profile of the child.
+
+The Commissioner sat for half an hour with his face in his hands,
+gazing downward, and none dared approach him. Then he arose and
+walked out. In the business office he paused long enough to ask that
+the Denny file be brought to his desk.
+
+He found Hamlin and Avery still reclining in their chairs, apparently
+oblivious of business. They were lazily discussing summer opera, it
+being, their habit--perhaps their pride also--to appear supernaturally
+indifferent whenever they stood with large interests imperilled. And
+they stood to win more on this stake than most people knew. They
+possessed inside information to the effect that a new railroad would,
+within a year, split this very Chiquito River valley and send land
+values ballooning all along its route. A dollar under thirty thousand
+profit on this location, if it should hold good, would be a loss to
+their expectations. So, while they chatted lightly and waited for the
+Commissioner to open the subject, there was a quick, sidelong sparkle
+in their eyes, evincing a desire to read their title clear to those
+fair acres on the Chiquito.
+
+A clerk brought in the file. The Commissioner seated himself and
+wrote upon it in red ink. Then he rose to his feet and stood for a
+while looking straight out of the window. The Land Office capped the
+summit of a bold hill. The eyes of the Commissioner passed over the
+roofs of many houses set in a packing of deep green, the whole
+checkered by strips of blinding white streets. The horizon, where his
+gaze was focussed, swelled to a fair wooded eminence flecked with
+faint dots of shining white. There was the cemetery, where lay many
+who were forgotten, and a few who had not lived in vain. And one
+lay there, occupying very small space, whose childish heart had been
+large enough to desire, while near its last beats, good to others.
+The Commissioner's lips moved slightly as he whispered to himself: "It
+was her last will and testament, and I have neglected it so long!"
+
+The big brown cigars of Hamlin and Avery were fireless, but they still
+gripped them between their teeth and waited, while they marvelled at
+the absent expression upon the Commissioner's face.
+
+By and by he spoke suddenly and promptly.
+
+"Gentlemen, I have just indorsed the Elias Denny survey for patenting.
+This office will not regard your location upon a part of it as legal."
+He paused a moment, and then, extending his hand as those dear old-time
+ones used to do in debate, he enunciated the spirit of that Ruling that
+subsequently drove the land-sharks to the wall, and placed the seal of
+peace and security over the doors of ten thousand homes.
+
+"And, furthermore," he continued, with a clear, soft light upon his
+face, "it may interest you to know that from this time on this office
+will consider that when a survey of land made by virtue of a
+certificate granted by this state to the men who wrested it from the
+wilderness and the savage--made in good faith, settled in good faith,
+and left in good faith to their children or innocent purchasers--when
+such a survey, although overrunning its complement, shall call for
+any natural object visible to the eye of man, to that object it shall
+hold, and be good and valid. And the children of this state shall
+lie down to sleep at night, and rumours of disturbers of title shall
+not disquiet them. For," concluded the Commissioner, "of such is the
+Kingdom of Heaven."
+
+In the silence that followed, a laugh floated up from the patent-room
+below. The man who carried down the Denny file was exhibiting it
+among the clerks.
+
+"Look here," he said, delightedly, "the old man has forgotten his
+name. He's written 'Patent to original grantee,' and signed it
+'Georgia Summerfield, Comr."'
+
+The speech of the Commissioner rebounded lightly from the impregnable
+Hamlin and Avery. They smiled, rose gracefully, spoke of the baseball
+team, and argued feelingly that quite a perceptible breeze had arisen
+from the east. They lit fresh fat brown cigars, and drifted
+courteously away. But later they made another tiger-spring for their
+quarry in the courts. But the courts, according to reports in the
+papers, "coolly roasted them" (a remarkable performance, suggestive of
+liquid-air didoes), and sustained the Commissioner's Ruling.
+
+And this Ruling itself grew to be a Precedent, and the Actual Settler
+framed it, and taught his children to spell from it, and there was
+sound sleep o' nights from the pines to the sage-brush, and from the
+chaparral to the great brown river of the north.
+
+But I think, and I am sure the Commissioner never thought otherwise,
+that whether Kampfer was a snuffy old instrument of destiny, or
+whether the meanders of the Chiquito accidentally platted themselves
+into that memorable sweet profile or not, there was brought about
+"something good for a whole lot of children," and the result ought
+to be called "Georgia's Ruling."
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+BLIND MAN'S HOLIDAY
+
+
+Alas for the man and for the artist with the shifting point of
+perspective! Life shall be a confusion of ways to the one; the
+landscape shall rise up and confound the other. Take the case of
+Lorison. At one time he appeared to himself to be the feeblest of
+fools; at another he conceived that he followed ideals so fine that
+the world was not yet ready to accept them. During one mood he cursed
+his folly; possessed by the other, he bore himself with a serene
+grandeur akin to greatness: in neither did he attain the perspective.
+
+Generations before, the name had been "Larsen." His race had
+bequeathed him its fine-strung, melancholy temperament, its saving
+balance of thrift and industry.
+
+From his point of perspective he saw himself an outcast from society,
+forever to be a shady skulker along the ragged edge of respectability;
+a denizen _des trois-quartz de monde_, that pathetic spheroid lying
+between the _haut_ and the _demi_, whose inhabitants envy each of their
+neighbours, and are scorned by both. He was self-condemned to this
+opinion, as he was self-exiled, through it, to this quaint Southern
+city a thousand miles from his former home. Here he had dwelt for
+longer than a year, knowing but few, keeping in a subjective world
+of shadows which was invaded at times by the perplexing bulks of
+jarring realities. Then he fell in love with a girl whom he met in a
+cheap restaurant, and his story begins.
+
+
+The Rue Chartres, in New Orleans, is a street of ghosts. It lies in
+the quarter where the Frenchman, in his prime, set up his translated
+pride and glory; where, also, the arrogant don had swaggered, and
+dreamed of gold and grants and ladies' gloves. Every flagstone has
+its grooves worn by footsteps going royally to the wooing and the
+fighting. Every house has a princely heartbreak; each doorway its
+untold tale of gallant promise and slow decay.
+
+By night the Rue Chartres is now but a murky fissure, from which the
+groping wayfarer sees, flung against the sky, the tangled filigree of
+Moorish iron balconies. The old houses of monsieur stand yet,
+indomitable against the century, but their essence is gone. The
+street is one of ghosts to whosoever can see them.
+
+A faint heartbeat of the street's ancient glory still survives in a
+corner occupied by the Caf Carabine d'Or. Once men gathered there to
+plot against kings, and to warn presidents. They do so yet, but they
+are not the same kind of men. A brass button will scatter these;
+those would have set their faces against an army. Above the door
+hangs the sign board, upon which has been depicted a vast animal of
+unfamiliar species. In the act of firing upon this monster is
+represented an unobtrusive human levelling an obtrusive gun, once the
+colour of bright gold. Now the legend above the picture is faded
+beyond conjecture; the gun's relation to the title is a matter of
+faith; the menaced animal, wearied of the long aim of the hunter, has
+resolved itself into a shapeless blot.
+
+The place is known as "Antonio's," as the name, white upon the red-lit
+transparency, and gilt upon the windows, attests. There is a promise
+in "Antonio"; a justifiable expectancy of savoury things in oil and
+pepper and wine, and perhaps an angel's whisper of garlic. But the
+rest of the name is "O'Riley." Antonio O'Riley!
+
+The Carabine d'Or is an ignominious ghost of the Rue Chartres. The
+caf where Bienville and Conti dined, where a prince has broken bread,
+is become a "family ristaurant."
+
+Its customers are working men and women, almost to a unit.
+Occasionally you will see chorus girls from the cheaper theatres,
+and men who follow avocations subject to quick vicissitudes; but at
+Antonio's--name rich in Bohemian promise, but tame in fulfillment--
+manners debonair and gay are toned down to the "family" standard.
+Should you light a cigarette, mine host will touch you on the "arrum"
+and remind you that the proprieties are menaced. "Antonio" entices
+and beguiles from fiery legend without, but "O'Riley" teaches decorum
+within.
+
+It was at this restaurant that Lorison first saw the girl. A flashy
+fellow with a predatory eye had followed her in, and had advanced to
+take the other chair at the little table where she stopped, but
+Lorison slipped into the seat before him. Their acquaintance began,
+and grew, and now for two months they had sat at the same table each
+evening, not meeting by appointment, but as if by a series of
+fortuitous and happy accidents. After dining, they would take a walk
+together in one of the little city parks, or among the panoramic
+markets where exhibits a continuous vaudeville of sights and sounds.
+Always at eight o'clock their steps led them to a certain street
+corner, where she prettily but firmly bade him good night and left
+him. "I do not live far from here," she frequently said, "and you
+must let me go the rest of the way alone."
+
+But now Lorison had discovered that he wanted to go the rest of the
+way with her, or happiness would depart, leaving, him on a very lonely
+corner of life. And at the same time that he made the discovery, the
+secret of his banishment from the society of the good laid its finger
+in his face and told him it must not be.
+
+Man is too thoroughly an egoist not to be also an egotist; if he love,
+the object shall know it. During a lifetime he may conceal it through
+stress of expediency and honour, but it shall bubble from his dying
+lips, though it disrupt a neighbourhood. It is known, however, that
+most men do not wait so long to disclose their passion. In the case
+of Lorison, his particular ethics positively forbade him to declare
+his sentiments, but he must needs dally with the subject, and woo by
+innuendo at least.
+
+On this night, after the usual meal at the Carabine d'Or, he strolled
+with his companion down the dim old street toward the river.
+
+The Rue Chartres perishes in the old Place d'Armes. The ancient
+Cabildo, where Spanish justice fell like hail, faces it, and the
+Cathedral, another provincial ghost, overlooks it. Its centre is a
+little, iron-railed park of flowers and immaculate gravelled walks,
+where citizens take the air of evenings. Pedestalled high above it,
+the general sits his cavorting steed, with his face turned stonily
+down the river toward English Turn, whence come no more Britons to
+bombard his cotton bales.
+
+Often the two sat in this square, but to-night Lorison guided her past
+the stone-stepped gate, and still riverward. As they walked, he smiled
+to himself to think that all he knew of her--except that be loved
+her--was her name, Norah Greenway, and that she lived with her
+brother. They had talked about everything except themselves. Perhaps
+her reticence had been caused by his.
+
+They came, at length, upon the levee, and sat upon a great, prostrate
+beam. The air was pungent with the dust of commerce. The great river
+slipped yellowly past. Across it Algiers lay, a longitudinous black
+bulk against a vibrant electric haze sprinkled with exact stars.
+
+The girl was young and of the piquant order. A certain bright
+melancholy pervaded her; she possessed an untarnished, pale prettiness
+doomed to please. Her voice, when she spoke, dwarfed her theme. It
+was the voice capable of investing little subjects with a large
+interest. She sat at ease, bestowing her skirts with the little
+womanly touch, serene as if the begrimed pier were a summer garden.
+Lorison poked the rotting boards with his cane.
+
+He began by telling her that he was in love with some one to whom he
+durst not speak of it. "And why not?" she asked, accepting swiftly
+his fatuous presentation of a third person of straw. "My place in the
+world," he answered, "is none to ask a woman to share. I am an
+outcast from honest people; I am wrongly accused of one crime, and am,
+I believe, guilty of another."
+
+Thence he plunged into the story of his abdication from society. The
+story, pruned of his moral philosophy, deserves no more than the
+slightest touch. It is no new tale, that of the gambler's declension.
+During one night's sitting he lost, and then had imperilled a certain
+amount of his employer's money, which, by accident, he carried with
+him. He continued to lose, to the last wager, and then began to gain,
+leaving the game winner to a somewhat formidable sum. The same night
+his employer's safe was robbed. A search was had; the winnings of
+Lorison were found in his room, their total forming an accusative
+nearness to the sum purloined. He was taken, tried and, through
+incomplete evidence, released, smutched with the sinister _devoirs_
+of a disagreeing jury.
+
+"It is not in the unjust accusation," he said to the girl, "that my
+burden lies, but in the knowledge that from the moment I staked the
+first dollar of the firm's money I was a criminal--no matter whether
+I lost or won. You see why it is impossible for me to speak of love
+to her."
+
+"It is a sad thing," said Norah, after a little pause, "to think what
+very good people there are in the world."
+
+"Good?" said Lorison.
+
+"I was thinking of this superior person whom you say you love. She
+must be a very poor sort of creature."
+
+"I do not understand."
+
+"Nearly," she continued, "as poor a sort of creature as yourself."
+
+"You do not understand," said Lorison, removing his hat and sweeping
+back his fine, light hair. "Suppose she loved me in return, and
+were willing to marry me. Think, if you can, what would follow. Never
+a day would pass but she would be reminded of her sacrifice. I would
+read a condescension in her smile, a pity even in her affection, that
+would madden me. No. The thing would stand between us forever. Only
+equals should mate. I could never ask her to come down upon my lower
+plane."
+
+An arc light faintly shone upon Lorison's face. An illumination from
+within also pervaded it. The girl saw the rapt, ascetic look; it was
+the face either of Sir Galahad or Sir Fool.
+
+"Quite starlike," she said, "is this unapproachable angel. Really too
+high to be grasped."
+
+"By me, yes."
+
+She faced him suddenly. "My dear friend, would you prefer your star
+fallen?" Lorison made a wide gesture.
+
+"You push me to the bald fact," he declared; "you are not in sympathy
+with my argument. But I will answer you so. If I could reach my
+particular star, to drag it down, I would not do it; but if it were
+fallen, I would pick it up, and thank Heaven for the privilege."
+
+They were silent for some minutes. Norah shivered, and thrust her
+hands deep into the pockets of her jacket. Lorison uttered a
+remorseful exclamation.
+
+"I'm not cold," she said. "I was just thinking. I ought to tell you
+something. You have selected a strange confidante. But you cannot
+expect a chance acquaintance, picked up in a doubtful restaurant, to
+be an angel."
+
+"Norah!" cried Lorison.
+
+"Let me go on. You have told me about yourself. We have been such
+good friends. I must tell you now what I never wanted you to know.
+I am--worse than you are. I was on the stage . . . I sang in the
+chorus . . . I was pretty bad, I guess . . . I stole diamonds from
+the prima donna . . . they arrested me . . . I gave most of them up,
+and they let me go . . . I drank wine every night . . . a great
+deal . . . I was very wicked, but--"
+
+Lorison knelt quickly by her side and took her hands.
+
+"Dear Norah!" he said, exultantly. "It is you, it is you I love!
+You never guessed it, did you? 'Tis you I meant all the time. Now I
+can speak. Let me make you forget the past. We have both suffered;
+let us shut out the world, and live for each other. Norah, do you
+hear me say I love you?"
+
+"In spite of--"
+
+"Rather say because of it. You have come out of your past noble and
+good. Your heart is an angel's. Give it to me."
+
+"A little while ago you feared the future too much to even speak."
+
+"But for you; not for myself. Can you love me?"
+
+She cast herself, wildly sobbing, upon his breast.
+
+"Better than life--than truth itself--than everything."
+
+"And my own past," said Lorison, with a note of solicitude--"can you
+forgive and--"
+
+"I answered you that," she whispered, "when I told you I loved you."
+She leaned away, and looked thoughtfully at him. "If I had not told
+you about myself, would you have--would you--"
+
+"No," he interrupted; "I would never have let you know I loved you. I
+would never have asked you this--Norah, will you be my wife?"
+
+She wept again.
+
+"Oh, believe me; I am good now--I am no longer wicked! I will be
+the best wife in the world. Don't think I am--bad any more. If you
+do I shall die, I shall die!"
+
+While he was consoling, her, she brightened up, eager and impetuous.
+"Will you marry me to-night?" she said. "Will you prove it that way.
+I have a reason for wishing it to be to-night. Will you?"
+
+Of one of two things was this exceeding frankness the outcome: either
+of importunate brazenness or of utter innocence. The lover's
+perspective contained only the one.
+
+"The sooner," said Lorison, "the happier I shall be."
+
+"What is there to do?" she asked. "What do you have to get? Come!
+You should know."
+
+Her energy stirred the dreamer to action.
+
+"A city directory first," he cried, gayly, "to find where the man
+lives who gives licenses to happiness. We will go together and rout
+him out. Cabs, cars, policemen, telephones and ministers shall aid
+us."
+
+"Father Rogan shall marry us," said the girl, with ardour. "I will
+take you to him."
+
+
+An hour later the two stood at the open doorway of an immense, gloomy
+brick building in a narrow and lonely street. The license was tight
+in Norah's hand.
+
+"Wait here a moment," she said, "till I find Father Rogan."
+
+She plunged into the black hallway, and the lover was left standing,
+as it were, on one leg, outside. His impatience was not greatly
+taxed. Gazing curiously into what seemed the hallway to Erebus,
+he was presently reassured by a stream of light that bisected the
+darkness, far down the passage. Then he heard her call, and
+fluttered lampward, like the moth. She beckoned him through a
+doorway into the room whence emanated the light. The room was
+bare of nearly everything except books, which had subjugated all
+its space. Here and there little spots of territory had been
+reconquered. An elderly, bald man, with a superlatively calm,
+remote eye, stood by a table with a book in his hand, his finger
+still marking a page. His dress was sombre and appertained to a
+religious order. His eye denoted an acquaintance with the
+perspective.
+
+"Father Rogan," said Norah, "this is _he_."
+
+"The two of ye," said Father Rogan, "want to get married?"
+
+They did not deny it. He married them. The ceremony was quickly
+done. One who could have witnessed it, and felt its scope, might have
+trembled at the terrible inadequacy of it to rise to the dignity of
+its endless chain of results.
+
+Afterward the priest spake briefly, as if by rote, of certain other
+civil and legal addenda that either might or should, at a later time,
+cap the ceremony. Lorison tendered a fee, which was declined, and
+before the door closed after the departing couple Father Rogan's book
+popped open again where his finger marked it.
+
+In the dark hall Norah whirled and clung to her companion, tearful.
+
+"Will you never, never be sorry?"
+
+At last she was reassured.
+
+At the first light they reached upon the street, she asked the time,
+just as she had each night. Lorison looked at his watch. Half-past
+eight.
+
+Lorison thought it was from habit that she guided their steps toward
+the corner where they always parted. But, arrived there, she
+hesitated, and then released his arm. A drug store stood on the
+corner; its bright, soft light shone upon them.
+
+"Please leave me here as usual to-night," said Norah, sweetly. "I
+must--I would rather you would. You will not object? At six
+to-morrow evening I will meet you at Antonio's. I want to sit with
+you there once more. And then--I will go where you say." She gave
+him a bewildering, bright smile, and walked swiftly away.
+
+Surely it needed all the strength of her charm to carry off this
+astounding behaviour. It was no discredit to Lorison's strength of
+mind that his head began to whirl. Pocketing his hands, he rambled
+vacuously over to the druggist's windows, and began assiduously to
+spell over the names of the patent medicines therein displayed.
+
+As soon as be had recovered his wits, he proceeded along the street in
+an aimless fashion. After drifting for two or three squares, he
+flowed into a somewhat more pretentious thoroughfare, a way much
+frequented by him in his solitary ramblings. For here was a row of
+shops devoted to traffic in goods of the widest range of choice--
+handiworks of art, skill and fancy, products of nature and labour from
+every zone.
+
+Here, for a time, he loitered among the conspicuous windows, where was
+set, emphasized by congested floods of light, the cunningest spoil of
+the interiors. There were few passers, and of this Lorison was glad.
+He was not of the world. For a long time he had touched his fellow
+man only at the gear of a levelled cog-wheel--at right angles, and
+upon a different axis. He had dropped into a distinctly new orbit.
+The stroke of ill fortune had acted upon him, in effect, as a blow
+delivered upon the apex of a certain ingenious toy, the musical top,
+which, when thus buffeted while spinning, gives forth, with scarcely
+retarded motion, a complete change of key and chord.
+
+Strolling along the pacific avenue, he experienced singular,
+supernatural calm, accompanied by an unusual a activity of brain.
+Reflecting upon recent affairs, he assured himself of his happiness in
+having won for a bride the one he had so greatly desired, yet he
+wondered mildly at his dearth of active emotion. Her strange
+behaviour in abandoning him without valid excuse on his bridal eve
+aroused in him only a vague and curious speculation. Again, he found
+himself contemplating, with complaisant serenity, the incidents of her
+somewhat lively career. His perspective seemed to have been queerly
+shifted.
+
+As he stood before a window near a corner, his ears were assailed by a
+waxing clamour and commotion. He stood close to the window to allow
+passage to the cause of the hubbub--a procession of human beings,
+which rounded the corner and headed in his direction. He perceived a
+salient hue of blue and a glitter of brass about a central figure of
+dazzling white and silver, and a ragged wake of black, bobbing
+figures.
+
+Two ponderous policemen were conducting between them a woman dressed
+as if for the stage, in a short, white, satiny skirt reaching to the
+knees, pink stockings, and a sort of sleeveless bodice bright with
+relucent, armour-like scales. Upon her curly, light hair was perched,
+at a rollicking angle, a shining tin helmet. The costume was to be
+instantly recognized as one of those amazing conceptions to which
+competition has harried the inventors of the spectacular ballet. One
+of the officers bore a long cloak upon his arm, which, doubtless, had
+been intended to veil the I candid attractions of their effulgent
+prisoner, but, for some reason, it had not been called into use, to
+the vociferous delight of the tail of the procession.
+
+Compelled by a sudden and vigorous movement of the woman, the parade
+halted before the window by which Lorison stood. He saw that she was
+young, and, at the first glance, was deceived by a sophistical
+prettiness of her face, which waned before a more judicious scrutiny.
+Her look was bold and reckless, and upon her countenance, where yet
+the contours of youth survived, were the finger-marks of old age's
+credentialed courier, Late Hours.
+
+The young woman fixed her unshrinking gaze upon Lorison, and called to
+him in the voice of the wronged heroine in straits:
+
+"Say! You look like a good fellow; come and put up the bail, won't
+you? I've done nothing to get pinched for. It's all a mistake. See
+how they're treating me! You won't be sorry, if you'll help me out of
+this. Think of your sister or your girl being dragged along the
+streets this way! I say, come along now, like a good fellow."
+
+It may be that Lorison, in spite of the unconvincing bathos of this
+appeal, showed a sympathetic face, for one of the officers left the
+woman's side, and went over to him.
+
+"It's all right, Sir," he said, in a husky, confidential tone; "she's
+the right party. We took her after the first act at the Green Light
+Theatre, on a wire from the chief of police of Chicago. It's only a
+square or two to the station. Her rig's pretty bad, but she refused
+to change clothes--or, rather," added the officer, with a smile, "to
+put on some. I thought I'd explain matters to you so you wouldn't
+think she was being imposed upon."
+
+"What is the charge?" asked Lorison.
+
+"Grand larceny. Diamonds. Her husband is a jeweller in Chicago. She
+cleaned his show case of the sparklers, and skipped with a comic-opera
+troupe."
+
+The policeman, perceiving that the interest of the entire group of
+spectators was centred upon himself and Lorison--their conference
+being regarded as a possible new complication--was fain to prolong
+the situation--which reflected his own importance--by a little
+afterpiece of philosophical comment.
+
+"A gentleman like you, Sir," he went on affably, "would never notice
+it, but it comes in my line to observe what an immense amount of
+trouble is made by that combination--I mean the stage, diamonds
+and light-headed women who aren't satisfied with good homes. I tell
+you, Sir, a man these days and nights wants to know what his women
+folks are up to."
+
+The policeman smiled a good night, and returned to the side of his
+charge, who had been intently watching Lorison's face during the
+conversation, no doubt for some indication of his intention to render
+succour. Now, at the failure of the sign, and at the movement made to
+continue the ignominious progress, she abandoned hope, and addressed
+him thus, pointedly:
+
+"You damn chalk-faced quitter! You was thinking of giving me a hand,
+but you let the cop talk you out of it the first word. You're a dandy
+to tie to. Say, if you ever get a girl, she'll have a picnic. Won't
+she work you to the queen's taste! Oh, my!" She concluded with a
+taunting, shrill laugh that rasped Lorison like a saw. The policemen
+urged her forward; the delighted train of gaping followers closed up
+the rear; and the captive Amazon, accepting her fate, extended the
+scope of her maledictions so that none in hearing might seem to be
+slighted.
+
+Then there came upon Lorison an overwhelming revulsion of his
+perspective. It may be that he had been ripe for it, that the
+abnormal condition of mind in which he had for so long existed was
+already about to revert to its balance; however, it is certain that
+the events of the last few minutes had furnished the channel, if not
+the impetus, for the change.
+
+The initial determining influence had been so small a thing as the
+fact and manner of his having been approached by the officer. That
+agent had, by the style of his accost, restored the loiterer to his
+former place in society. In an instant he had been transformed from a
+somewhat rancid prowler along the fishy side streets of gentility into
+an honest gentleman, with whom even so lordly a guardian of the peace
+might agreeably exchange the compliments.
+
+This, then, first broke the spell, and set thrilling in him a
+resurrected longing for the fellowship of his kind, and the rewards of
+the virtuous. To what end, he vehemently asked himself, was this
+fanciful self-accusation, this empty renunciation, this moral
+squeamishness through which he had been led to abandon what was his
+heritage in life, and not beyond his deserts? Technically, he was
+uncondemned; his sole guilty spot was in thought rather than deed, and
+cognizance of it unshared by others. For what good, moral or
+sentimental, did he slink, retreating like the hedgehog from his own
+shadow, to and fro in this musty Bohemia that lacked even the
+picturesque?
+
+But the thing that struck home and set him raging was the part played
+by the Amazonian prisoner. To the counterpart of that astounding
+belligerent--identical at least, in the way of experience--to one,
+by her own confession, thus far fallen, had he, not three hours since,
+been united in marriage. How desirable and natural it had seemed to
+him then, and how monstrous it seemed now! How the words of diamond
+thief number two yet burned in his ears: "If you ever get a girl,
+she'll have a picnic." What did that mean but that women instinctively
+knew him for one they could hoodwink? Still again, there reverberated
+the policeman's sapient contribution to his agony: "A man these days
+and nights wants to know what his women folks are up to." Oh, yes, he
+had been a fool; he had looked at things from the wrong standpoint.
+
+But the wildest note in all the clamour was struck by pain's
+forefinger, jealousy. Now, at least, he felt that keenest sting--a
+mounting love unworthily bestowed. Whatever she might be, he loved
+her; he bore in his own breast his doom. A grating, comic flavour to
+his predicament struck him suddenly, and he laughed creakingly as he
+swung down the echoing pavement. An impetuous desire to act, to
+battle with his fate, seized him. He stopped upon his heel, and smote
+his palms together triumphantly. His wife was--where? But there
+was a tangible link; an outlet more or less navigable, through which
+his derelict ship of matrimony might yet be safely towed--the
+priest!
+
+Like all imaginative men with pliable natures, Lorison was, when
+thoroughly stirred, apt to become tempestuous. With a high and
+stubborn indignation upon him, be retraced his steps to the
+intersecting street by which he had come. Down this he hurried to the
+corner where he had parted with--an astringent grimace tinctured the
+thought--his wife. Thence still back he harked, following through
+an unfamiliar district his stimulated recollections of the way they
+had come from that preposterous wedding. Many times he went abroad,
+and nosed his way back to the trail, furious.
+
+At last, when he reached the dark, calamitous building in which his
+madness had culminated, and found the black hallway, he dashed down
+it, perceiving no light or sound. But he raised his voice, hailing
+loudly; reckless of everything but that he should find the old
+mischief-maker with the eyes that looked too far away to see the
+disaster he had wrought. The door opened, and in the stream of light
+Father Rogan stood, his book in hand, with his finger marking the
+place.
+
+"Ah!" cried Lorison. "You are the man I want. I had a wife of you a
+few hours ago. I would not trouble you, but I neglected to note how
+it was done. Will you oblige me with the information whether the
+business is beyond remedy?"
+
+"Come inside," said the priest; "there are other lodgers in the
+house, who might prefer sleep to even a gratified curiosity."
+
+Lorison entered the room and took the chair offered him. The priest's
+eyes looked a courteous interrogation.
+
+"I must apologize again," said the young man, "for so soon intruding
+upon you with my marital infelicities, but, as my wife has neglected
+to furnish me with her address, I am deprived of the legitimate
+recourse of a family row."
+
+"I am quite a plain man," said Father Rogan, pleasantly; "but I do
+not see how I am to ask you questions."
+
+"Pardon my indirectness," said Lorison; "I will ask one. In this room
+to-night you pronounced me to be a husband. You afterward spoke of
+additional rites or performances that either should or could be
+effected. I paid little attention to your words then, but I am hungry
+to hear them repeated now. As matters stand, am I married past all
+help?"
+
+"You are as legally and as firmly bound," said the priest, "as though
+it had been done in a cathedral, in the presence of thousands. The
+additional observances I referred to are not necessary to the
+strictest legality of the act, but were advised as a precaution for
+the future--for convenience of proof in such contingencies as wills,
+inheritances and the like."
+
+Lorison laughed harshly.
+
+"Many thanks," he said. "Then there is no mistake, and I am the happy
+benedict. I suppose I should go stand upon the bridal corner, and
+when my wife gets through walking the streets she will look me up."
+
+Father Rogan regarded him calmly.
+
+"My son," he said, "when a man and woman come to me to be married I
+always marry them. I do this for the sake of other people whom they
+might go away and marry if they did not marry each other. As you see,
+I do not seek your confidence; but your case seems to me to be one not
+altogether devoid of interest. Very few marriages that have come to
+my notice have brought such well-expressed regret within so short a
+time. I will hazard one question: were you not under the impression
+that you loved the lady you married, at the time you did so;"
+
+"Loved her!" cried Lorison, wildly. "Never so well as now, though
+she told me she deceived and sinned and stole. Never more than now,
+when, perhaps, she is laughing at the fool she cajoled and left, with
+scarcely a word, to return to God only knows what particular line of
+her former folly."
+
+Father Rogan answered nothing. During the silence that succeeded, he
+sat with a quiet expectation beaming in his full, lambent eye.
+
+"If you would listen--" began Lorison. The priest held up his hand.
+
+"As I hoped," he said. "I thought you would trust me. Wait but a
+moment." He brought a long clay pipe, filled and lighted it.
+
+"Now, my son," he said.
+
+Lorison poured a twelve month's accumulated confidence into Father
+Rogan's ear. He told all; not sparing himself or omitting the facts
+of his past, the events of the night, or his disturbing conjectures
+and fears.
+
+"The main point," said the priest, when he had concluded, "seems to
+me to be this--are you reasonably sure that you love this woman whom
+you have married?"
+
+"Why," exclaimed Lorison, rising impulsively to his feet--"why
+should I deny it? But look at me--am fish, flesh or fowl? That is
+the main point to me, I assure you."
+
+"I understand you," said the priest, also rising, and laying down his
+pipe. "The situation is one that has taxed the endurance of much
+older men than you--in fact, especially much older men than you. I
+will try to relieve you from it, and this night. You shall see for
+yourself into exactly what predicament you have fallen, and how you
+shall, possibly, be extricated. There is no evidence so credible as
+that of the eyesight."
+
+Father Rogan moved about the room, and donned a soft black hat.
+Buttoning his coat to his throat, he laid his hand on the doorknob.
+"Let us walk," he said.
+
+The two went out upon the street. The priest turned his face down it,
+and Lorison walked with him through a squalid district, where the
+houses loomed, awry and desolate-looking, high above them. Presently
+they turned into a less dismal side street, where the houses were
+smaller, and, though hinting of the most meagre comfort, lacked the
+concentrated wretchedness of the more populous byways.
+
+At a segregated, two-story house Father Rogan halted, and mounted the
+steps with the confidence of a familiar visitor. He ushered Lorison
+into a narrow hallway, faintly lighted by a cobwebbed hanging lamp.
+Almost immediately a door to the right opened and a dingy Irishwoman
+protruded her head.
+
+"Good evening to ye, Mistress Geehan," said the priest, unconsciously,
+it seemed, falling into a delicately flavoured brogue. "And is it
+yourself can tell me if Norah has gone out again, the night, maybe?"
+
+"Oh, it's yer blissid riverence! Sure and I can tell ye the same.
+The purty darlin' wint out, as usual, but a bit later. And she says:
+'Mother Geehan,' says she, 'it's me last noight out, praise the
+saints, this noight is!' And, oh, yer riverence, the swate, beautiful
+drame of a dress she had this toime! White satin and silk and
+ribbons, and lace about the neck and arrums--'twas a sin, yer
+reverence, the gold was spint upon it."
+
+The priest heard Lorison catch his breath painfully, and a faint smile
+flickered across his own clean-cut mouth.
+
+"Well, then, Mistress Geehan," said he, "I'll just step upstairs and
+see the bit boy for a minute, and I'll take this gentleman up with
+me."
+
+"He's awake, thin," said the woman. 'I've just come down from sitting
+wid him the last hour, tilling him fine shtories of ould County
+Tyrone. 'Tis a greedy gossoon, it is, yer riverence, for me
+shtories."
+
+"Small the doubt," said Father Rogan. "There's no rocking would put
+him to slape the quicker, I'm thinking."
+
+Amid the woman's shrill protest against the retort, the two men
+ascended the steep stairway. The priest pushed open the door of a
+room near its top.
+
+"Is that you already, sister?" drawled a sweet, childish voice from
+the darkness.
+
+"It's only ould Father Denny come to see ye, darlin'; and a foine
+gentleman I've brought to make ye a gr-r-and call. And ye resaves us
+fast aslape in bed! Shame on yez manners!"
+
+"Oh, Father Denny, is that you? I'm glad. And will you light the
+lamp, please? It's on the table by the door. And quit talking like
+Mother Geehan, Father Denny."
+
+The priest lit the lamp, and Lorison saw a tiny, towsled-haired boy,
+with a thin, delicate face, sitting up in a small bed in a corner.
+Quickly, also, his rapid glance considered the room and its
+contents. It was furnished with more than comfort, and its adornments
+plainly indicated a woman's discerning taste. An open door beyond
+revealed the blackness of an adjoining room's interior.
+
+The boy clutched both of Father Rogan's hands. "I'm so glad you
+came," he said; "but why did you come in the night? Did sister send
+you?"
+
+"Off wid ye! Am I to be sint about, at me age, as was Terence
+McShane, of Ballymahone? I come on me own r-r-responsibility."
+
+Lorison had also advanced to the boy's bedside. He was fond of
+children; and the wee fellow, laying himself down to sleep alone in
+that dark room, stirred-his heart.
+
+"Aren't you afraid, little man?" he asked, stooping down beside him.
+
+"Sometimes," answered the boy, with a shy smile, "when the rats make
+too much noise. But nearly every night, when sister goes out, Mother
+Geehan stays a while with me, and tells me funny stories. I'm not
+often afraid, sir."
+
+"This brave little gentleman," said Father Rogan, "is a scholar of
+mine. Every day from half-past six to half-past eight--when sister
+comes for him--he stops in my study, and we find out what's in the
+inside of books. He knows multiplication, division and fractions; and
+he's troubling me to begin wid the chronicles of Ciaran of
+Clonmacnoise, Corurac McCullenan and Cuan O'Lochain, the gr-r-reat
+Irish histhorians." The boy was evidently accustomed to the priest's
+Celtic pleasantries. A little, appreciative grin was all the attention
+the insinuation of pedantry received.
+
+Lorison, to have saved his life, could not have put to the child one
+of those vital questions that were wildly beating about, unanswered,
+in his own brain. The little fellow was very like Norah; he had the
+same shining hair and candid eyes.
+
+"Oh, Father Denny," cried the boy, suddenly, "I forgot to tell you!
+Sister is not going away at night any more! She told me so when she
+kissed me good night as she was leaving. And she said she was so
+happy, and then she cried. Wasn't that queer? But I'm glad; aren't
+you?"
+
+"Yes, lad. And now, ye omadhaun, go to sleep, and say good night; we
+must be going."
+
+"Which shall I do first, Father Denny?"
+
+"Faith, he's caught me again! Wait till I get the sassenach into the
+annals of Tageruach, the hagiographer; I'll give him enough of the
+Irish idiom to make him more respectful."
+
+The light was out, and the small, brave voice bidding them good night
+from the dark room. They groped downstairs, and tore away from the
+garrulity of Mother Geehan.
+
+Again the priest steered them through the dim ways, but this time in
+another direction. His conductor was serenely silent, and Lorison
+followed his example to the extent of seldom speaking. Serene he
+could not be. His heart beat suffocatingly in his breast. The
+following of this blind, menacing trail was pregnant with he knew not
+what humiliating revelation to be delivered at its end.
+
+They came into a more pretentious street, where trade, it could be
+surmised, flourished by day. And again the priest paused; this time
+before a lofty building, whose great doors and windows in the lowest
+floor were carefully shuttered and barred. Its higher apertures were
+dark, save in the third story, the windows of which were brilliantly
+lighted. Lorison's ear caught a distant, regular, pleasing thrumming,
+as of music above. They stood at an angle of the building. Up, along
+the side nearest them, mounted an iron stairway. At its top was an
+upright, illuminated parallelogram. Father Rogan had stopped, and
+stood, musing.
+
+"I will say this much," he remarked, thoughtfully: "I believe you to
+be a better man than you think yourself to be, and a better man than I
+thought some hours ago. But do not take this," he added, with a smile,
+"as much praise. I promised you a possible deliverance from an
+unhappy perplexity. I will have to modify that promise. I can only
+remove the mystery that enhanced that perplexity. Your deliverance
+depends upon yourself. Come."
+
+He led his companion up the stairway. Halfway up, Lorison caught him
+by the sleeve. "Remember," he gasped, "I love that woman."
+
+"You desired to know.
+
+"I--Go on."
+
+The priest reached the landing at the top of the stairway. Lorison,
+behind him, saw that the illuminated space was the glass upper half of
+a door opening into the lighted room. The rhythmic music increased as
+they neared it; the stairs shook with the mellow vibrations.
+
+Lorison stopped breathing when he set foot upon the highest step, for
+the priest stood aside, and motioned him to look through the glass of
+the door.
+
+His eye, accustomed to the darkness, met first a blinding glare,
+and then he made out the faces and forms of many people, amid
+an extravagant display of splendid robings--billowy laces,
+brilliant-hued finery, ribbons, silks and misty drapery. And then
+he caught the meaning of that jarring hum, and he saw the tired,
+pale, happy face of his wife, bending, as were a score of others,
+over her sewing machine--toiling, toiling. Here was the folly she
+pursued, and the end of his quest.
+
+But not his deliverance, though even then remorse struck him. His
+shamed soul fluttered once more before it retired to make room for the
+other and better one. For, to temper his thrill of joy, the shine of
+the satin and the glimmer of ornaments recalled the disturbing figure
+of the bespangled Amazon, and the base duplicate histories lit by the
+glare of footlights and stolen diamonds. It is past the wisdom of him
+who only sets the scenes, either to praise or blame the man. But this
+time his love overcame his scruples. He took a quick step, and
+reached out his hand for the doorknob. Father Rogan was quicker to
+arrest it and draw him back.
+
+"You use my trust in you queerly," said the priest sternly. "What are
+you about to do?"
+
+"I am going to my wife," said Lorison. "Let me pass."
+
+"Listen," said the priest, holding him firmly by the arm. "I am about
+to put you in possession of a piece of knowledge of which, thus far,
+you have scarcely proved deserving. I do not think you ever will; but
+I will not dwell upon that. You see in that room the woman you
+married, working for a frugal living for herself, and a generous
+comfort for an idolized brother. This building belongs to the chief
+costumer of the city. For months the advance orders for the coming
+Mardi Gras festivals have kept the work going day and night. I myself
+secured employment here for Norah. She toils here each night from
+nine o'clock until daylight, and, besides, carries home with her some
+of the finer costumes, requiring more delicate needlework, and works
+there part of the day. Somehow, you two have remained strangely
+ignorant of each other's lives. Are you convinced now that your wife
+is not walking the streets?"
+
+"Let me go to her," cried Lorison, again struggling, "and beg her
+forgiveness!'
+
+"Sir," said the priest, "do you owe me nothing? Be quiet. It seems
+so often that Heaven lets fall its choicest gifts into hands that must
+be taught to hold them. Listen again. You forgot that repentant sin
+must not compromise, but look up, for redemption, to the purest and
+best. You went to her with the fine-spun sophistry that peace could be
+found in a mutual guilt; and she, fearful of losing what her heart so
+craved, thought it worth the price to buy it with a desperate, pure,
+beautiful lie. I have known her since the day she was born; she is as
+innocent and unsullied in life and deed as a holy saint. In that
+lowly street where she dwells she first saw the light, and she has
+lived there ever since, spending her days in generous self-sacrifice
+for others. Och, ye spalpeen!" continued Father Rogan, raising his
+finger in kindly anger at Lorison. "What for, I wonder, could she be
+after making a fool of hersilf, and shamin' her swate soul with lies,
+for the like of you!"
+
+"Sir," said Lorison, trembling, "say what you please of me. Doubt it
+as you must, I will yet prove my gratitude to you, and my devotion to
+her. But let me speak to her once now, let me kneel for just one
+moment at her feet, and--"
+
+"Tut, tut!" said the priest. "How many acts of a love drama do you
+think an old bookworm like me capable of witnessing? Besides, what
+kind of figures do we cut, spying upon the mysteries of midnight
+millinery! Go to meet your wife to-morrow, as she ordered you, and
+obey her thereafter, and maybe some time I shall get forgiveness for
+the part I have played in this night's work. Off wid yez down the
+shtairs, now! 'Tis late, and an ould man like me should be takin' his
+rest."
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES
+
+
+"Aunt Ellen," said Octavia, cheerfully, as she threw her black kid
+gloves carefully at the dignified Persian cat on the window-seat, "I'm
+a pauper."
+
+"You are so extreme in your statements, Octavia, dear," said Aunt
+Ellen, mildly, looking up from her paper. "If you find yourself
+temporarily in need of some small change for bonbons, you will find
+my purse in the drawer of the writing desk."
+
+Octavia Beaupree removed her hat and seated herself on a footstool
+near her aunt's chair, clasping her hands about her knees. Her slim
+and flexible figure, clad in a modish mourning costume, accommodated
+itself easily and gracefully to the trying position. Her bright and
+youthful face, with its pair of sparkling, life-enamoured eyes, tried
+to compose itself to the seriousness that the occasion seemed to
+demand.
+
+"You good auntie, it isn't a case of bonbons; it is abject, staring,
+unpicturesque poverty, with ready-made clothes, gasolined gloves, and
+probably one o'clock dinners all waiting with the traditional wolf at
+the door. I've just come from my lawyer, auntie, and, 'Please, ma'am,
+I ain't got nothink 't all. Flowers, lady? Buttonhole, gentleman?
+Pencils, sir, three for five, to help a poor widow?' Do I do it
+nicely, auntie, or, as a bread-winner accomplishment, were my lessons
+in elocution entirely wasted?"
+
+"Do be serious, my dear," said Aunt Ellen, letting her paper fall to
+the floor, "long enough to tell me what you mean. Colonel Beaupree's
+estate--"
+
+"Colonel Beaupree's estate," interrupted Octavia, emphasizing her
+words with appropriate dramatic gestures, "is of Spanish castellar
+architecture. Colonel Beaupree's resources are--wind. Colonel
+Beaupree's stocks are--water. Colonel Beaupree's income is--all
+in. The statement lacks the legal technicalities to which I have been
+listening for an hour, but that is what it means when translated."
+
+"Octavia!" Aunt Ellen was now visibly possessed by consternation. "I
+can hardly believe it. And it was the impression that he was worth a
+million. And the De Peysters themselves introduced him!"
+
+Octavia rippled out a laugh, and then became properly grave.
+
+"_De mortuis nil_, auntie--not even the rest of it. The dear old
+colonel--what a gold brick he was, after all! I paid for my bargain
+fairly--I'm all here, am I not?--items: eyes, fingers, toes,
+youth, old family, unquestionable position in society as called for
+in the contract--no wild-cat stock here." Octavia picked up the morning
+paper from the floor. "But I'm not going to 'squeal'--isn't that
+what they call it when you rail at Fortune because you've, lost the
+game?" She turned the pages of the paper calmly. "'Stock market'--no
+use for that. 'Society's doings'--that's done. Here is my page--the
+wish column. A Van Dresser could not be said to 'want' for anything,
+of course. 'Chamber-maids, cooks, canvassers, stenographers--'"
+
+"Dear," said Aunt Ellen, with a little tremor in her voice, "please do
+not talk in that way. Even if your affairs are in so unfortunate a
+condition, there is my three thousand--"
+
+Octavia sprang up lithely, and deposited a smart kiss on the delicate
+cheek of the prim little elderly maid.
+
+"Blessed auntie, your three thousand is just sufficient to insure your
+Hyson to be free from willow leaves and keep the Persian in sterilized
+cream. I know I'd be welcome, but I prefer to strike bottom like
+Beelzebub rather than hang around like the Peri listening to the music
+from the side entrance. I'm going to earn my own living. There's
+nothing else to do. I'm a--Oh, oh, oh!--I had forgotten. There's
+one thing saved from the wreck. It's a corral--no, a ranch in--let
+me see--Texas: an asset, dear old Mr. Bannister called it. How
+pleased he was to show me something he could describe as unencumbered!
+I've a description of it among those stupid papers he made me bring
+away with me from his office. I'll try to find it."
+
+Octavia found her shopping-bag, and drew from it a long envelope
+filled with typewritten documents.
+
+"A ranch in Texas," sighed Aunt Ellen. "It sounds to me more like a
+liability than an asset. Those are the places where the centipedes are
+found, and cowboys, and fandangos."
+
+"'The Rancho de las Sombras,'" read Octavia from a sheet of violently
+purple typewriting, "'is situated one hundred and ten miles southeast
+of San Antonio, and thirty-eight miles from its nearest railroad
+station, Nopal, on the I. and G. N. Ranch, consists of 7,680 acres
+of well-watered land, with title conferred by State patents, and
+twenty-two sections, or 14,080 acres, partly under yearly running
+lease and partly bought under State's twenty-year-purchase act. Eight
+thousand graded merino sheep, with the necessary equipment of horses,
+vehicles and general ranch paraphernalia. Ranch-house built of brick,
+with six rooms comfortably furnished according to the requirements of
+the climate. All within a strong barbed-wire fence.
+
+"'The present ranch manager seems to be competent and reliable, and is
+rapidly placing upon a paying basis a business that, in other hands,
+had been allowed to suffer from neglect and misconduct.
+
+"'This property was secured by Colonel Beaupree in a deal with a
+Western irrigation syndicate, and the title to it seems to be perfect.
+With careful management and the natural increase of land values, it
+ought to be made the foundation for a comfortable fortune for its
+owner.'"
+
+When Octavia ceased reading, Aunt Ellen uttered something as near a
+sniff as her breeding permitted.
+
+"The prospectus," she said, with uncompromising metropolitan
+suspicion, "doesn't mention the centipedes, or the Indians. And you
+never did like mutton, Octavia. I don't see what advantage you can
+derive from this--desert."
+
+But Octavia was in a trance. Her eyes were steadily regarding
+something quite beyond their focus. Her lips were parted, and her face
+was lighted by the kindling furor of the explorer, the ardent,
+stirring disquiet of the adventurer. Suddenly she clasped her hands
+together exultantly.
+
+"The problem solves itself, auntie," she cried. "I'm going to that
+ranch. I'm going to live on it. I'm going to learn to like mutton,
+and even concede the good qualities of centipedes--at a respectful
+distance. It's just what I need. It's a new life that comes when my
+old one is just ending. It's a release, auntie; it isn't a narrowing.
+Think of the gallops over those leagues of prairies, with the wind
+tugging at the roots of your hair, the coming close to the earth
+and learning over again the stories of the growing grass and the
+little wild flowers without names! Glorious is what it will be. Shall
+I be a shepherdess with a Watteau hat, and a crook to keep the bad
+wolves from the lambs, or a typical Western ranch girl, with short
+hair, like the pictures of her in the Sunday papers? I think the
+latter. And they'll have my picture, too, with the wild-cats I've
+slain, single-handed, hanging from my saddle horn. 'From the Four
+Hundred to the Flocks' is the way they'll headline it, and they'll
+print photographs of the old Van Dresser mansion and the church where
+I was married. They won't have my picture, but they'll get an artist
+to draw it. I'll be wild and woolly, and I'll grow my own wool."
+
+"Octavia!" Aunt Ellen condensed into the one word all the protests
+she was unable to utter.
+
+"Don't say a word, auntie. I'm going. I'll see the sky at night fit
+down on the world like a big butter-dish cover, and I'll make friends
+again with the stars that I haven't had a chat with since I was a wee
+child. I wish to go. I'm tired of all this. I'm glad I haven't any
+money. I could bless Colonel Beaupree for that ranch, and forgive him
+for all his bubbles. What if the life will be rough and lonely! I--I
+deserve it. I shut my heart to everything except that miserable
+ambition. I--oh, I wish to go away, and forget--forget!"
+
+Octavia swerved suddenly to her knees, laid her flushed face in her
+aunt's lap, and shook with turbulent sobs.
+
+Aunt Ellen bent over her, and smoothed the coppery-brown hair.
+
+"I didn't know," she said, gently; "I didn't know--that. Who was it,
+dear?"
+
+
+When Mrs. Octavia Beaupree, ne Van Dresser, stepped from the train at
+Nopal, her manner lost, for the moment, some of that easy certitude
+which had always marked her movements. The town was of recent
+establishment, and seemed to have been hastily constructed of undressed
+lumber and flapping canvas. The element that had congregated about the
+station, though not offensively demonstrative, was clearly composed of
+citizens accustomed to and prepared for rude alarms.
+
+Octavia stood on the platform, against the telegraph office, and
+attempted to choose by intuition from the swaggering, straggling
+string, of loungers the manager of the Rancho de las Sombras, who
+had been instructed by Mr. Bannister to meet her there. That tall,
+serious, looking, elderly man in the blue flannel shirt and white tie
+she thought must be he. But, no; he passed by, removing his gaze from
+the lady as hers rested on him, according to the Southern custom. The
+manager, she thought, with some impatience at being kept waiting,
+should have no difficulty in selecting her. Young women wearing the
+most recent thing in ash-coloured travelling suits were not so
+plentiful in Nopal!
+
+Thus keeping a speculative watch on all persons of possible managerial
+aspect, Octavia, with a catching breath and a start of surprise,
+suddenly became aware of Teddy Westlake hurrying along the platform in
+the direction of the train--of Teddy Westlake or his sun-browned
+ghost in cheviot, boots and leather-girdled hat--Theodore Westlake,
+Jr., amateur polo (almost) champion, all-round butterfly and cumberer
+of the soil; but a broader, surer, more emphasized and determined
+Teddy than the one she had known a year ago when last she saw him.
+
+He perceived Octavia at almost the same time, deflected his course,
+and steered for her in his old, straightforward way. Something like
+awe came upon her as the strangeness of his metamorphosis was
+brought into closer range; the rich, red-brown of his complexion
+brought out so vividly his straw-coloured mustache and steel-gray
+eyes. He seemed more grown-up, and, somehow, farther away. But, when
+he spoke, the old, boyish Teddy came back again. They had been friends
+from childhood.
+
+"Why, 'Tave!" he exclaimed, unable to reduce his perplexity to
+coherence. "How--what--when--where?"
+
+"Train," said Octavia; "necessity; ten minutes ago; home. Your
+complexion's gone, Teddy. Now, how--what--when--where?"
+
+"I'm working down here," said Teddy. He cast side glances about the
+station as one does who tries to combine politeness with duty.
+
+"You didn't notice on the train," he asked, "an old lady with gray
+curls and a poodle, who occupied two seats with her bundles and
+quarrelled with the conductor, did you?"
+
+"I think not," answered Octavia, reflecting. "And you haven't, by
+any chance, noticed a big, gray-mustached man in a blue shirt and
+six-shooters, with little flakes of merino wool sticking in his hair,
+have you?"
+
+"Lots of 'em," said Teddy, with symptoms of mental delirium under the
+strain. Do you happen to know any such individual?"
+
+"No; the description is imaginary. Is your interest in the old lady
+whom you describe a personal one?"
+
+"Never saw her in my life. She's painted entirely from fancy. She owns
+the little piece of property where I earn my bread and butter--the
+Rancho de las Sombras. I drove up to meet her according to arrangement
+with her lawyer."
+
+Octavia leaned against the wall of the telegraph office. Was this
+possible? And didn't he know?
+
+"Are you the manager of that ranch?" she asked weakly.
+
+"I am," said Teddy, with pride.
+
+"I am Mrs. Beaupree," said Octavia faintly; "but my hair never would
+curl, and I was polite to the conductor."
+
+For a moment that strange, grown-up look came back, and removed Teddy
+miles away from her.
+
+"I hope you'll excuse me," he said, rather awkwardly. "You see, I've
+been down here in the chaparral a year. I hadn't heard. Give me your
+checks, please, and I'll have your traps loaded into the wagon. Jos
+will follow with them. We travel ahead in the buckboard."
+
+Seated by Teddy in a feather-weight buckboard, behind a pair of wild,
+cream-coloured Spanish ponies, Octavia abandoned all thought for the
+exhilaration of the present. They swept out of the little town and
+down the level road toward the south. Soon the road dwindled and
+disappeared, and they struck across a world carpeted with an endless
+reach of curly mesquite grass. The wheels made no sound. The tireless
+ponies bounded ahead at an unbroken gallop. The temperate wind, made
+fragrant by thousands of acres of blue and yellow wild flowers, roared
+gloriously in their ears. The motion was arial, ecstatic, with a
+thrilling sense of perpetuity in its effect. Octavia sat silent,
+possessed by a feeling of elemental, sensual bliss. Teddy seemed to be
+wrestling with some internal problem.
+
+"I'm going to call you madama," he announced as the result of his
+labours. "That is what the Mexicans will call you--they're nearly
+all Mexicans on the ranch, you know. That seems to me about the proper
+thing."
+
+"Very well, Mr. Westlake," said Octavia, primly.
+
+"Oh, now," said Teddy, in some consternation, "that's carrying the
+thing too far, isn't it?"
+
+"Don't worry me with your beastly etiquette. I'm just beginning to
+live. Don't remind me of anything artificial. If only this air could
+be bottled! This much alone is worth coming for. Oh, look I there goes
+a deer!"
+
+"Jack-rabbit," said Teddy, without turning his head.
+
+"Could I--might I drive?" suggested Octavia, panting, with rose-tinted
+cheeks and the eye of an eager child.
+
+"On one condition. Could I--might I smoke?"
+
+"Forever!" cried Octavia, taking the lines with solemn joy. "How shall
+I know which way to drive?"
+
+"Keep her sou' by sou'east, and all sail set. You see that black speck
+on the horizon under that lowermost Gulf cloud? That's a group of
+live-oaks and a landmark. Steer halfway between that and the little
+hill to the left. I'll recite you the whole code of driving rules for
+the Texas prairies: keep the reins from under the horses' feet, and
+swear at 'em frequent."
+
+"I'm too happy to swear, Ted. Oh, why do people buy yachts or travel
+in palace-cars, when a buckboard and a pair of plugs and a spring
+morning like this can satisfy all desire?"
+
+"Now, I'll ask you," protested Teddy, who was futilely striking match
+after match on the dashboard, "not to call those denizens of the air
+plugs. They can kick out a hundred miles between daylight and dark."
+At last he succeeded in snatching a light for his cigar from the flame
+held in the hollow of his hands.
+
+"Room!" said Octavia, intensely. "That's what produces the effect. I
+know now what I've wanted--scope--range--room!"
+
+"Smoking-room," said Teddy, unsentimentally. "I love to smoke in a
+buckboard. The wind blows the smoke into you and out again. It saves
+exertion."
+
+The two fell so naturally into their old-time goodfellowship that it
+was only by degrees that a sense of the strangeness of the new
+relations between them came to be felt.
+
+"Madama," said Teddy, wonderingly, "however did you get it into your
+bead to cut the crowd and come down here? Is it a fad now among the
+upper classes to trot off to sheep ranches instead of to Newport?"
+
+"I was broke, Teddy," said Octavia, sweetly, with her interest centred
+upon steering safely between a Spanish dagger plant and a clump of
+chaparral; "I haven't a thing in the world but this ranch--not even
+any other home to go to."
+
+"Come, now," said Teddy, anxiously but incredulously, "you don't
+mean it?"
+
+"When my husband," said Octavia, with a shy slurring of the word,
+"died three months ago I thought I had a reasonable amount of the
+world's goods. His lawyer exploded that theory in a sixty-minute fully
+illustrated lecture. I took to the sheep as a last resort. Do you
+happen to know of any fashionable caprice among the gilded youth of
+Manhattan that induces them to abandon polo and club windows to become
+managers of sheep ranches?"
+
+"It's easily explained in my case," responded Teddy, promptly. "I
+had to go to work. I couldn't have earned my board in New York, so I
+chummed a while with old Sandford, one of the syndicate that owned the
+ranch before Colonel Beaupree bought it, and got a place down here. I
+wasn't manager at first. I jogged around on ponies and studied the
+business in detail, until I got all the points in my head. I saw where
+it was losing and what the remedies were, and then Sandford put me
+in charge. I get a hundred dollars a month, and I earn it."
+
+"Poor Teddy!" said Octavia, with a smile.
+
+"You needn't. I like it. I save half my wages, and I'm as hard as a
+water plug. It beats polo."
+
+"Will it furnish bread and tea and jam for another outcast from
+civilization?"
+
+"The spring shearing," said the manager, "just cleaned up a deficit in
+last year's business. Wastefulness and inattention have been the rule
+heretofore. The autumn clip will leave a small profit over all
+expenses. Next year there will be jam."
+
+When, about four o'clock in the afternoon, the ponies rounded a
+gentle, brush-covered hill, and then swooped, like a double
+cream-coloured cyclone, upon the Rancho de las Sombras, Octavia gave
+a little cry of delight. A lordly grove of magnificent live-oaks cast
+an area of grateful, cool shade, whence the ranch had drawn its name,
+"de las Sombras"--of the shadows. The house, of red brick, one story,
+ran low and long beneath the trees. Through its middle, dividing its
+six rooms in half, extended a broad, arched passageway, picturesque
+with flowering cactus and hanging red earthern jars. A "gallery," low
+and broad, encircled the building. Vines climbed about it, and the
+adjacent ground was, for a space, covered with transplanted grass and
+shrubs. A little lake, long and narrow, glimmered in the sun at the
+rear. Further away stood the shacks of the Mexican workers, the
+corrals, wool sheds and shearing pens. To the right lay the low hills,
+splattered with dark patches of chaparral; to the left the unbounded
+green prairie blending against the blue heavens.
+
+"It's a home, Teddy," said Octavia, breathlessly; that's what it
+is--it's a home."
+
+"Not so bad for a sheep ranch," admitted Teddy, with excusable pride.
+"I've been tinkering on it at odd times."
+
+A Mexican youth sprang from somewhere in the grass, and took charge of
+the creams. The mistress and the manager entered the house.
+
+"Here's Mrs. MacIntyre," said Teddy, as a placid, neat, elderly lady
+came out upon the gallery to meet them. "Mrs. Mac, here's the boss.
+Very likely she will be wanting a hunk of ham and a dish of beans
+after her drive."
+
+Mrs. MacIntyre, the housekeeper, as much a fixture on the place as the
+lake or the live-oaks, received the imputation of the ranch's
+resources of refreshment with mild indignation, and was about to give
+it utterance when Octavia spoke.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. MacIntyre, don't apologize for Teddy. Yes, I call him Teddy.
+So does every one whom he hasn't duped into taking him seriously. You
+see, we used to cut paper dolls and play jackstraws together ages ago.
+No one minds what he says."
+
+"No," said Teddy, "no one minds what he says, just so he doesn't do it
+again."
+
+Octavia cast one of those subtle, sidelong glances toward him from
+beneath her lowered eyelids--a glance that Teddy used to describe as
+an upper-cut. But there was nothing in his ingenuous, weather-tanned
+face to warrant a suspicion that he was making an allusion--nothing.
+Beyond a doubt, thought Octavia, he had forgotten.
+
+"Mr. Westlake likes his fun," said Mrs. Maclntyre, as she conducted
+Octavia to her rooms. "But," she added, loyally, "people around here
+usually pay attention to what he says when he talks in earnest. I
+don't know what would have become of this place without him."
+
+Two rooms at the east end of the house had been arranged for the
+occupancy of the ranch's mistress. When she entered them a slight
+dismay seized her at their bare appearance and the scantiness of
+their furniture; but she quickly reflected that the climate was a
+semi-tropical one, and was moved to appreciation of the well-conceived
+efforts to conform to it. The sashes had already been removed from the
+big windows, and white curtains waved in the Gulf breeze that streamed
+through the wide jalousies. The bare floor was amply strewn with cool
+rugs; the chairs were inviting, deep, dreamy willows; the walls were
+papered with a light, cheerful olive. One whole side of her sitting
+room was covered with books on smooth, unpainted pine shelves. She
+flew to these at once. Before her was a well-selected library. She
+caught glimpses of titles of volumes of fiction and travel not yet
+seasoned from the dampness of the press.
+
+Presently, recollecting that she was now in a wilderness given over to
+mutton, centipedes and privations, the incongruity of these luxuries
+struck her, and, with intuitive feminine suspicion, she began turning
+to the fly-leaves of volume after volume. Upon each one was inscribed
+in fluent characters the name of Theodore Westlake, Jr.
+
+Octavia, fatigued by her long journey, retired early that night. Lying
+upon her white, cool bed, she rested deliciously, but sleep coquetted
+long with her. She listened to faint noises whose strangeness kept her
+faculties on the alert--the fractious yelping of the coyotes, the
+ceaseless, low symphony of the wind, the distant booming of the frogs
+about the lake, the lamentation of a concertina in the Mexicans'
+quarters. There were many conflicting feelings in her heart--
+thankfulness and rebellion, peace and disquietude, loneliness and a
+sense of protecting care, happiness and an old, haunting pain.
+
+She did what any other woman would have done--sought relief in a
+wholesome tide of unreasonable tears, and her last words, murmured to
+herself before slumber, capitulating, came softly to woo her, were "He
+has forgotten."
+
+The manager of the Rancho de las Sombras was no dilettante. He was a
+"hustler." He was generally up, mounted, and away of mornings before
+the rest of the household were awake, making the rounds of the flocks
+and camps. This was the duty of the major-domo, a stately old Mexican
+with a princely air and manner, but Teddy seemed to have a great deal
+of confidence in his own eyesight. Except in the busy seasons, he
+nearly always returned to the ranch to breakfast at eight o'clock,
+with Octavia and Mrs. Maclntyre, at the little table set in the
+central hallway, bringing with him a tonic and breezy cheerfulness
+full of the health and flavour of the prairies.
+
+A few days after Octavia's arrival he made her get out one of her
+riding skirts, and curtail it to a shortness demanded by the chaparral
+brakes.
+
+With some misgivings she donned this and the pair of buckskin leggings
+he prescribed in addition, and, mounted upon a dancing pony, rode with
+him to view her possessions. He showed her everything--the flocks
+of ewes, muttons and grazing lambs, the dipping vats, the shearing
+pens, the uncouth merino rams in their little pasture, the water-tanks
+prepared against the summer drought--giving account of his stewardship
+with a boyish enthusiasm that never flagged.
+
+Where was the old Teddy that she knew so well? This side of him was
+the same, and it was a side that pleased her; but this was all she
+ever saw of him now. Where was his sentimentality--those old,
+varying moods of impetuous love-making, of fanciful, quixotic
+devotion, of heart-breaking gloom, of alternating, absurd tenderness
+and haughty dignity? His nature had been a sensitive one, his
+temperament bordering closely on the artistic. She knew that, besides
+being a follower of fashion and its fads and sports, he had cultivated
+tastes of a finer nature. He had written things, he had tampered with
+colours, he was something of a student in certain branches of art, and
+once she had been admitted to all his aspirations and thoughts. But
+now--and she could not avoid the conclusion--Teddy had barricaded
+against her every side of himself except one--the side that showed the
+manager of the Rancho de las Sombras and a jolly chum who had forgiven
+and forgotten. Queerly enough the words of Mr. Bannister's description
+of her property came into her mind--"all inclosed within a strong
+barbed-wire fence."
+
+"Teddy's fenced, too," said Octavia to herself.
+
+It was not difficult for her to reason out the cause of his
+fortifications. It had originated one night at the Hammersmiths' ball.
+It occurred at a time soon after she had decided to accept Colonel
+Beaupree and his million, which was no more than her looks and the
+entre she held to the inner circles were worth. Teddy had proposed
+with all his impetuosity and fire, and she looked him straight in the
+eyes, an said, coldly and finally: "Never let me hear any such silly
+nonsense from you again." "You won't," said Teddy, with an expression
+around his mouth, and--now Teddy was inclosed within a strong
+barbed-wire fence.
+
+It was on this first ride of inspection that Teddy was seized by the
+inspiration that suggested the name of Mother Goose's heroine, and he
+at once bestowed it upon Octavia. The idea, supported by both a
+similarity of names and identity of occupations, seemed to strike him
+as a peculiarly happy one, and he never tired of using it. The
+Mexicans on the ranch also took up the name, adding another syllable
+to accommodate their lingual incapacity for the final "p," gravely
+referring to her as "La Madama Bo-Peepy." Eventually it spread, and
+"Madame Bo-Peep's ranch" was as often mentioned as the "Rancho de las
+Sombras."
+
+Came the long, hot season from May to September, when work is scarce
+on the ranches. Octavia passed the days in a kind of lotus-eater's
+dream. Books, hammocks, correspondence with a few intimate friends, a
+renewed interest in her old water-colour box and easel--these
+disposed of the sultry hours of daylight. The evenings were always
+sure to bring enjoyment. Best of all were the rapturous horseback
+rides with Teddy, when the moon gave light over the wind-swept
+leagues, chaperoned by the wheeling night-hawk and the startled owl.
+Often the Mexicans would come up from their shacks with their guitars
+and sing the weirdest of heart-breaking songs. There were long, cosy
+chats on the breezy gallery, and an interminable warfare of wits
+between Teddy and Mrs. MacIntyre, whose abundant Scotch shrewdness
+often more than overmatched the lighter humour in which she was
+lacking.
+
+And the nights came, one after another, and were filed away by weeks
+and months--nights soft and languorous and fragrant, that should
+have driven Strephon to Chloe over wires however barbed, that might
+have drawn Cupid himself to hunt, lasso in hand, among those amorous
+pastures--but Teddy kept his fences up.
+
+One July night Madame Bo-Peep and her ranch manager were sitting on
+the east gallery. Teddy had been exhausting the science of
+prognostication as to the probabilities of a price of twenty-four
+cents for the autumn clip, and had then subsided into an anesthetic
+cloud of Havana smoke. Only as incompetent a judge as a woman would
+have failed to note long ago that at least a third of his salary must
+have gone up in the fumes of those imported Regalias.
+
+"Teddy," said Octavia, suddenly, and rather sharply, "what are you
+working down here on a ranch for?"
+
+"One hundred per," said Teddy, glibly, "and found."
+
+"I've a good mind to discharge you."
+
+"Can't do it," said Teddy, with a grin.
+
+"Why not?" demanded Octavia, with argumentative heat.
+
+"Under contract. Terms of sale respect all unexpired contracts. Mine
+runs until 12 P. M., December thirty-first. You might get up at
+midnight on that date and fire me. If you try it sooner I'll be in a
+position to bring legal proceedings."
+
+Octavia seemed to be considering the prospects of litigation.
+
+"But," continued Teddy cheerfully, "I've been thinking of resigning
+anyway."
+
+Octavia's rocking-chair ceased its motion. There were centipedes in
+this country, she felt sure; and Indians, and vast, lonely, desolate,
+empty wastes; all within strong barbed-wire fence. There was a Van
+Dresser pride, but there was also a Van Dresser heart. She must know
+for certain whether or not he had forgotten.
+
+"Ah, well, Teddy," she said, with a fine assumption of polite
+interest, "it's lonely down here; you're longing to get back to the
+old life--to polo and lobsters and theatres and balls."
+
+"Never cared much for balls," said Teddy virtuously.
+
+"You're getting old, Teddy. Your memory is failing. Nobody ever knew
+you to miss a dance, unless it occurred on the same night with another
+one which you attended. And you showed such shocking bad taste, too,
+in dancing too often with the same partner. Let me see, what was that
+Forbes girl's name--the one with wall eyes--Mabel, wasn't it?"
+
+"No; Adle. Mabel was the one with the bony elbows. That wasn't wall
+in Adle's eyes. It was soul. We used to talk sonnets together, and
+Verlaine. Just then I was trying to run a pipe from the Pierian
+spring."
+
+"You were on the floor with her," said Octavia, undeflected, "five
+times at the Hammersmiths'."
+
+"Hammersmiths' what?" questioned Teddy, vacuously.
+
+"Ball--ball," said Octavia, viciously. "What were we talking of?"
+
+"Eyes, I thought," said Teddy, after some reflection; "and elbows."
+
+"Those Hammersmiths," went on Octavia, in her sweetest society
+prattle, after subduing an intense desire to yank a handful of
+sunburnt, sandy hair from the head lying back contentedly against the
+canvas of the steamer chair, "had too much money. Mines, wasn't it? It
+was something that paid something to the ton. You couldn't get a glass
+of plain water in their house. Everything at that ball was dreadfully
+overdone."
+
+"It was," said Teddy.
+
+"Such a crowd there was!" Octavia continued, conscious that she was
+talking the rapid drivel of a school-girl describing her first dance.
+"The balconies were as warm as the rooms. I--lost--something at
+that ball." The last sentence was uttered in a tone calculated to
+remove the barbs from miles of wire.
+
+"So did I," confessed Teddy, in a lower voice.
+
+"A glove," said Octavia, falling back as the enemy approached her
+ditches.
+
+"Caste," said Teddy, halting his firing line without loss. "I
+hobnobbed, half the evening with one of Hammersmith's miners, a fellow
+who kept his hands in his pockets, and talked like an archangel about
+reduction plants and drifts and levels and sluice-boxes."
+
+"A pearl-gray glove, nearly new," sighed Octavia, mournfully.
+
+"A bang-up chap, that McArdle," maintained Teddy approvingly. "A
+man who hated olives and elevators; a man who handled mountains as
+croquettes, and built tunnels in the air; a man who never uttered a
+word of silly nonsense in his life. Did you sign those lease-renewal
+applications yet, madama? They've got to be on file in the land office
+by the thirty-first."
+
+Teddy turned his head lazily. Octavia's chair was vacant.
+
+
+A certain centipede, crawling along the lines marked out by fate,
+expounded the situation. It was early one morning while Octavia and
+Mrs. Maclntyre were trimming the honeysuckle on the west gallery.
+Teddy had risen and departed hastily before daylight in response to
+word that a flock of ewes had been scattered from their bedding ground
+during the night by a thunder-storm.
+
+The centipede, driven by destiny, showed himself on the floor of the
+gallery, and then, the screeches of the two women giving him his cue,
+he scuttled with all his yellow legs through the open door into the
+furthermost west room, which was Teddy's. Arming themselves with
+domestic utensils selected with regard to their length, Octavia and
+Mrs. Maclntyre, with much clutching of skirts and skirmishing for the
+position of rear guard in the attacking force, followed.
+
+Once outside, the centipede seemed to have disappeared, and his
+prospective murderers began a thorough but cautious search for their
+victim.
+
+Even in the midst of such a dangerous and absorbing adventure Octavia
+was conscious of an awed curiosity on finding herself in Teddy's
+sanctum. In that room he sat alone, silently communing with those
+secret thoughts that he now shared with no one, dreamed there whatever
+dreams he now called on no one to interpret.
+
+It was the room of a Spartan or a soldier. In one corner stood a wide,
+canvas-covered cot; in another, a small bookcase; in another, a grim
+stand of Winchesters and shotguns. An immense table, strewn with
+letters, papers and documents and surmounted by a set of pigeon-holes,
+occupied one side.
+
+The centipede showed genius in concealing himself in such bare
+quarters. Mrs. Maclntyre was poking a broom-handle behind the
+bookcase. Octavia approached Teddy's cot. The room was just as the
+manager had left it in his hurry. The Mexican maid had not yet given
+it her attention. There was his big pillow with the imprint of his
+head still in the centre. She thought the horrid beast might have
+climbed the cot and hidden itself to bite Teddy. Centipedes were thus
+cruel and vindictive toward managers.
+
+She cautiously overturned the pillow, and then parted her lips to give
+the signal for reinforcements at sight of a long, slender, dark object
+lying there. But, repressing it in time, she caught up a glove, a
+pearl-gray glove, flattened--it might be conceived--by many, many
+months of nightly pressure beneath the pillow of the man who had
+forgotten the Hammersmiths' ball. Teddy must have left so hurriedly
+that morning that he had, for once, forgotten to transfer it to its
+resting-place by day. Even managers, who are notoriously wily and
+cunning, are sometimes caught up with.
+
+Octavia slid the gray glove into the bosom of her summery morning gown.
+It was hers. Men who put themselves within a strong barbed-wire fence,
+and remember Hammersmith balls only by the talk of miners about
+sluice-boxes, should not be allowed to possess such articles.
+
+After all, what a paradise this prairie country was! How it blossomed
+like the rose when you found things that were thought to be lost! How
+delicious was that morning breeze coming in the windows, fresh and
+sweet with the breath of the yellow ratama blooms! Might one not
+stand, for a minute, with shining, far-gazing eyes, and dream that
+mistakes might be corrected?
+
+Why was Mrs. Maclntyre poking about so absurdly with a broom?
+
+"I've found it," said Mrs. MacIntyre, banging the door. "Here it is."
+
+"Did you lose something? asked Octavia, with sweetly polite
+non-interest.
+
+"The little devil!" said Mrs. Maclntyre, driven to violence. "Ye've no
+forgotten him alretty?"
+
+Between them they slew the centipede. Thus was he rewarded for his
+agency toward the recovery of things lost at the Hammersmiths' ball.
+
+It seems that Teddy, in due course, remembered the glove, and when he
+returned to the house at sunset made a secret but exhaustive search
+for it. Not until evening, upon the moonlit eastern gallery, did he
+find it. It was upon the hand that he had thought lost to him forever,
+and so he was moved to repeat certain nonsense that he had been
+commanded never, never to utter again. Teddy's fences were down.
+
+This time there was no ambition to stand in the way, and the wooing
+was as natural and successful as should be between ardent shepherd and
+gentle shepherdess.
+
+The prairies changed to a garden. The Rancho de las Sombras became the
+Ranch of Light.
+
+A few days later Octavia received a letter from Mr. Bannister, in
+reply to one she had written to him asking some questions about her
+business. A portion of the letter ran as follows:
+
+
+ "I am at a loss to account for your references to the sheep ranch.
+ Two months after your departure to take up your residence upon it,
+ it was discovered that Colonel Beaupree's title was worthless. A
+ deed came to light showing that he disposed of the property before
+ his death. The matter was reported to your manager, Mr. Westlake,
+ who at once repurchased the property. It is entirely beyond my
+ powers of conjecture to imagine how you have remained in ignorance
+ of this fact. I beg that you that will at once confer with that
+ gentleman, who will, at least, corroborate my statement."
+
+
+Octavia sought Teddy, with battle in her eye.
+
+"What are you working on this ranch for?" she asked once more.
+
+"One hundred--" he began to repeat, but saw in her face that she
+knew. She held Mr. Bannister's letter in her hand. He knew that the
+game was up.
+
+"It's my ranch," said Teddy, like a schoolboy detected in evil. "It's
+a mighty poor manager that isn't able to absorb the boss's business if
+you give him time."
+
+"Why were you working down here?" pursued Octavia still struggling
+after the key to the riddle of Teddy.
+
+"To tell the truth, 'Tave," said Teddy, with quiet candour, "it wasn't
+for the salary. That about kept me in cigars and sunburn lotions. I
+was sent south by my doctor. 'Twas that right lung that was going to
+the bad on account of over-exercise and strain at polo and gymnastics.
+I needed climate and ozone and rest and things of that sort."
+
+In an instant Octavia was close against the vicinity of the affected
+organ. Mr. Bannister's letter fluttered to the floor.
+
+"It's--it's well now, isn't it, Teddy?"
+
+"Sound as a mesquite chunk. I deceived you in one thing. I paid fifty
+thousand for your ranch as soon as I found you had no title. I had
+just about that much income accumulated at my banker's while I've been
+herding sheep down here, so it was almost like picking the thing up on
+a bargain-counter for a penny. There's another little surplus of
+unearned increment piling up there, 'Tave. I've been thinking of a
+wedding trip in a yacht with white ribbons tied to the mast, through
+the Mediterranean, and then up among the Hebrides and down Norway to
+the Zuyder Zee."
+
+"And I was thinking," said Octavia, softly, "of a wedding gallop with
+my manager among the flocks of sheep and back to a wedding breakfast
+with Mrs. MacIntyre on the gallery, with, maybe, a sprig of orange
+blossom fastened to the red jar above the table."
+
+Teddy laughed, and began to chant:
+
+ "Little Bo-Peep has lost her sheep,
+ And doesn't know where to find 'em.
+ Let 'em alone, and they'll come home,
+ And--"
+
+Octavia drew his head down, and whispered in his ear, But that is one
+of the tales they brought behind them.
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, WHIRLIGIGS ***
+
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
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+Title: Whirligigs
+
+Author: O. Henry
+
+Release Date: January, 1999 [EBook #1595]
+[This HTML version was first posted on May 2, 2004]
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, WHIRLIGIGS ***
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+E-text prepared by anonymous Project Gutenberg Volunteers and revised by
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+</pre>
+<hr size="5" noshade>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center>
+<h1>WHIRLIGIGS</h1>
+<br>
+<h3>by</h3>
+<br>
+<h2>O. Henry</h2>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>CONTENTS</h3>
+<br>
+<table cellpadding="6" cellspacing="0">
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">I.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#1">THE WORLD AND THE DOOR</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">II.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#2">THE THEORY AND THE HOUND</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">III.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#3">THE HYPOTHESES OF FAILURE</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">IV.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#4">CALLOWAY'S CODE</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">V.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#5">A MATTER OF MEAN ELEVATION</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">VI.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#6">"GIRL"</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">VII.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#7">SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">VIII.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#8">THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">IX.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#9">THE MARRY MONTH OF MAY</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">X.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#10">A TECHNICAL ERROR</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">XI.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#11">SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">XII.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#12">THE WHIRLIGIG OF LIFE</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">XIII.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#13">A SACRIFICE HIT</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">XIV.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#14">THE ROADS WE TAKE</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">XV.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#15">A BLACKJACK BARGAINER</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">XVI.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#16">THE SONG AND THE SERGEANT</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">XVII.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#17">ONE DOLLAR'S WORTH</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">XVIII.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#18">A NEWSPAPER STORY</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">XIX.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#19">TOMMY'S BURGLAR</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">XX.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#20">A CHAPARRAL CHRISTMAS GIFT</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">XXI.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#21">A LITTLE LOCAL COLOUR</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">XXII.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#22">GEORGIA'S RULING</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">XXIII.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#23">BLIND MAN'S HOLIDAY</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align="right" valign="top">XXIV.
+</td>
+<td valign="top"><a href="#24">MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center>
+<a name="1"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<b>
+I
+<br>
+<br>
+THE WORLD AND THE DOOR<br>
+</b>
+</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A favourite dodge to get your story read by the public is to assert that it is true, and
+then add that Truth is stranger than Fiction. I do not know if the yarn I am anxious
+for you to read is true; but the Spanish purser of the fruit steamer <i>El Carrero</i> swore
+to me by the shrine of Santa Guadalupe that he had the facts from the U. S.
+vice-consul at La Paz&mdash;a person who could not possibly have been cognizant of half
+of them.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">As for the adage quoted above, I take pleasure in puncturing it by affirming that I
+read in a purely fictional story the other day the line: "'Be it so,' said the policeman."
+Nothing so strange has yet cropped out in Truth.</span></p>
+
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When H. Ferguson Hedges, millionaire promoter, investor and man-about-
+New-York, turned his thoughts upon matters convivial, and word of it went "down
+the line," bouncers took a precautionary turn at the Indian clubs, waiters put
+ironstone china on his favourite tables, cab drivers crowded close to the curbstone
+in front of all-night caf&eacute;s, and careful cashiers in his regular haunts charged up a
+few bottles to his account by way of preface and introduction.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">As a money power a one-millionaire is of small account in a city where the man
+who cuts your slice of beef behind the free-lunch counter rides to work in his own
+automobile. But Hedges spent his money as lavishly, loudly and showily as though
+he were only a clerk squandering a week's wages. And, after all, the bartender
+takes no interest in your reserve fund. He would rather look you up on his cash
+register than in Bradstreet.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">On the evening that the material allegation of facts begins, Hedges was bidding dull
+care begone in the company of five or six good fellows&mdash;acquaintances and friends
+who had gathered in his wake. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Among them were two younger men&mdash;Ralph Merriam, a broker, and Wade, his
+friend.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Two deep-sea cabmen were chartered. At Columbus Circle they hove to long
+enough to revile the statue of the great navigator, unpatriotically rebuking him for
+having voyaged in search of land instead of liquids. Midnight overtook the party
+marooned in the rear of a cheap caf&eacute; far uptown.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Hedges was arrogant, overriding and quarrelsome. He was burly and tough,
+iron-gray but vigorous, "good" for the rest of the night. There was a dispute&mdash;about
+nothing that matters&mdash;and the five-fingered words were passed&mdash;the words that
+represent the glove cast into the lists. Merriam played the r&ocirc;le of the verbal
+Hotspur. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Hedges rose quickly, seized his chair, swung it once and smashed wildly down at
+Merriam's head. Merriam dodged, drew a small revolver and shot Hedges in the
+chest. The leading roysterer stumbled, fell in a wry heap, and lay still.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Wade, a commuter, had formed that habit of promptness. He juggled Merriam out
+a side door, walked him to the corner, ran him a block and caught a hansom. They
+rode five minutes and then got out on a dark corner and dismissed the cab. Across
+the street the lights of a small saloon betrayed its hectic hospitality.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Go in the back room of that saloon," said Wade, "and wait. I'll go find out what's
+doing and let you know. You may take two drinks while I am gone&mdash;no more."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At ten minutes to one o'clock Wade returned. "Brace up, old chap," he said. "The
+ambulance got there just as I did. The doctor says he's dead. You may have one
+more drink. You let me run this thing for you. You've got to skip. I don't believe a
+chair is legally a deadly weapon. You've got to make tracks, that's all there is to it."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Merriam complained of the cold querulously, and asked for another drink. "Did
+you notice what big veins he had on the back of his hands?" he said. "I never could
+stand&mdash;I never could&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Take one more," said Wade, "and then come on. I'll see you through."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Wade kept his promise so well that at eleven o'clock the next morning Merriam,
+with a new suit case full of new clothes and hair-brushes, stepped quietly on board
+a little 500-ton fruit steamer at an East River pier. The vessel had brought the
+season's first cargo of limes from Port Limon, and was homeward bound. Merriam
+had his bank balance of $2,800 in his pocket in large bills, and brief instructions to
+pile up as much water as he could between himself and New York. There was no
+time for anything more.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">From Port Limon Merriam worked down the coast by schooner and sloop to Colon,
+thence across the isthmus to Panama, where he caught a tramp bound for Callao
+and such intermediate ports as might tempt the discursive skipper from his course.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It was at La Paz that Merriam decided to land&mdash;La Paz the Beautiful, a little
+harbourless town smothered in a living green ribbon that banded the foot of a
+cloud-piercing mountain. Here the little steamer stopped to tread water while the
+captain's dory took him ashore that he might feel the pulse of the cocoanut market.
+Merriam went too, with his suit case, and remained.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Kalb, the vice-consul, a Gr&aelig;co-Armenian citizen of the United States, born in
+Hessen-Darmstadt, and educated in Cincinnati ward primaries, considered all
+Americans his brothers and bankers. He attached himself to Merriam's elbow,
+introduced him to every one in La Paz who wore shoes, borrowed ten dollars and
+went back to his hammock. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">There was a little wooden hotel in the edge of a banana grove, facing the sea, that
+catered to the tastes of the few foreigners that had dropped out of the world into the
+<i>triste</i> Peruvian town. At Kalb's introductory: "Shake hands with &ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;," he had
+obediently exchanged manual salutations with a German doctor, one French and
+two Italian merchants, and three or four Americans who were spoken of as gold
+men, rubber men, mahogany men&mdash;anything but men of living tissue.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">After dinner Merriam sat in a corner of the broad front <i>galeria</i> with Bibb, a
+Vermonter interested in hydraulic mining, and smoked and drank Scotch "smoke."
+The moonlit sea, spreading infinitely before him, seemed to separate him beyond all
+apprehension from his old life. The horrid tragedy in which he had played such a
+disastrous part now began, for the first time since he stole on board the fruiter, a
+wretched fugitive, to lose its sharper outlines. Distance lent assuagement to his
+view. Bibb had opened the flood-gates of a stream of long-dammed discourse,
+overjoyed to have captured an audience that had not suffered under a hundred
+repetitions of his views and theories.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"One year more," said Bibb, "and I'll go back to God's country. Oh, I know it's
+pretty here, and you get <i>dolce far niente</i> handed to you in chunks, but this country
+wasn't made for a white man to live in. You've got to have to plug through snow
+now and then, and see a game of baseball and wear a stiff collar and have a
+policeman cuss you. Still, La Paz is a good sort of a pipe-dreamy old hole. And
+Mrs. Conant is here. When any of us feels particularly like jumping into the sea we
+rush around to her house and propose. It's nicer to be rejected by Mrs. Conant than
+it is to be drowned. And they say drowning is a delightful sensation."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Many like her here?" asked Merriam.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Not anywhere," said Bibb, with a comfortable sigh. She's the only white woman in
+La Paz. The rest range from a dappled dun to the colour of a b-flat piano key.
+She's been here a year. Comes from&mdash;well, you know how a woman can talk&mdash;ask
+'em to say 'string' and they'll say 'crow's foot' or 'cat's cradle.' Sometimes you'd think
+she was from Oshkosh, and again from Jacksonville, Florida, and the next day from
+Cape Cod."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mystery?" ventured Merriam.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"M&mdash;well, she looks it; but her talk's translucent enough. But that's a woman. I
+suppose if the Sphinx were to begin talking she'd merely say: 'Goodness me! more
+visitors coming for dinner, and nothing to eat but the sand which is here.' But you
+won't think about that when you meet her, Merriam. You'll propose to her too."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">To make a hard story soft, Merriam did meet her and propose to her. He found her
+to be a woman in black with hair the colour of a bronze turkey's wings, and
+mysterious, <i>remembering</i> eyes that&mdash;well, that looked as if she might have been a
+trained nurse looking on when Eve was created. Her words and manner, though,
+were translucent, as Bibb had said. She spoke, vaguely, of friends in California and
+some of the lower parishes in Louisiana. The tropical climate and indolent life
+suited her; she had thought of buying an orange grove later on; La Paz, all in all,
+charmed her.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Merriam's courtship of the Sphinx lasted three months, although be did not know
+that he was courting her. He was using her as an antidote for remorse, until he
+found, too late, that he had acquired the habit. During that time he had received no
+news from home. Wade did not know where he was; and he was not sure of
+Wade's exact address, and was afraid to write. He thought he had better let matters
+rest as they were for a while.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One afternoon he and Mrs. Conant hired two ponies and rode out along the
+mountain trail as far as the little cold river that came tumbling down the foothills.
+There they stopped for a drink, and Merriam spoke his piece&mdash;he proposed, as Bibb
+had prophesied.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mrs. Conant gave him one glance of brilliant tenderness, and then her face took on
+such a strange, haggard look that Merriam was shaken out of his intoxication and
+back to his senses.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I beg your pardon, Florence," he said, releasing her hand; "but I'll have to hedge on
+part of what I said. I can't ask you to marry me, of course. I killed a man in New
+York&mdash;a man who was my friend&mdash;shot him down&mdash;in quite a cowardly manner, I
+understand. Of course, the drinking didn't excuse it. Well, I couldn't resist having
+my say; and I'll always mean it. I'm here as a fugitive from justice, and&mdash;I suppose
+that ends our acquaintance."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mrs. Conant plucked little leaves assiduously from the low-hanging branch of a
+lime tree.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I suppose so," she said, in low and oddly uneven tones; "but that depends upon
+you. I'll be as honest as you were. I poisoned my husband. I am a self-made
+widow. A man cannot love a murderess. So I suppose that ends our acquaintance."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She looked up at him slowly. His face turned a little pale, and he stared at her
+blankly, like a deaf-and-dumb man who was wondering what it was all about.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She took a swift step toward him, with stiffened arms and eyes blazing.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Don't look at me like that!" she cried, as though she were in acute pain. "Curse
+me, or turn your back on me, but don't look that way. Am I a woman to be beaten?
+If I could show you&mdash;here on my arms, and on my back are scars&mdash;and it has been
+more than a year&mdash;scars that he made in his brutal rages. A holy nun would have
+risen and struck the fiend down. Yes, I killed him. The foul and horrible words
+that he hurled at me that last day are repeated in my ears every night when I sleep.
+And then came his blows, and the end of my endurance. I got the poison that
+afternoon. It was his custom to drink every night in the library before going to bed
+a hot punch made of rum and wine. Only from my fair hands would he receive it&mdash;
+because he knew the fumes of spirits always sickened me. That night when the
+maid brought it to me I sent her downstairs on an errand. Before taking him his
+drink I went to my little private cabinet and poured into it more than a tea-spoonful
+of tincture of aconite&mdash;enough to kill three men, so I had learned. I had drawn
+$6,000 that I had in bank, and with that and a few things in a satchel I left the house
+without any one seeing me. As I passed the library I heard him stagger up and fall
+heavily on a couch. I took a night train for New Orleans, and from there I sailed to
+the Bermudas. I finally cast anchor in La Paz. And now what have you to say?
+Can you open your mouth?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Merriam came back to life.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Florence," he said earnestly, "I want you. I don't care what you've done. If the
+world&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ralph," she interrupted, almost with a scream, "be my world!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Her eyes melted; she relaxed magnificently and swayed toward Merriam so
+suddenly that he had to jump to catch her.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Dear me! in such scenes how the talk runs into artificial prose. But it can't be
+helped. It's the subconscious smell of the footlights' smoke that's in all of us. Stir
+the depths of your cook's soul sufficiently and she will discourse in
+Bulwer-Lyttonese.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Merriam and Mrs. Conant were very happy. He announced their engagement at the
+Hotel Orilla del Mar. Eight foreigners and four native Astors pounded his back and
+shouted insincere congratulations at him. Pedrito, the Castilian-mannered barkeep,
+was goaded to extra duty until his agility would have turned a Boston
+cherry-phosphate clerk a pale lilac with envy.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">They were both very happy. According to the strange mathematics of the god of
+mutual affinity, the shadows that clouded their pasts when united became only half
+as dense instead of darker. They shut the world out and bolted the doors. Each was
+the other's world. Mrs. Conant lived again. The remembering look left her eyes.
+Merriam was with her every moment that was possible. On a little plateau under a
+grove of palms and calabash trees they were going to build a fairy bungalow. They
+were to be married in two months. Many hours of the day they had their heads
+together over the house plans. Their joint capital would set up a business in fruit or
+woods that would yield a comfortable support. "Good night, my world," would say
+Mrs. Conant every evening when Merriam left her for his hotel. They were very
+happy. Their love had, circumstantially, that element of melancholy in it that it
+seems to require to attain its supremest elevation. And it seemed that their mutual
+great misfortune or sin was a bond that nothing could sever.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One day a steamer hove in the offing. Bare-legged and bare-shouldered La Paz
+scampered down to the beach, for the arrival of a steamer was their loop-the-loop,
+circus, Emancipation Day and four-o'clock tea. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When the steamer was near enough, wise ones proclaimed that she was the <i>Pajaro</i>,
+bound up-coast from Callao to Panama.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The <i>Pajaro</i> put on brakes a mile off shore. Soon a boat came bobbing shoreward.
+Merriam strolled down on the beach to look on. In the shallow water the Carib
+sailors sprang out and dragged the boat with a mighty rush to the firm shingle. Out
+climbed the purser, the captain and two passengers, ploughing their way through the
+deep sand toward the hotel. Merriam glanced toward them with the mild interest
+due to strangers. There was something familiar to him in the walk of one of the
+passengers. He looked again, and his blood seemed to turn to strawberry ice cream
+in his veins. Burly, arrogant, debonair as ever, H. Ferguson Hedges, the man he
+had killed, was coming toward him ten feet away.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When Hedges saw Merriam his face flushed a dark red. Then he shouted in his old,
+bluff way: "Hello, Merriam. Glad to see you. Didn't expect to find you out here.
+Quinby, this is my old friend Merriam, of New York&mdash;Merriam, Mr. Quinby."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Merriam gave Hedges and then Quinby an ice-cold hand. "Br-r-r-r!" said Hedges.
+"But you've got a frapp&eacute;d flipper! Man, you're not well. You're as yellow as a
+Chinaman. Malarial here? Steer us to a bar if there is such a thing, and let's take a
+prophylactic."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Merriam, still half comatose, led them toward the Hotel Orilla del Mar.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Quinby and I," explained Hedges, puffing through the slippery sand, "are looking
+out along the coast for some investments. We've just come up from Concepci&oacute;n
+and Valparaiso and Lima. The captain of this subsidized ferry boat told us there
+was some good picking around here in silver mines. So we got off. Now, where is
+that caf&eacute;, Merriam? Oh, in this portable soda water pavilion?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Leaving Quinby at the bar, Hedges drew Merriam aside.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Now, what does this mean?" he said, with gruff kindness. "Are you sulking about
+that fool row we had?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I thought," stammered Merriam&mdash;"I heard&mdash;they told me you were&mdash;that I had&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Well, you didn't, and I'm not," said Hedges. "That fool young ambulance surgeon
+told Wade I was a candidate for a coffin just because I'd got tired and quit
+breathing. I laid up in a private hospital for a month; but here I am, kicking as hard
+as ever. Wade and I tried to find you, but couldn't. Now, Merriam, shake hands
+and forget it all. I was as much to blame as you were; and the shot really did me
+good&mdash;I came out of the hospital as healthy and fit as a cab horse. Come on; that
+drink's waiting."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Old man," said Merriam, brokenly, "I don't know how to thank you&mdash;I&mdash;well, you
+know&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, forget it," boomed Hedges. "Quinby'll die of thirst if we don't join him."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Bibb was sitting on the shady side of the gallery waiting for the eleven-o'clock
+breakfast. Presently Merriam came out and joined him. His eye was strangely
+bright.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Bibb, my boy," said he, slowly waving his hand, "do you see those mountains and
+that sea and sky and sunshine?&mdash;they're mine, Bibbsy&mdash;all mine."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You go in," said Bibb, "and take eight grains of quinine, right away. It won't do in
+this climate for a man to get to thinking he's Rockefeller, or James O'Neill either."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Inside, the purser was untying a great roll of newspapers, many of them weeks old,
+gathered in the lower ports by the <i>Pajaro</i> to be distributed at casual stopping-places.
+Thus do the beneficent voyagers scatter news and entertainment among the
+prisoners of sea and mountains.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Tio Pancho, the hotel proprietor, set his great silver-rimmed <i>anteojos</i> upon his nose
+and divided the papers into a number of smaller rolls. A barefooted <i>muchacho</i>
+dashed in, desiring the post of messenger. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"<i>Bien venido</i>," said Tio Pancho. "This to Se&ntilde;ora Conant; that to el Doctor
+S-S-Schlegel&mdash;<i>Dios</i>! what a name to say!&mdash;that to Se&ntilde;or Davis&mdash;one for Don
+Alberto. These two for the <i>Casa de Huespedes</i>, <i>Numero 6</i>, <i>en la calle de las
+Buenas Gracias</i>. And say to them all, <i>muchacho</i>, that the <i>Pajaro</i> sails for Panama
+at three this afternoon. If any have letters to send by the post, let them come
+quickly, that they may first pass through the <i>correo</i>."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mrs. Conant received her roll of newspapers at four o'clock. The boy was late in
+delivering them, because he had been deflected from his duty by an iguana that
+crossed his path and to which he immediately gave chase. But it made no hardship,
+for she had no letters to send. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She was idling in a hammock in the patio of the house that she occupied, half
+awake, half happily dreaming of the paradise that she and Merriam had created out
+of the wrecks of their pasts. She was content now for the horizon of that
+shimmering sea to be the horizon of her life. They had shut out the world and
+closed the door. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Merriam was coming to her house at seven, after his dinner at the hotel. She would
+put on a white dress and an apricot-coloured lace mantilla, and they would walk an
+hour under the cocoanut palms by the lagoon. She smiled contentedly, and chose a
+paper at random from the roll the boy had brought.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At first the words of a certain headline of a Sunday newspaper meant nothing to
+her; they conveyed only a visualized sense of familiarity. The largest type ran thus:
+"Lloyd B. Conant secures divorce." And then the subheadings: "Well-known Saint
+Louis paint manufacturer wins suit, pleading one year's absence of wife." "Her
+mysterious disappearance recalled." "Nothing has been heard of her since." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Twisting herself quickly out of the hammock, Mrs. Conant's eye soon traversed the
+half-column of the "Recall." It ended thus: "It will be remembered that Mrs. Conant
+disappeared one evening in March of last year. It was freely rumoured that her
+marriage with Lloyd B. Conant resulted in much unhappiness. Stories were not
+wanting to the effect that his cruelty toward his wife had more than once taken the
+form of physical abuse. After her departure a full bottle of tincture of aconite, a
+deadly poison, was found in a small medicine cabinet in her bedroom. This might
+have been an indication that she meditated suicide. It is supposed that she
+abandoned such an intention if she possessed it, and left her home instead."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mrs. Conant slowly dropped the paper, and sat on a chair, clasping her hands
+tightly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Let me think&mdash;O God!&mdash;let me think," she whispered. "I took the bottle with me
+. . . I threw it out of the window of the train . . . I&mdash; . . . there was another bottle in the
+cabinet . . . there were two, side by side&mdash;the aconite&mdash;and the valerian that I took
+when I could not sleep . . . If they found the aconite bottle full, why&mdash;but, he is
+alive, of course&mdash;I gave him only a harmless dose of valerian . . . I am not a
+murderess in fact . . . Ralph, I&mdash;O God, don't let this be a dream!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She went into the part of the house that she rented from the old Peruvian man and
+his wife, shut the door, and walked up and down her room swiftly and feverishly
+for half an hour. Merriam's photograph stood in a frame on a table. She picked it
+up, looked at it with a smile of exquisite tenderness, and&mdash;dropped four tears on it.
+And Merriam only twenty rods away! Then she stood still for ten minutes, looking
+into space. She looked into space through a slowly opening door. On her side of
+the door was the building material for a castle of Romance&mdash;love, an Arcady of
+waving palms, a lullaby of waves on the shore of a haven of rest, respite, peace, a
+lotus land of dreamy ease and security&mdash;a life of poetry and heart's ease and refuge.
+Romanticist, will you tell me what Mrs. Conant saw on the other side of the door?
+You cannot?&mdash;that is, you will not? Very well; then listen.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt"><i>She saw herself go into a department store and buy five spools of silk thread and
+three yards of gingham to make an apron for the cook. "Shall I charge it, ma'am?"
+asked the clerk. As she walked out a lady whom she met greeted her cordially.
+"Oh, where did you get the pattern for those sleeves, dear Mrs. Conant?" she said.
+At the corner a policeman helped her across the street and touched his helmet.
+"Any callers?" she asked the maid when she reached home. "Mrs. Waldron,"
+answered the maid, "and the two Misses Jenkinson." "Very well," she said. "You may
+bring me a cup of tea, Maggie."</i></span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mrs. Conant went to the door and called Angela, the old Peruvian woman. "If
+Mateo is there send him to me." Mateo, a half-breed, shuffling and old but efficient,
+came.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Is there a steamer or a vessel of any kind leaving this coast to-night or to-morrow
+that I can get passage on?" she asked.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mateo considered.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"At Punta Reina, thirty miles down the coast, se&ntilde;ora," he answered, "there is a
+small steamer loading with cinchona and dyewoods. She sails for San Francisco
+to-morrow at sunrise. So says my brother, who arrived in his sloop to-day, passing
+by Punta Reina."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You must take me in that sloop to that steamer to-night. Will you do that?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Perhaps&mdash;" Mateo shrugged a suggestive shoulder. Mrs. Conant took a handful of
+money from a drawer and gave it to him.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Get the sloop ready behind the little point of land below the town," she ordered.
+"Get sailors, and be ready to sail at six o'clock. In half an hour bring a cart partly
+filled with straw into the patio here, and take my trunk to the sloop. There is more
+money yet. Now, hurry."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">For one time Mateo walked away without shuffling his feet.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Angela," cried Mrs. Conant, almost fiercely, "come and help me pack. I am going
+away. Out with this trunk. My clothes first. Stir yourself. Those dark dresses
+first. Hurry."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">From the first she did not waver from her decision. Her view was clear and final.
+Her door had opened and let the world in. Her love for Merriam was not lessened;
+but it now appeared a hopeless and unrealizable thing. The visions of their future
+that had seemed so blissful and complete had vanished. She tried to assure herself
+that her renunciation was rather for his sake than for her own. Now that she was
+cleared of her burden&mdash;at least, technically&mdash;would not his own weigh too heavily
+upon him? If she should cling to him, would not the difference forever silently mar
+and corrode their happiness? Thus she reasoned; but there were a thousand little
+voices calling to her that she could feel rather than hear, like the hum of distant,
+powerful machinery&mdash;the little voices of the world, that, when raised in unison, can
+send their insistent call through the thickest door.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Once while packing, a brief shadow of the lotus dream came back to her. She held
+Merriam's picture to her heart with one hand, while she threw a pair of shoes into
+the trunk with her other.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At six o'clock Mateo returned and reported the sloop ready. He and his brother
+lifted the trunk into the cart, covered it with straw and conveyed it to the point of
+embarkation. From there they transferred it on board in the sloop's dory. Then
+Mateo returned for additional orders.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mrs. Conant was ready. She had settled all business matters with Angela, and was
+impatiently waiting. She wore a long, loose black-silk duster that she often walked
+about in when the evenings were chilly. On her head was a small round hat, and
+over it the apricot-coloured lace mantilla.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Dusk had quickly followed the short twilight. Mateo led her by dark and
+grass-grown streets toward the point behind which the sloop was anchored. On
+turning a corner they beheld the Hotel Orilla del Mar three streets away, nebulously
+aglow with its array of kerosene lamps. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mrs. Conant paused, with streaming eyes. "I must, I <i>must</i> see him once before I
+go," she murmured in anguish. But even then she did not falter in her decision.
+Quickly she invented a plan by which she might speak to him, and yet make her
+departure without his knowing. She would walk past the hotel, ask some one to call
+him out and talk a few moments on some trivial excuse, leaving him expecting to
+see her at her home at seven.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She unpinned her hat and gave it to Mateo. "Keep this, and wait here till I come,"
+she ordered. Then she draped the mantilla over her head as she usually did when
+walking after sunset, and went straight to the Orilla del Mar.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She was glad to see the bulky, white-clad figure of Tio Pancho standing alone on
+the gallery.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Tio Pancho," she said, with a charming smile, "may I trouble you to ask Mr.
+Merriam to come out for just a few moments that I may speak with him?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Tio Pancho bowed as an elephant bows.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Buenas tardes, Se&ntilde;ora Conant," he said, as a cavalier talks. And then he went on,
+less at his ease:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"But does not the se&ntilde;ora know that Se&ntilde;or Merriam sailed on the <i>Pajaro</i> for Panama
+at three o'clock of this afternoon?"</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="2"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center>
+<b>
+II
+<br>
+<br>
+THE THEORY AND THE HOUND<br>
+</b>
+</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Not many days ago my old friend from the tropics, J. P. Bridger, United States
+consul on the island of Ratona, was in the city. We had wassail and jubilee and
+saw the Flatiron building, and missed seeing the Bronxless menagerie by about a
+couple of nights. And then, at the ebb tide, we were walking up a street that
+parallels and parodies Broadway.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A woman with a comely and mundane countenance passed us, holding in leash a
+wheezing, vicious, waddling, brute of a yellow pug. The dog entangled himself
+with Bridger's legs and mumbled his ankles in a snarling, peevish, sulky bite.
+Bridger, with a happy smile, kicked the breath out of the brute; the woman
+showered us with a quick rain of well-conceived adjectives that left us in no doubt
+as to our place in her opinion, and we passed on. Ten yards farther an old woman
+with disordered white hair and her bankbook tucked well hidden beneath her
+tattered shawl begged. Bridger stopped and disinterred for her a quarter from his
+holiday waistcoat.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">On the next corner a quarter of a ton of well-clothed man with a rice-powdered, fat,
+white jowl, stood holding the chain of a devil-born bulldog whose forelegs were
+strangers by the length of a dachshund. A little woman in a last-season's hat
+confronted him and wept, which was plainly all she could do, while he cursed her
+in low sweet, practised tones.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Bridger smiled again&mdash;strictly to himself&mdash;and this time he took out a little
+memorandum book and made a note of it. This he had no right to do without due
+explanation, and I said so.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's a new theory," said Bridger, "that I picked up down in Ratona. I've been
+gathering support for it as I knock about. The world isn't ripe for it yet, but&mdash;well
+I'll tell you; and then you run your mind back along the people you've known and
+see what you make of it." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">And so I cornered Bridger in a place where they have artificial palms and wine; and
+he told me the story which is here in my words and on his responsibility.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One afternoon at three o'clock, on the island of Ratona, a boy raced along the beach
+screaming, "<i>Pajaro</i>, ahoy!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Thus he made known the keenness of his hearing and the justice of his
+discrimination in pitch.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He who first heard and made oral proclamation concerning the toot of an
+approaching steamer's whistle, and correctly named the steamer, was a small hero in
+Ratona&mdash;until the next steamer came. Wherefore, there was rivalry among the
+barefoot youth of Ratona, and many fell victims to the softly blown conch shells of
+sloops which, as they enter harbour, sound surprisingly like a distant steamer's
+signal. And some could name you the vessel when its call, in your duller ears,
+sounded no louder than the sigh of the wind through the branches of the cocoanut
+palms.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But to-day he who proclaimed the <i>Pajaro</i> gained his honours. Ratona bent its ear
+to listen; and soon the deep-tongued blast grew louder and nearer, and at length
+Ratona saw above the line of palms on the low "point" the two black funnels of the
+fruiter slowly creeping toward the mouth of the harbour.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">You must know that Ratona is an island twenty miles off the south of a South
+American republic. It is a port of that republic; and it sleeps sweetly in a smiling
+sea, toiling not nor spinning; fed by the abundant tropics where all things "ripen,
+cease and fall toward the grave."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Eight hundred people dream life away in a green-embowered village that follows
+the horseshoe curve of its bijou harbour. They are mostly Spanish and Indian
+<i>mestizos</i>, with a shading of San Domingo Negroes, a lightening of pure-blood
+Spanish officials and a slight leavening of the froth of three or four pioneering
+white races. No steamers touch at Ratona save the fruit steamers which take on
+their banana inspectors there on their way to the coast. They leave Sunday
+newspapers, ice, quinine, bacon, watermelons and vaccine matter at the island and
+that is about all the touch Ratona gets with the world.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The <i>Pajaro</i> paused at the mouth of the harbour, rolling heavily in the swell that sent
+the whitecaps racing beyond the smooth water inside. Already two dories from the
+village&mdash;one conveying fruit inspectors, the other going for what it could get&mdash;were
+halfway out to the steamer.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The inspectors' dory was taken on board with them, and the <i>Pajaro</i> steamed away
+for the mainland for its load of fruit.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The other boat returned to Ratona bearing a contribution from the <i>Pajaro's</i> store of
+ice, the usual roll of newspapers and one passenger&mdash;Taylor Plunkett, sheriff of
+Chatham County, Kentucky.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Bridger, the United States consul at Ratona, was cleaning his rifle in the official
+shanty under a bread-fruit tree twenty yards from the water of the harbour. The
+consul occupied a place somewhat near the tail of his political party's procession.
+The music of the band wagon sounded very faintly to him in the distance. The
+plums of office went to others. Bridger's share of the spoils&mdash;the consulship at
+Ratona&mdash;was little more than a prune&mdash;a dried prune from the boarding-house
+department of the public crib. But $900 yearly was opulence in Ratona. Besides,
+Bridger had contracted a passion for shooting alligators in the lagoons near his
+consulate, and was not unhappy.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He looked up from a careful inspection of his rifle lock and saw a broad man filling
+his doorway. A broad, noiseless, slow-moving man, sunburned almost to the brown
+of Vandyke. A man of forty-five, neatly clothed in homespun, with scanty light
+hair, a close-clipped brown-and-gray beard and pale-blue eyes expressing mildness
+and simplicity.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You are Mr. Bridger, the consul," said the broad man. "They directed me here.
+Can you tell me what those big bunches of things like gourds are in those trees that
+look like feather dusters along the edge of the water?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Take that chair," said the consul, reoiling his cleaning rag. "No, the other one&mdash;that
+bamboo thing won't hold you. Why, they're cocoanuts&mdash;green cocoanuts. The shell
+of 'em is always a light green before they're ripe."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Much obliged," said the other man, sitting down carefully. "I didn't quite like to
+tell the folks at home they were olives unless I was sure about it. My name is
+Plunkett. I'm sheriff of Chatham County, Kentucky. I've got extradition papers in
+my pocket authorizing the arrest of a man on this island. They've been signed by
+the President of this country, and they're in correct shape. The man's name is Wade
+Williams. He's in the cocoanut raising business. What he's wanted for is the
+murder of his wife two years ago. Where can I find him?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The consul squinted an eye and looked through his rifle barrel. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"There's nobody on the island who calls himself 'Williams,'" he remarked.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Didn't suppose there was," said Plunkett mildly. "He'll do by any other name."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Besides myself," said Bridger, "there are only two Americans on Ratona&mdash;Bob
+Reeves and Henry Morgan."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The man I want sells cocoanuts," suggested Plunkett.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You see that cocoanut walk extending up to the point?" said the consul, waving his
+hand toward the open door. "That belongs to Bob Reeves. Henry Morgan owns
+half the trees to loo'ard on the island."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"One, month ago," said the sheriff, "Wade Williams wrote a confidential letter to a
+man in Chatham county, telling him where he was and how he was getting along.
+The letter was lost; and the person that found it gave it away. They sent me after
+him, and I've got the papers. I reckon he's one of your cocoanut men for certain." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You've got his picture, of course," said Bridger. "It might be Reeves or Morgan,
+but I'd hate to think it. They're both as fine fellows as you'd meet in an all-day auto
+ride."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"No," doubtfully answered Plunkett; "there wasn't any picture of Williams to be
+had. And I never saw him myself. I've been sheriff only a year. But I've got a
+pretty accurate description of him. About 5 feet 11; dark-hair and eyes; nose
+inclined to be Roman; heavy about the shoulders; strong, white teeth, with none
+missing; laughs a good deal, talkative; drinks considerably but never to
+intoxication; looks you square in the eye when talking; age thirty-five. Which one
+of your men does that description fit?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The consul grinned broadly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'll tell you what you do," he said, laying down his rifle and slipping on his dingy
+black alpaca coat. "You come along, Mr. Plunkett, and I'll take you up to see the
+boys. If you can tell which one of 'em your description fits better than it does the
+other you have the advantage of me."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Bridger conducted the sheriff out and along the hard beach close to which the tiny
+houses of the village were distributed. Immediately back of the town rose sudden,
+small, thickly wooded hills. Up one of these, by means of steps cut in the hard clay,
+the consul led Plunkett. On the very verge of an eminence was perched a two-room
+wooden cottage with a thatched roof. A Carib woman was washing clothes outside.
+The consul ushered the sheriff to the door of the room that overlooked the harbour.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Two men were in the room, about to sit down, in their shirt sleeves, to a table
+spread for dinner. They bore little resemblance one to the other in detail; but the
+general description given by Plunkett could have been justly applied to either. In
+height, colour of hair, shape of nose, build and manners each of them tallied with it.
+They were fair types of jovial, ready-witted, broad-gauged Americans who had
+gravitated together for companionship in an alien land. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Hello, Bridger" they called in unison at sight Of the consul. "Come and have
+dinner with us!" And then they noticed Plunkett at his heels, and came forward
+with hospitable curiosity.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Gentlemen," said the consul, his voice taking on unaccustomed formality, "this is
+Mr. Plunkett. Mr. Plunkett&mdash;Mr. Reeves and Mr. Morgan."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The cocoanut barons greeted the newcomer joyously. Reeves seemed about an inch
+taller than Morgan, but his laugh was not quite as loud. Morgan's eyes were deep
+brown; Reeves's were black. Reeves was the host and busied himself with fetching
+other chairs and calling to the Carib woman for supplemental table ware. It was
+explained that Morgan lived in a bamboo shack to &#8220;loo'ard,&#8221; but that every day the
+two friends dined together. Plunkett stood still during the preparations, looking
+about mildly with his pale-blue eyes. Bridger looked apologetic and uneasy.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At length two other covers were laid and the company was assigned to places.
+Reeves and Morgan stood side by side across the table from the visitors. Reeves
+nodded genially as a signal for all to seat themselves. And then suddenly Plunkett
+raised his hand with a gesture of authority. He was looking straight between
+Reeves and Morgan.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Wade Williams," he said quietly, "you are under arrest for murder." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Reeves and Morgan instantly exchanged a quick, bright glance, the quality of which
+was interrogation, with a seasoning of surprise. Then, simultaneously they turned to
+the speaker with a puzzled and frank deprecation in their gaze.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Can't say that we understand you, Mr. Plunkett," said Morgan, cheerfully. "Did
+you say 'Williams'?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What's the joke, Bridgy?" asked Reeves, turning, to the consul with a smile.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Before Bridger could answer Plunkett spoke again.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'll explain," he said, quietly. "One of you don't need any explanation, but this is
+for the other one. One of you is Wade Williams of Chatham County, Kentucky.
+You murdered your wife on May 5, two years ago, after ill-treating and abusing her
+continually for five years. I have the proper papers in my pocket for taking you
+back with me, and you are going. We will return on the fruit steamer that comes
+back by this island to-morrow to leave its inspectors. I acknowledge, gentlemen,
+that I'm not quite sure which one of you is Williams. But Wade Williams goes back
+to Chatham County to-morrow. I want you to understand that."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A great sound of merry laughter from Morgan and Reeves went out over the still
+harbour. Two or three fishermen in the fleet of sloops anchored there looked up at
+the house of the diablos Americanos on the hill and wondered.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"My dear Mr. Plunkett," cried Morgan, conquering his mirth, "the dinner is getting,
+cold. Let us sit down and eat. I am anxious to get my spoon into that shark-fin
+soup. Business afterward." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Sit down, gentlemen, if you please," added Reeves, pleasantly. "I am sure Mr.
+Plunkett will not object. Perhaps a little time may be of advantage to him in
+identifying&mdash;the gentleman he wishes to arrest."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"No objections, I'm sure," said Plunkett, dropping into his chair heavily. "I'm
+hungry myself. I didn't want to accept the hospitality of you folks without giving
+you notice; that's all." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Reeves set bottles and glasses on the table.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"There's cognac," he said, "and anisada, and Scotch 'smoke,' and rye. Take your
+choice."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Bridger chose rye, Reeves poured three fingers of Scotch for himself, Morgan took
+the same. The sheriff, against much protestation, filled his glass from the water
+bottle.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Here's to the appetite," said Reeves, raising his glass, "of Mr. Williams!" Morgan's
+laugh and his drink encountering sent him into a choking splutter. All began to pay
+attention to the dinner, which was well cooked and palatable.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Williams!" called Plunkett, suddenly and sharply.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">All looked up wonderingly. Reeves found the sheriff's mild eye resting upon him.
+He flushed a little.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"See here," he said, with some asperity, "my name's Reeves, and I don't want you
+to&mdash;" But the comedy of the thing came to his rescue, and he ended with a laugh.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I suppose, Mr. Plunkett," said Morgan, carefully seasoning an alligator pear, "that
+you are aware of the fact that you will import a good deal of trouble for yourself
+into Kentucky if you take back the wrong man&mdash;that is, of course, if you take
+anybody back?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Thank you for the salt," said the sheriff. "Oh, I'll take somebody back. It'll be one
+of you two gentlemen. Yes, I know I'd get stuck for damages if I make a mistake.
+But I'm going to try to get the right man."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'll tell you what you do," said Morgan, leaning forward with a jolly twinkle in his
+eyes. "You take me. I'll go without any trouble. The cocoanut business hasn't
+panned out well this year, and I'd like to make some extra money out of your
+bondsmen."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"That's not fair," chimed in Reeves. "I got only $16 a thousand for my last
+shipment. Take me, Mr. Plunkett."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'll take Wade Williams," said the sheriff, patiently, "or I'll come pretty close to it."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's like dining with a ghost," remarked Morgan, with a pretended shiver. "The
+ghost of a murderer, too! Will somebody pass the toothpicks to the shade of the
+naughty Mr. Williams?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Plunkett seemed as unconcerned as if he were dining at his own table in Chatham
+County. He was a gallant trencherman, and the strange tropic viands tickled his
+palate. Heavy, commonplace, almost slothful in his movements, he appeared to be
+devoid of all the cunning and watchfulness of the sleuth. He even ceased to
+observe, with any sharpness or attempted discrimination, the two men, one of
+whom he had undertaken with surprising self-confidence, to drag away upon the
+serious charge of wife-murder. Here, indeed, was a problem set before him that if
+wrongly solved would have amounted to his serious discomfiture, yet there he sat
+puzzling his soul (to all appearances) over the novel flavour of a broiled iguana
+cutlet. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The consul felt a decided discomfort. Reeves and Morgan were his friends and
+pals; yet the sheriff from Kentucky had a certain right to his official aid and moral
+support. So Bridger sat the silentest around the board and tried to estimate the
+peculiar situation. His conclusion was that both Reeves and Morgan, quickwitted,
+as he knew them to be, had conceived at the moment of Plunkett's disclosure of his
+mission&mdash;and in the brief space of a lightning flash&mdash;the idea that the other might be
+the guilty Williams; and that each of them had decided in that moment loyally to
+protect his comrade against the doom that threatened him. This was the consul's
+theory and if he had been a bookmaker at a race of wits for life and liberty he would
+have offered heavy odds against the plodding sheriff from Chatham County,
+Kentucky.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When the meal was concluded the Carib woman came and removed the dishes and
+cloth. Reeves strewed the table with excellent cigars, and Plunkett, with the others,
+lighted one of these with evident gratification.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I may be dull," said Morgan, with a grin and a wink at Bridger; "but I want to
+know if I am. Now, I say this is all a joke of Mr. Plunkett's, concocted to frighten
+two babes-in-the-woods. Is this Williamson to be taken seriously or not?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"'Williams,'" corrected Plunkett gravely. "I never got off any jokes in my life. I
+know I wouldn't travel 2,000 miles to get off a poor one as this would be if I didn't
+take Wade Williams back with me. Gentlemen!" continued the sheriff, now letting
+his mild eyes travel impartially from one of the company to another, "see if you can
+find any joke in this case. Wade Williams is listening to the words I utter now; but
+out of politeness, I will speak of him as a third person. For five years he made his
+wife lead the life of a dog&mdash;No; I'll take that back. No dog in Kentucky was ever
+treated as she was. He spent the money that she brought him&mdash;spent it at races, at
+the card table and on horses and hunting. He was a good fellow to his friends, but a
+cold, sullen demon at home. He wound up the five years of neglect by striking her
+with his closed hand&mdash;a hand as hard as a stone&mdash;when she was ill and weak from
+suffering. She died the next day; and he skipped. That's all there is to it. It's
+enough. I never saw Williams; but I knew his wife. I'm not a man to tell half. She
+and I were keeping company when she met him. She went to Louisville on a visit
+and saw him there. I'll admit that he spoilt my chances in no time. I lived then on
+the edge of the Cumberland mountains. I was elected sheriff of Chatham County a
+year after Wade Williams killed his wife. My official duty sends me out here after
+him; but I'll admit that there's personal feeling, too. And he's going back with me.
+Mr.&mdash;er&mdash;Reeves, will you pass me a match?</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Awfully imprudent of Williams," said Morgan, putting his feet up against the wall,
+"to strike a Kentucky lady. Seems to me I've heard they were scrappers."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Bad, bad Williams," said Reeves, pouring out more Scotch.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The two men spoke lightly, but the consul saw and felt the tension and the
+carefulness in their actions and words. "Good old fellows," he said to himself;
+"they're both all right. Each of 'em is standing by the other like a little brick
+church."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">And then a dog walked into the room where they sat&mdash;a black-and-tan hound,
+long-eared, lazy, confident of welcome.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Plunkett turned his head and looked at the animal, which halted, confidently, within
+a few feet of his chair.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Suddenly the sheriff, with a deep-mouthed oath, left his seat and, bestowed upon
+the dog a vicious and heavy kick, with his ponderous shoe.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The hound, heartbroken, astonished, with flapping ears and incurved tail, uttered a
+piercing yelp of pain and surprise.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Reeves and the consul remained in their chairs, saying nothing, but astonished at
+the unexpected show of intolerance from the easy-going man from Chatham county.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But Morgan, with a suddenly purpling face, leaped, to his feet and raised a
+threatening arm above the guest.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You&mdash;brute!" he shouted, passionately; "why did you do that?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Quickly the amenities returned, Plunkett muttered some indistinct apology and
+regained his seat. Morgan with a decided effort controlled his indignation and also
+returned to his chair. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">And then Plunkett with the spring of a tiger, leaped around the corner of the table
+and snapped handcuffs on the paralyzed Morgan's wrists.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Hound-lover and woman-killer!" he cried; "get ready to meet your God."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When Bridger had finished I asked him:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Did he get the right man?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"He did," said the Consul.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"And how did he know?" I inquired, being in a kind of bewilderment. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"When he put Morgan in the dory," answered Bridger, "the next day to take him
+aboard the <i>Pajaro</i>, this man Plunkett stopped to shake hands with me and I asked
+him the same question."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"'Mr. Bridger,' said he, 'I'm a Kentuckian, and I've seen a great deal of both men and
+animals. And I never yet saw a man that was overfond of horses and dogs but what
+was cruel to women.'" </span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="3"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+III<br>
+<br>
+THE HYPOTHESES OF FAILURE<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lawyer Gooch bestowed his undivided attention upon the engrossing arts of his
+profession. But one flight of fancy did he allow his mind to entertain. He was fond
+of likening his suite of office rooms to the bottom of a ship. The rooms were three
+in number, with a door opening from one to another. These doors could also be
+closed. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ships," Lawyer Gooch would say, "are constructed for safety, with separate,
+water-tight compartments in their bottoms. If one compartment springs a leak it
+fills with water; but the good ship goes on unhurt. Were it not for the separating
+bulkheads one leak would sink the vessel. Now it often happens that while I am
+occupied with clients, other clients with conflicting interests call. With the
+assistance of Archibald&mdash;an office boy with a future&mdash;I cause the dangerous influx to
+be diverted into separate compartments, while I sound with my legal plummet the
+depth of each. If necessary, they may be baled into the hallway and permitted to
+escape by way of the stairs, which we may term the lee scuppers. Thus the good
+ship of business is kept afloat; whereas if the element that supports her were
+allowed to mingle freely in her hold we might be swamped&mdash;ha, ha, ha!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The law is dry. Good jokes are few. Surely it might be permitted Lawyer Gooch to
+mitigate the bore of briefs, the tedium of torts and the prosiness of processes with
+even so light a levy upon the good property of humour.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lawyer Gooch's practice leaned largely to the settlement of marital infelicities. Did
+matrimony languish through complications, he mediated, soothed and arbitrated.
+Did it suffer from implications, he readjusted, defended and championed. Did it
+arrive at the extremity of duplications, he always got light sentences for his clients.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But not always was Lawyer Gooch the keen, armed, wily belligerent, ready with his
+two-edged sword to lop off the shackles of Hymen. He had been known to build up
+instead of demolishing, to reunite instead of severing, to lead erring and foolish
+ones back into the fold instead of scattering the flock. Often had he by his eloquent
+and moving appeals sent husband and wife, weeping, back into each other's arms.
+Frequently he had coached childhood so successfully that, at the psychological
+moment (and at a given signal) the plaintive pipe of "Papa, won't you tum home
+adain to me and muvver?" had won the day and upheld the pillars of a tottering
+home.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Unprejudiced persons admitted that Lawyer Gooch received as big fees from these
+reyoked clients as would have been paid him had the cases been contested in court.
+Prejudiced ones intimated that his fees were doubled, because the penitent couples
+always came back later for the divorce, anyhow.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">There came a season in June when the legal ship of Lawyer Gooch (to borrow his
+own figure) was nearly becalmed. The divorce mill grinds slowly in June. It is the
+month of Cupid and Hymen.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lawyer Gooch, then, sat idle in the middle room of his clientless suite. A small
+anteroom connected&mdash;or rather separated&mdash;this apartment from the hallway. Here
+was stationed Archibald, who wrested from visitors their cards or oral nomenclature
+which he bore to his master while they waited.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Suddenly, on this day, there came a great knocking at the outermost door.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Archibald, opening it, was thrust aside as superfluous by the visitor, who without
+due reverence at once penetrated to the office of Lawyer Gooch and threw himself
+with good-natured insolence into a comfortable chair facing that gentlemen.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You are Phineas C. Gooch, attorney-at-law?" said the visitor, his tone of voice and
+inflection making his words at once a question, an assertion and an accusation.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Before committing himself by a reply, the lawyer estimated his possible client in
+one of his brief but shrewd and calculating glances.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The man was of the emphatic type&mdash;large-sized, active, bold and debonair in
+demeanour, vain beyond a doubt, slightly swaggering, ready and at ease. He was
+well-clothed, but with a shade too much ornateness. He was seeking a lawyer; but
+if that fact would seem to saddle him with troubles they were not patent in his
+beaming eye and courageous air.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"My name is Gooch," at length the lawyer admitted. Upon pressure he would also
+have confessed to the Phineas C. But he did not consider it good practice to
+volunteer information. "I did not receive your card," he continued, by way of
+rebuke, "so I&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I know you didn't," remarked the visitor, coolly; "And you won't just yet. Light
+up?" He threw a leg over an arm of his chair, and tossed a handful of rich-hued
+cigars upon the table. Lawyer Gooch knew the brand. He thawed just enough to
+accept the invitation to smoke. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You are a divorce lawyer," said the cardless visitor. This time there was no
+interrogation in his voice. Nor did his words constitute a simple assertion. They
+formed a charge&mdash;a denunciation&mdash;as one would say to a dog: "You are a dog."
+Lawyer Gooch was silent under the imputation.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You handle," continued the visitor, "all the various ramifications of busted-up
+connubiality. You are a surgeon, we might saw, who extracts Cupid's darts when
+he shoots 'em into the wrong parties. You furnish patent, incandescent lights for
+premises where the torch of Hymen has burned so low you can't light a cigar at it.
+Am I right, Mr. Gooch?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I have undertaken cases," said the lawyer, guardedly, "in the line to which your
+figurative speech seems to refer. Do you wish to consult me professionally, Mr. &ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;" The lawyer paused, with significance. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Not yet," said the other, with an arch wave of his cigar, "not just yet. Let us
+approach the subject with the caution that should have been used in the original act
+that makes this pow-wow necessary. There exists a matrimonial jumble to be
+straightened out. But before I give you names I want your honest&mdash;well, anyhow,
+your professional opinion on the merits of the mix-up. I want you to size up the
+catastrophe&mdash;abstractly&mdash;you understand? I'm Mr. Nobody; and I've got a story to
+tell you. Then you say what's what. Do you get my wireless?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You want to state a hypothetical case?" suggested Lawyer Gooch. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"That's the word I was after. 'Apothecary' was the best shot I could make at it in my
+mind. The hypothetical goes. I'll state the case. Suppose there's a woman&mdash;a deuced
+fine-looking woman&mdash;who has run away from her husband and home? She's badly
+mashed on another man who went to her town to work up some real estate business.
+Now, we may as well call this woman's husband Thomas R. Billings, for that's his
+name. I'm giving you straight tips on the cognomens. The Lothario chap is Henry
+K. Jessup. The Billingses lived in a little town called Susanville&mdash;a good many
+miles from here. Now, Jessup leaves Susanville two weeks ago. The next day Mrs.
+Billings follows him. She's dead gone on this man Jessup; you can bet your law
+library on that."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lawyer Gooch's client said this with such unctuous satisfaction that even the callous
+lawyer experienced a slight ripple of repulsion. He now saw clearly in his fatuous
+visitor the conceit of the lady-killer, the egoistic complacency of the successful
+trifler.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Now," continued the visitor, "suppose this Mrs. Billings wasn't happy at home?
+We'll say she and her husband didn't gee worth a cent. They've got incompatibility
+to burn. The things she likes, Billings wouldn't have as a gift with trading-stamps.
+It's Tabby and Rover with them all the time. She's an educated woman in science
+and culture, and she reads things out loud at meetings. Billings is not on. He don't
+appreciate progress and obelisks and ethics, and things of that sort. Old Billings is
+simply a blink when it comes to such things. The lady is out and out above his
+class. Now, lawyer, don't it look like a fair equalization of rights and wrongs that a
+woman like that should be allowed to throw down Billings and take the man that
+can appreciate her?</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Incompatibility," said Lawyer Gooch, "is undoubtedly the source of much marital
+discord and unhappiness. Where it is positively proved, divorce would seem to be
+the equitable remedy. Are you&mdash;excuse me&mdash;is this man Jessup one to whom the
+lady may safely trust her future?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, you can bet on Jessup," said the client, with a confident wag of his head.
+"Jessup's all right. He'll do the square thing. Why, he left Susanville just to keep
+people from talking about Mrs. Billings. But she followed him up, and now, of
+course, he'll stick to her. When she gets a divorce, all legal and proper, Jessup will
+do the proper thing."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"And now," said Lawyer Gooch, "continuing the hypothesis, if you prefer, and
+supposing that my services should be desired in the case, what&mdash;" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The client rose impulsively to his feet.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, dang the hypothetical business," he exclaimed, impatiently. "Let's let her drop,
+and get down to straight talk. You ought to know who I am by this time. I want
+that woman to have her divorce. I'll pay for it. The day you set Mrs. Billings free
+I'll pay you five hundred dollars."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lawyer Gooch's client banged his fist upon the table to punctuate his generosity.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"If that is the case&mdash;" began the lawyer.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Lady to see you, sir," bawled Archibald, bouncing in from his anteroom. He had
+orders to always announce immediately any client that might come. There was no
+sense in turning business away. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lawyer Gooch took client number one by the arm and led him suavely into one of
+the adjoining rooms. "Favour me by remaining here a few minutes, sir," said he. "I
+will return and resume our consultation with the least possible delay. I am rather
+expecting a visit from a very wealthy old lady in connection with a will. I will not
+keep you waiting long."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The breezy gentleman seated himself with obliging acquiescence, and took up a
+magazine. The lawyer returned to the middle office, carefully closing behind him
+the connecting door.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Show the lady in, Archibald," he said to the office boy, who was awaiting the
+order.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A tall lady, of commanding presence and sternly handsome, entered the room. She
+wore robes&mdash;robes; not clothes&mdash;ample and fluent. In her eye could be perceived the
+lambent flame of genius and soul. In her hand was a green bag of the capacity of a
+bushel, and an umbrella that also seemed to wear a robe, ample and fluent. She
+accepted a chair.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Are you Mr. Phineas C. Gooch, the lawyer?" she asked, in formal and
+unconciliatory tones.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I am," answered Lawyer Gooch, without circumlocution. He never circumlocuted
+when dealing with a woman. Women circumlocute. Time is wasted when both
+sides in debate employ the same tactics.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"As a lawyer, sir," began the lady, "you may have acquired some knowledge of the
+human heart. Do you believe that the pusillanimous and petty conventions of our
+artificial social life should stand as an obstacle in the way of a noble and
+affectionate heart when it finds its true mate among the miserable and worthless
+wretches in the world that are called men?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Madam," said Lawyer Gooch, in the tone that he used in curbing his female
+clients, "this is an office for conducting the practice of law. I am a lawyer, not a
+philosopher, nor the editor of an 'Answers to the Lovelorn' column of a newspaper.
+I have other clients waiting. I will ask you kindly to come to the point."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Well, you needn't get so stiff around the gills about it," said the lady, with a snap of
+her luminous eyes and a startling gyration of her umbrella. "Business is what I've
+come for. I want your opinion in the matter of a suit for divorce, as the vulgar
+would call it, but which is really only the readjustment of the false and ignoble
+conditions that the short-sighted laws of man have interposed between a loving&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I beg your pardon, madam," interrupted Lawyer Gooch, with some impatience,
+"for reminding you again that this is a law office. Perhaps Mrs. Wilcox&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mrs. Wilcox is all right," cut in the lady, with a hint of asperity. "And so are
+Tolstoi, and Mrs. Gertrude Atherton, and Omar Khayyam, and Mr. Edward Bok.
+I've read 'em all. I would like to discuss with you the divine right of the soul as
+opposed to the freedom-destroying restrictions of a bigoted and narrow-minded
+society. But I will proceed to business. I would prefer to lay the matter before you
+in an impersonal way until you pass upon its merits. That is to describe it as a
+supposable instance, without&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You wish to state a hypothetical case?" said Lawyer Gooch. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I was going to say that," said the lady, sharply. "Now, suppose there is a woman
+who is all soul and heart and aspirations for a complete existence. This woman has
+a husband who is far below her in intellect, in taste&mdash;in everything. Bah! he is a
+brute. He despises literature. He sneers at the lofty thoughts of the world's great
+thinkers. He thinks only of real estate and such sordid things. He is no mate for a
+woman with soul. We will say that this unfortunate wife one day meets with her
+ideal&mdash;a man with brain and heart and force. She loves him. Although this man
+feels the thrill of a new-found affinity he is too noble, too honourable to declare
+himself. He flies from the presence of his beloved. She flies after him, trampling,
+with superb indifference, upon the fetters with which an unenlightened social
+system would bind her. Now, what will a divorce cost? Eliza Ann Timmins, the
+poetess of Sycamore Gap, got one for three hundred and forty dollars. Can I&mdash;I
+mean can this lady I speak of get one that cheap?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Madam," said Lawyer Gooch, "your last two or three sentences delight me with
+their intelligence and clearness. Can we not now abandon the hypothetical and
+come down to names and business?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I should say so," exclaimed the lady, adopting the practical with admirable
+readiness. "Thomas R. Billings is the name of the low brute who stands between
+the happiness of his legal&mdash;his legal, but not his spiritual&mdash;wife and Henry K. Jessup,
+the noble man whom nature intended for her mate. I," concluded the client, with an
+air of dramatic revelation, "am Mrs. Billings!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Gentlemen to see you, sir," shouted Archibald, invading the room almost at a
+handspring. Lawyer Gooch arose from his chair. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mrs. Billings," he said courteously, "allow me to conduct you into the adjoining
+office apartment for a few minutes. I am expecting a very wealthy old gentleman
+on business connected with a will. In a very short while I will join you, and continue
+our consultation." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">With his accustomed chivalrous manner, Lawyer Gooch ushered his soulful client
+into the remaining unoccupied room, and came out, closing the door with
+circumspection.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The next visitor introduced by Archibald was a thin, nervous, irritable-looking man
+of middle age, with a worried and apprehensive expression of countenance. He
+carried in one hand a small satchel, which he set down upon the floor beside the
+chair which the lawyer placed for him. His clothing was of good quality, but it was
+worn without regard to neatness or style, and appeared to be covered with the dust
+of travel.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You make a specialty of divorce cases," he said, in, an agitated but business-like
+tone.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I may say," began Lawyer Gooch, "that my practice has not altogether avoided&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I know you do," interrupted client number three. "You needn't tell me. I've heard
+all about you. I have a case to lay before you without necessarily disclosing any
+connection that I might have with it&mdash;that is&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You wish," said Lawyer Gooch, "to state a hypothetical case. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You may call it that. I am a plain man of business. I will be as brief as possible.
+We will first take up hypothetical woman. We will say she is married
+uncongenially. In many ways she is a superior woman. Physically she is
+considered to be handsome. She is devoted to what she calls literature&mdash;poetry and
+prose, and such stuff. Her husband is a plain man in the business walks of life.
+Their home has not been happy, although the husband has tried to make it so.
+Some time ago a man&mdash;a stranger&mdash;came to the peaceful town in which they lived
+and engaged in some real estate operations. This woman met him, and became
+unaccountably infatuated with him. Her attentions became so open that the man
+felt the community to be no safe place for him, so he left it. She abandoned
+husband and home, and followed him. She forsook her home, where she was
+provided with every comfort, to follow this man who had inspired her with such a
+strange affection. Is there anything more to be deplored," concluded the client, in a
+trembling voice, "than the wrecking of a home by a woman's uncalculating folly?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lawyer Gooch delivered the cautious opinion that there was not. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"This man she has gone to join," resumed the visitor, "is not the man to make her
+happy. It is a wild and foolish self-deception that makes her think he will. Her
+husband, in spite of their many disagreements, is the only one capable of dealing
+with her sensitive and peculiar nature. But this she does not realize now."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Would you consider a divorce the logical cure in the case you present?" asked
+Lawyer Gooch, who felt that the conversation was wandering too far from the field
+of business.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"A divorce!" exclaimed the client, feelingly&mdash;almost tearfully. "No, no&mdash;not that. I
+have read, Mr. Gooch, of many instances where your sympathy and kindly interest
+led you to act as a mediator between estranged husband and wife, and brought them
+together again. Let us drop the hypothetical case&mdash;I need conceal no longer that it is
+I who am the sufferer in this sad affair&mdash;the names you shall have&mdash;Thomas R.
+Billings and wife&mdash;and Henry K. Jessup, the man with whom she is infatuated."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Client number three laid his hand upon Mr. Gooch's arm. Deep emotion was
+written upon his careworn face. "For Heaven's sake", he said fervently, "help me in
+this hour of trouble. Seek out Mrs. Billings, and persuade her to abandon this
+distressing pursuit of her lamentable folly. Tell her, Mr. Gooch, that her husband is
+willing to receive her back to his heart and home&mdash;promise her anything that will
+induce her to return. I have heard of your success in these matters. Mrs. Billings
+cannot be very far away. I am worn out with travel and weariness. Twice during
+the pursuit I saw her, but various circumstances prevented our having an interview.
+Will you undertake this mission for me, Mr. Gooch, and earn my everlasting
+gratitude?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It is true," said Lawyer Gooch, frowning slightly at the other's last words, but
+immediately calling up an expression of virtuous benevolence, "that on a number of
+occasions I have been successful in persuading couples who sought the severing of
+their matrimonial bonds to think better of their rash intentions and return to their
+homes reconciled. But I assure you that the work is often exceedingly difficult.
+The amount of argument, perseverance, and, if I may be allowed to say it,
+eloquence that it requires would astonish you. But this is a case in which my
+sympathies would be wholly enlisted. I feel deeply for you sir, and I would be most
+happy to see husband and wife reunited. But my time," concluded the lawyer,
+looking at his watch as if suddenly reminded of the fact, "is valuable."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I am aware of that," said the client, "and if you will take the case and persuade
+Mrs. Billings to return home and leave the man alone that she is following&mdash;on that
+day I will pay you the sum of one thousand dollars. I have made a little money in
+real estate during the recent boom in Susanville, and I will not begrudge that
+amount."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Retain your seat for a few moments, please," said Lawyer Gooch, arising, and
+again consulting his watch. "I have another client waiting in an adjoining room
+whom I had very nearly forgotten. I will return in the briefest possible space."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The situation was now one that fully satisfied Lawyer Gooch's love of intricacy and
+complication. He revelled in cases that presented such subtle problems and
+possibilities. It pleased him to think that he was master of the happiness and fate of
+the three individuals who sat, unconscious of one another's presence, within his
+reach. His old figure of the ship glided into his mind. But now the figure failed,
+for to have filled every compartment of an actual vessel would have been to
+endanger her safety; with his compartments full, his ship of affairs could but sail on
+to the advantageous port of a fine, fat fee. The thing for him to do, of course, was to
+wring the best bargain he could from some one of his anxious cargo.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">First he called to the office boy: "Lock the outer door, Archibald, and admit no
+one." Then he moved, with long, silent strides into the room in which client
+number one waited. That gentleman sat, patiently scanning the pictures in the
+magazine, with a cigar in his mouth and his feet upon a table.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Well," he remarked, cheerfully, as the lawyer entered, "have you made up your
+mind? Does five hundred dollars go for getting the fair lady a divorce?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You mean that as a retainer?" asked Lawyer Gooch, softly interrogative.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Hey? No; for the whole job. It's enough, ain't it?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"My fee," said Lawyer Gooch, "would be one thousand five hundred dollars. Five
+hundred dollars down, and the remainder upon issuance of the divorce."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A loud whistle came from client number one. His feet descended to the floor.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Guess we can't close the deal," he said, arising, "I cleaned up five hundred dollars
+in a little real estate dicker down in Susanville. I'd do anything I could to free the
+lady, but it out-sizes my pile." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Could you stand one thousand two hundred dollars?" asked the lawyer,
+insinuatingly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Five hundred is my limit, I tell you. Guess I'll have to hunt up a cheaper lawyer."
+The client put on his hat.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Out this way, please," said Lawyer Gooch, opening the door that led into the
+hallway.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">As the gentleman flowed out of the compartment and down the stairs, Lawyer
+Gooch smiled to himself. "Exit Mr. Jessup," he murmured, as he fingered the
+Henry Clay tuft of hair at his ear. "And now for the forsaken husband." He
+returned to the middle office, and assumed a businesslike manner.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I understand," he said to client number three, "that you agree to pay one thousand
+dollars if I bring about, or am instrumental in bringing about, the return of Mrs.
+Billings to her home, and her abandonment of her infatuated pursuit of the man for
+whom she has conceived such a violent fancy. Also that the case is now
+unreservedly in my hands on that basis. Is that correct?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Entirely", said the other, eagerly. "And I can produce the cash any time at two
+hours' notice."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lawyer Gooch stood up at his full height. His thin figure seemed to expand. His
+thumbs sought the arm-holes of his vest. Upon his face was a look of sympathetic
+benignity that he always wore during such undertakings.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Then, sir," he said, in kindly tones, "I think I can promise you an early relief from
+your troubles. I have that much confidence in my powers of argument and
+persuasion, in the natural impulses of the human heart toward good, and in the
+strong influence of a husband's unfaltering love. Mrs. Billings, sir, is here&mdash;in that
+room&mdash;" the lawyer's long arm pointed to the door. "I will call her in at once; and our
+united pleadings&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lawyer Gooch paused, for client number three had leaped from his chair as if
+propelled by steel springs, and clutched his satchel. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What the devil," he exclaimed, harshly, "do you mean? That woman in there! I
+thought I shook her off forty miles back."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He ran to the open window, looked out below, and threw one leg over the sill.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Stop!" cried Lawyer Gooch, in amazement. "What would you do? Come, Mr.
+Billings, and face your erring but innocent wife. Our combined entreaties cannot
+fail to&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Billings!" shouted the now thoroughly moved client. "I'll Billings you, you old
+idiot!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Turning, he hurled his satchel with fury at the lawyer's head. It struck that
+astounded peacemaker between the eyes, causing him to stagger backward a pace or
+two. When Lawyer Gooch recovered his wits he saw that his client had
+disappeared. Rushing to the window, he leaned out, and saw the recreant gathering
+himself up from the top of a shed upon which he had dropped from the
+second-story window. Without stopping to collect his hat he then plunged
+downward the remaining ten feet to the alley, up which he flew with prodigious
+celerity until the surrounding building swallowed him up from view. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lawyer Gooch passed his hand tremblingly across his brow. It was a habitual act
+with him, serving to clear his thoughts. Perhaps also it now seemed to soothe the
+spot where a very hard alligator-hide satchel had struck.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The satchel lay upon the floor, wide open, with its contents spilled about.
+Mechanically, Lawyer Gooch stooped to gather up the articles. The first was a
+collar; and the omniscient eye of the man of law perceived, wonderingly, the initials
+H. K. J. marked upon it. Then came a comb, a brush, a folded map, and a piece of
+soap. Lastly, a handful of old business letters, addressed&mdash;every one of them&mdash;to
+"Henry K. Jessup, Esq."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lawyer Gooch closed the satchel, and set it upon the table. He hesitated for a
+moment, and then put on his hat and walked into the office boy's anteroom.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Archibald," he said mildly, as he opened the hall door, "I am going around to the
+Supreme Court rooms. In five minutes you may step into the inner office, and
+inform the lady who is waiting there that"&mdash;here Lawyer Gooch made use of the
+vernacular&mdash;"that there's nothing doing."</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="4"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+IV<br>
+<br>
+CALLOWAY'S CODE<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The New York <i>Enterprise</i> sent H. B. Calloway as special correspondent to the
+Russo-Japanese-Portsmouth war.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">For two months Calloway hung about Yokohama and Tokio, shaking dice with the
+other correspondents for drinks of 'rickshaws&mdash;oh, no, that's something to ride in;
+anyhow, he wasn't earning the salary that his paper was paying him. But that was
+not Calloway's fault. The little brown men who held the strings of Fate between
+their fingers were not ready for the readers of the <i>Enterprise</i> to season their
+breakfast bacon and eggs with the battles of the descendants of the gods.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But soon the column of correspondents that were to go out with the First Army
+tightened their field-glass belts and went down to the Yalu with Kuroki. Calloway
+was one of these.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Now, this is no history of the battle of the Yalu River. That has been told in detail
+by the correspondents who gazed at the shrapnel smoke rings from a distance of
+three miles. But, for justice's sake, let it be understood that the Japanese
+commander prohibited a nearer view.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Calloway's feat was accomplished before the battle. What he did was to furnish the
+<i>Enterprise</i> with the biggest beat of the war. That paper published exclusively and
+in detail the news of the attack on the lines of the Russian General on the same day
+that it was made. No other paper printed a word about it for two days afterward,
+except a London paper, whose account was absolutely incorrect and untrue. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Calloway did this in face of the fact that General Kuroki was making his moves and
+laying his plans with the profoundest secrecy as far as the world outside his camps
+was concerned. The correspondents were forbidden to send out any news whatever
+of his plans; and every message that was allowed on the wires was censored with
+rigid severity.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The correspondent for the London paper handed in a cablegram describing Kuroki's
+plans; but as it was wrong from beginning to end the censor grinned and let it go
+through.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">So, there they were&mdash;Kuroki on one side of the Yalu with forty-two thousand
+infantry, five thousand cavalry, and one hundred and twenty-four guns. On the
+other side, Zassulitch waited for him with only twenty-three thousand men, and
+with a long stretch of river to guard. And Calloway had got hold of some important
+inside information that he knew would bring the <i>Enterprise</i> staff around a
+cablegram as thick as flies around a Park Row lemonade stand. If he could only get
+that message past the censor&mdash;the new censor who had arrived and taken his post
+that day!</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Calloway did the obviously proper thing. He lit his pipe and sat down on a gun
+carriage to think it over. And there we must leave him; for the rest of the story
+belongs to Vesey, a sixteen-dollar-a-week reporter on the <i>Enterprise</i>.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Calloway's cablegram was handed to the managing editor at four o'clock in the
+afternoon. He read it three times; and then drew a pocket mirror from a pigeon-hole
+in his desk, and looked at his reflection carefully. Then he went over to the desk of
+Boyd, his assistant (he usually called Boyd when he wanted him), and laid the
+cablegram before him.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's from Calloway," he said. "See what you make of it." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The message was dated at Wi-ju, and these were the words of it: </span></p>
+<br>
+<blockquote>
+<span style="font-size: 12pt">Foregone preconcerted rash witching goes muffled rumour mine dark silent unfortunate
+richmond existing great hotly brute select mooted parlous beggars ye angel
+incontrovertible.</span>
+</blockquote
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Boyd read it twice.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's either a cipher or a sunstroke," said he.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ever hear of anything like a code in the office&mdash;a secret code?" asked the m. e.,
+who had held his desk for only two years. Managing editors come and go.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"None except the vernacular that the lady specials write in," said Boyd. "Couldn't
+be an acrostic, could it?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I thought of that," said the m. e., "but the beginning letters contain only four
+vowels. It must be a code of some sort." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Try em in groups," suggested Boyd. "Let's see&mdash;'Rash witching goes'&mdash;not with me
+it doesn't. 'Muffled rumour mine'&mdash;must have an underground wire. 'Dark silent
+unfortunate richmond'&mdash;no reason why he should knock that town so hard. 'Existing
+great hotly'&mdash;no it doesn't pan out. I'll call Scott."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The city editor came in a hurry, and tried his luck. A city editor must know
+something about everything; so Scott knew a little about cipher-writing.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It may be what is called an inverted alphabet cipher," said he. "I'll try that. 'R'
+seems to be the oftenest used initial letter, with the exception of 'm.' Assuming 'r' to
+mean 'e', the most frequently used vowel, we transpose the letters&mdash;so."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Scott worked rapidly with his pencil for two minutes; and then showed the first
+word according to his reading&mdash;the word "Scejtzez." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Great!" cried Boyd. "It's a charade. My first is a Russian general. Go on, Scott."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"No, that won't work," said the city editor. "It's undoubtedly a code. It's impossible
+to read it without the key. Has the office ever used a cipher code?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Just what I was asking," said the m.e. "Hustle everybody up that ought to know.
+We must get at it some way. Calloway has evidently got hold of something big, and
+the censor has put the screws on, or he wouldn't have cabled in a lot of chop suey
+like this."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Throughout the office of the <i>Enterprise</i> a dragnet was sent, hauling in such
+members of the staff as would be likely to know of a code, past or present, by
+reason of their wisdom, information, natural intelligence, or length of servitude.
+They got together in a group in the city room, with the m. e. in the centre. No one
+had heard of a code. All began to explain to the head investigator that newspapers
+never use a code, anyhow&mdash;that is, a cipher code. Of course the Associated Press
+stuff is a sort of code&mdash;an abbreviation, rather&mdash;but&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The m. e. knew all that, and said so. He asked each man how long he had worked
+on the paper. Not one of them had drawn pay from an <i>Enterprise</i> envelope for
+longer than six years. Calloway had been on the paper twelve years.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Try old Heffelbauer," said the m. e. "He was here when Park Row was a potato
+patch."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Heffelbauer was an institution. He was half janitor, half handy-man about the
+office, and half watchman&mdash;thus becoming the peer of thirteen and one-half tailors.
+Sent for, he came, radiating his nationality.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Heffelbauer," said the m. e., "did you ever hear of a code belonging to the office a
+long time ago&mdash;a private code? You know what a code is, don't you?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Yah," said Heffelbauer. "Sure I know vat a code is. Yah, apout dwelf or fifteen
+year ago der office had a code. Der reborters in der city-room haf it here."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ah!" said the m. e. "We're getting on the trail now. Where was it kept,
+Heffelbauer? What do you know about it?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Somedimes," said the retainer, "dey keep it in der little room behind der library
+room."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Can you find it?" asked the m. e. eagerly. "Do you know where it is?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mein Gott!" said Heffelbauer. "How long you dink a code live? Der reborters
+call him a maskeet. But von day he butt mit his head der editor, und&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, he's talking about a goat," said Boyd. "Get out, Heffelbauer." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Again discomfited, the concerted wit and resource of the <i>Enterprise</i> huddled around
+Calloway's puzzle, considering its mysterious words in vain.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Then Vesey came in.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Vesey was the youngest reporter. He had a thirty-two-inch chest and wore a
+number fourteen collar; but his bright Scotch plaid suit gave him presence and
+conferred no obscurity upon his whereabouts. He wore his hat in such a position
+that people followed him about to see him take it off, convinced that it must be
+hung upon a peg driven into the back of his head. He was never without an
+immense, knotted, hard-wood cane with a German-silver tip on its crooked handle.
+Vesey was the best photograph hustler in the office. Scott said it was because no
+living human being could resist the personal triumph it was to hand his picture over
+to Vesey. Vesey always wrote his own news stories, except the big ones, which
+were sent to the rewrite men. Add to this fact that among all the inhabitants,
+temples, and groves of the earth nothing existed that could abash Vesey, and his
+dim sketch is concluded.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Vesey butted into the circle of cipher readers very much as Heffelbauer's "code"
+would have done, and asked what was up. Some one explained, with the touch of
+half-familiar condescension that they always used toward him. Vesey reached out
+and took the cablegram from the m. e.'s hand. Under the protection of some special
+Providence, he was always doing appalling things like that, and coming, off
+unscathed.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's a code," said Vesey. "Anybody got the key?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The office has no code," said Boyd, reaching for the message. Vesey held to it.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Then old Calloway expects us to read it, anyhow," said he. "He's up a tree, or
+something, and he's made this up so as to get it by the censor. It's up to us. Gee! I
+wish they had sent me, too. Say&mdash;we can't afford to fall down on our end of it.
+'Foregone, preconcerted rash, witching'&mdash;h'm."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Vesey sat down on a table corner and began to whistle softly, frowning at the
+cablegram.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Let's have it, please," said the m. e. "We've got to get to work on it."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I believe I've got a line on it," said Vesey. "Give me ten minutes."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He walked to his desk, threw his hat into a waste-basket, spread out flat on his chest
+like a gorgeous lizard, and started his pencil going. The wit and wisdom of the
+<i>Enterprise</i> remained in a loose group, and smiled at one another, nodding their
+heads toward Vesey. Then they began to exchange their theories about the cipher. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It took Vesey exactly fifteen minutes. He brought to the m. e. a pad with the
+code-key written on it.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I felt the swing of it as soon as I saw it," said Vesey. "Hurrah for old Calloway!
+He's done the Japs and every paper in town that prints literature instead of news.
+Take a look at that."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Thus had Vesey set forth the reading of the code:</span></p>
+<br>
+<blockquote><span style="font-size: 12pt">
+Foregone&mdash;conclusion<br>
+Preconcerted&mdash;arrangement<br>
+Rash&mdash;act<br>
+Witching&mdash;hour of midnight<br>
+Goes&mdash;without saying<br>
+Muffled&mdash;report<br>
+Rumour&mdash;hath it<br>
+Mine&mdash;host<br>
+Dark&mdash;horse<br>
+Silent&mdash;majority<br>
+Unfortunate&mdash;pedestrians*<br>
+Richmond&mdash;in the field<br>
+Existing&mdash;conditions<br>
+Great&mdash;White Way<br>
+Hotly&mdash;contested<br>
+Brute&mdash;force<br>
+Select&mdash;few<br>
+Mooted&mdash;question<br>
+Parlous&mdash;times<br>
+Beggars&mdash;description<br>
+Ye&mdash;correspondent<br>
+Angel&mdash;unawares<br>
+Incontrovertible&mdash;fact<br>
+<br>
+*Mr. Vesey afterward explained that the logical journalistic complement of the word
+"unfortunate" was once the word "victim." But, since the automobile became so popular,
+the correct following word is now "pedestrians". Of course, in Calloway's code it meant
+infantry.
+</span>
+</blockquote>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's simply newspaper English," explained Vesey. "I've been reporting on the
+<i>Enterprise</i> long enough to know it by heart. Old Calloway gives us the cue word,
+and we use the word that naturally follows it just as we use 'em in the paper. Read
+it over, and you'll see how pat they drop into their places. Now, here's the message
+he intended us to get."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Vesey handed out another sheet of paper.</span></p>
+
+<br>
+<blockquote><span style="font-size: 12pt">
+Concluded arrangement to act at hour of midnight without saying. Report hath it that a
+large body of cavalry and an overwhelming force of infantry will be thrown into the field.
+Conditions white. Way contested by only a small force. Question the <i>Times</i> description.
+Its correspondent is unaware of the facts.
+</span>
+</blockquote>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Great stuff!" cried Boyd excitedly. "Kuroki crosses the Yalu to-night and attacks.
+Oh, we won't do a thing to the sheets that make up with Addison's essays, real
+estate transfers, and bowling scores!" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mr. Vesey," said the m. e., with his jollying-which-you-should-regard-as-a-favour
+manner, "you have cast a serious reflection upon the literary standards of the paper
+that employs you. You have also assisted materially in giving us the biggest 'beat' of
+the year. I will let you know in a day or two whether you are to be discharged or
+retained at a larger salary. Somebody send Ames to me."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Ames was the king-pin, the snowy-petalled Marguerite, the star-bright looloo of the
+rewrite men. He saw attempted murder in the pains of green-apple colic, cyclones
+in the summer zephyr, lost children in every top-spinning urchin, an uprising of the
+down-trodden masses in every hurling of a derelict potato at a passing automobile.
+When not rewriting, Ames sat on the porch of his Brooklyn villa playing checkers
+with his ten-year-old son.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Ames and the "war editor" shut themselves in a room. There was a map in there
+stuck full of little pins that represented armies and divisions. Their fingers had been
+itching for days to move those pins along the crooked line of the Yalu. They did so
+now; and in words of fire Ames translated Calloway's brief message into a front
+page masterpiece that set the world talking. He told of the secret councils of the
+Japanese officers; gave Kuroki's flaming speeches in full; counted the cavalry and
+infantry to a man and a horse; described the quick and silent building, of the bridge
+at Suikauchen, across which the Mikado's legions were hurled upon the surprised
+Zassulitch, whose troops were widely scattered along the river. And the
+battle!&mdash;well, you know what Ames can do with a battle if you give him just one
+smell of smoke for a foundation. And in the same story, with seemingly
+supernatural knowledge, he gleefully scored the most profound and ponderous
+paper in England for the false and misleading account of the intended movements
+of the Japanese First Army printed in its issue of <i>the same date</i>.</span></p>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">&nbsp;</span></p>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Only one error was made; and that was the fault of the cable operator at Wi-ju.
+Calloway pointed it out after he came back. The word "great" in his code should
+have been "gage," and its complemental words "of battle." But it went to Ames
+"conditions white," and of course he took that to mean snow. His description of the
+Japanese army struggling through the snowstorm, blinded by the whirling flakes,
+was thrillingly vivid. The artists turned out some effective illustrations that made a
+hit as pictures of the artillery dragging their guns through the drifts. But, as the
+attack was made on the first day of May, "conditions white" excited some
+amusement. But it in made no difference to the <i>Enterprise</i>, anyway.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It was wonderful. And Calloway was wonderful in having made the new censor
+believe that his jargon of words meant no more than a complaint of the dearth of
+news and a petition for more expense money. And Vesey was wonderful. And
+most wonderful of all are words, and how they make friends one with another,
+being oft associated, until not even obituary notices them do part.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">On the second day following, the city editor halted at Vesey's desk where the
+reporter was writing the story of a man who had broken his leg by falling into a
+coal-hole&mdash;Ames having failed to find a murder motive in it.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The old man says your salary is to be raised to twenty a week," said Scott.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"All right," said Vesey. "Every little helps. Say&mdash;Mr. Scott, which would you
+say&mdash;'We can state without fear of successful contradiction,' or, 'On the whole it can
+be safely asserted'?" </span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="5"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+V<br>
+<br>
+A MATTER OF MEAN ELEVATION<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One winter the Alcazar Opera Company of New Orleans made a speculative trip
+along the Mexican, Central American and South American coasts. The venture
+proved a most successful one. The music-loving, impressionable
+Spanish-Americans deluged the company with dollars and "vivas." The manager
+waxed plump and amiable. But for the prohibitive climate he would have put forth
+the distinctive flower of his prosperity&mdash;the overcoat of fur, braided, frogged and
+opulent. Almost was he persuaded to raise the salaries of his company. But with a
+mighty effort he conquered the impulse toward such an unprofitable effervescence
+of joy.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At Macuto, on the coast of Venezuela, the company scored its greatest success.
+Imagine Coney Island translated into Spanish and you will comprehend Macuto.
+The fashionable season is from November to March. Down from La Guayra and
+Caracas and Valencia and other interior towns flock the people for their holiday
+season. There are bathing and fiestas and bull fights and scandal. And then the
+people have a passion for music that the bands in the plaza and on the sea beach stir
+but do not satisfy. The coming of the Alcazar Opera Company aroused the utmost
+ardour and zeal among the pleasure seekers. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The illustrious Guzman Blanco, President and Dictator of Venezuela, sojourned in
+Macuto with his court for the season. That potent ruler&mdash;who himself paid a
+subsidy of 40,000 pesos each year to grand opera in Caracas&mdash;ordered one of the
+Government warehouses to be cleared for a temporary theatre. A stage was quickly
+constructed and rough wooden benches made for the audience. Private boxes were
+added for the use of the President and the notables of the army and Government. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The company remained in Macuto for two weeks. Each performance filled the
+house as closely as it could be packed. Then the music-mad people fought for room
+in the open doors and windows, and crowded about, hundreds deep, on the outside.
+Those audiences formed a brilliantly diversified patch of colour. The hue of their
+faces ranged from the clear olive of the pure-blood Spaniards down through the
+yellow and brown shades of the Mestizos to the coal-black Carib and the Jamaica
+Negro. Scattered among them were little groups of Indians with faces like stone
+idols, wrapped in gaudy fibre-woven blankets&mdash;Indians down from the mountain
+states of Zamora and Los Andes and Miranda to trade their gold dust in the coast
+towns.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The spell cast upon these denizens of the interior fastnesses was remarkable. They
+sat in petrified ecstasy, conspicuous among the excitable Macutians, who wildly
+strove with tongue and hand to give evidence of their delight. Only once did the
+sombre rapture of these aboriginals find expression. During the rendition of
+"Faust," Guzman Blanco, extravagantly pleased by the "Jewel Song," cast upon the
+stage a purse of gold pieces. Other distinguished citizens followed his lead to the
+extent of whatever loose coin they had convenient, while some of the fair and
+fashionable se&ntilde;oras were moved, in imitation, to fling a jewel or a ring or two at the
+feet of the Marguerite&mdash;who was, according to the bills, Mlle. Nina Giraud. Then,
+from different parts of the house rose sundry of the stolid hillmen and cast upon the
+stage little brown and dun bags that fell with soft "thumps" and did not rebound. It
+was, no doubt, pleasure at the tribute to her art that caused Mlle. Giraud's eyes to
+shine so brightly when she opened these little deerskin bags in her dressing room
+and found them to contain pure gold dust. If so, the pleasure was rightly hers, for
+her voice in song, pure, strong and thrilling with the feeling of the emotional artist,
+deserved the tribute that it earned.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But the triumph of the Alcazar Opera Company is not the theme&mdash;it but leans upon
+and colours it. There happened in Macuto a tragic thing, an unsolvable mystery,
+that sobered for a time the gaiety of the happy season.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One evening between the short twilight and the time when she should have whirled
+upon the stage in the red and black of the ardent Carmen, Mlle. Nina Giraud
+disappeared from the sight and ken of 6,000 pairs of eyes and as many minds in
+Macuto. There was the usual turmoil and hurrying to seek her. Messengers flew to
+the little French-kept hotel where she stayed; others of the company hastened here
+or there where she might be lingering in some tienda or unduly prolonging her bath
+upon the beach. All search was fruitless. Mademoiselle had vanished.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Half an hour passed and she did not appear. The dictator, unused to the caprices of
+prime donne, became impatient. He sent an aide from his box to say to the manager
+that if the curtain did not at once rise he would immediately hale the entire company
+to the calabosa, though it would desolate his heart, indeed, to be compelled to such
+an act. Birds in Macuto could be made to sing.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The manager abandoned hope for the time of Mlle. Giraud. A member of the
+chorus, who had dreamed hopelessly for years of the blessed opportunity, quickly
+Carmenized herself and the opera went on. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Afterward, when the lost cantatrice appeared not, the aid of the authorities was
+invoked. The President at once set the army, the police and all citizens to the
+search. Not one clue to Mlle. Giraud's disappearance was found. The Alcazar left to
+fill engagements farther down the coast.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">On the way back the steamer stopped at Macuto and the manager made anxious
+inquiry. Not a trace of the lady had been discovered. The Alcazar could do no
+more. The personal belongings of the missing lady were stored in the hotel against
+her possible later reappearance and the opera company continued upon its
+homeward voyage to New Orleans. </span></p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"><span style="font-size: 14pt">* * * * *</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">On the camino real along the beach the two saddle mules and the four pack mules
+of Don Se&ntilde;or Johnny Armstrong stood, patiently awaiting the crack of the whip of
+the <i>arriero</i>, Luis. That would be the signal for the start on another long journey
+into the mountains. The pack mules were loaded with a varied assortment of
+hardware and cutlery. These articles Don Johnny traded to the interior Indians for
+the gold dust that they washed from the Andean streams and stored in quills and
+bags against his coming. It was a profitable business, and Se&ntilde;or Armstrong
+expected soon to be able to purchase the coffee plantation that he coveted.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Armstrong stood on the narrow sidewalk, exchanging garbled Spanish with old
+Peralto, the rich native merchant who had just charged him four prices for half a
+gross of pot-metal hatchets, and abridged English with Rucker, the little German
+who was Consul for the United States.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Take with you, se&ntilde;or," said Peralto, "the blessings of the saints upon your
+journey."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Better try quinine," growled Rucker through his pipe. "Take two grains every
+night. And don't make your trip too long, Johnny, because we haf needs of you. It
+is ein villainous game dot Melville play of whist, and dere is no oder substitute. <i>Auf
+wiedersehen</i>, und keep your eyes dot mule's ears between when you on der edge of
+der brecipices ride."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The bells of Luis's mule jingled and the pack train filed after the warning note.
+Armstrong, waved a good-bye and took his place at the tail of the procession. Up
+the narrow street they turned, and passed the two-story wooden Hotel Ingles, where
+Ives and Dawson and Richards and the rest of the chaps were dawdling on the
+broad piazza, reading week-old newspapers. They crowded to the railing and
+shouted many friendly and wise and foolish farewells after him. Across the plaza
+they trotted slowly past the bronze statue of Guzman Blanco, within its fence of
+bayoneted rifles captured from revolutionists, and out of the town between the rows
+of thatched huts swarming with the unclothed youth of Macuto. They plunged into
+the damp coolness of banana groves at length to emerge upon a bright stream,
+where brown women in scant raiment laundered clothes destructively upon the
+rocks. Then the pack train, fording the stream, attacked the sudden ascent, and bade
+adieu to such civilization as the coast afforded. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">For weeks Armstrong, guided by Luis, followed his regular route among the
+mountains. After he had collected an arroba of the precious metal, winning a profit
+of nearly $5,000, the heads of the lightened mules were turned down-trail again.
+Where the head of the Guarico River springs from a great gash in the
+mountain-side, Luis halted the train.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Half a day's journey from here, Se&ntilde;or," said he, "is the village of Tacuzama, which
+we have never visited. I think many ounces of gold may be procured there. It is
+worth the trial."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Armstrong concurred, and they turned again upward toward Tacuzama. The trail
+was abrupt and precipitous, mounting through a dense forest. As night fell, dark
+and gloomy, Luis once more halted. Before them was a black chasm, bisecting the
+path as far as they could see.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Luis dismounted. "There should be a bridge," he called, and ran along the cleft a
+distance. "It is here," he cried, and remounting, led the way. In a few moments
+Armstrong, heard a sound as though a thunderous drum were beating somewhere in
+the dark. It was the falling of the mules' hoofs upon the bridge made of strong
+hides lashed to poles and stretched across the chasm. Half a mile further was
+Tacuzama. The village was a congregation of rock and mud huts set in the
+profundity of an obscure wood. As they rode in a sound inconsistent with that
+brooding solitude met their ears. From a long, low mud hut that they were nearing
+rose the glorious voice of a woman in song. The words were English, the air
+familiar to Armstrong's memory, but not to his musical knowledge.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He slipped from his mule and stole to a narrow window in one end of the house.
+Peering cautiously inside, he saw, within three feet of him, a woman of marvellous,
+imposing beauty, clothed in a splendid loose robe of leopard skins. The hut was
+packed close to the small space in which she stood with the squatting figures of
+Indians. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The woman finished her song and seated herself close to the little window, as if
+grateful for the unpolluted air that entered it. When she had ceased several of the
+audience rose and cast little softly-falling bags at her feet. A harsh murmur&mdash;no
+doubt a barbarous kind of applause and comment&mdash;went through the grim assembly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Armstrong, was used to seizing opportunities promptly. Taking advantage of the
+noise he called to the woman in a low but distinct voice: "Do not turn your head this
+way, but listen. I am an American. If you need assistance tell me how I can render
+it. Answer as briefly as you can."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The woman was worthy of his boldness. Only by a sudden flush of her pale cheek
+did she acknowledge understanding of his words. Then she spoke, scarcely moving
+her lips.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I am held a prisoner by these Indians. God knows I need help. In two hours come
+to the little hut twenty yards toward the Mountainside. There will be a light and a
+red curtain in the window. There is always a guard at the door, whom you will
+have to overcome. For the love of heaven, do not fail to come."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The story seems to shrink from adventure and rescue and mystery. The theme is
+one too gentle for those brave and quickening tones. And yet it reaches as far back
+as time itself. It has been named "environment," which is as weak a word as any to
+express the unnameable kinship of man to nature, that queer fraternity that causes
+stones and trees and salt water and clouds to play upon our emotions. Why are we
+made serious and solemn and sublime by mountain heights, grave and
+contemplative by an abundance of overhanging trees, reduced to inconstancy and
+monkey capers by the ripples on a sandy beach? Did the protoplasm&mdash;but enough.
+The chemists are looking into the matter, and before long they will have all life in
+the table of the symbols.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Briefly, then, in order to confine the story within scientific bounds, John
+Armstrong, went to the hut, choked the Indian guard and carried away Mlle.
+Giraud. With her was also conveyed a number of pounds of gold dust she had
+collected during her six months' forced engagement in Tacuzama. The Carabobo
+Indians are easily the most enthusiastic lovers of music between the equator and the
+French Opera House in New Orleans. They are also strong believers that the advice
+of Emerson was good when he said: "The thing thou wantest, O discontented man
+&mdash;take it, and pay the price." A number of them had attended the performance of
+the Alcazar Opera Company in Macuto, and found Mlle. Giraud's style and
+technique satisfactory. They wanted her, so they took her one evening suddenly and
+without any fuss. They treated her with much consideration, exacting only one song
+recital each day. She was quite pleased at being rescued by Mr. Armstrong. So
+much for mystery and adventure. Now to resume the theory of the protoplasm. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">John Armstrong and Mlle. Giraud rode among the Andean peaks, enveloped in their
+greatness and sublimity. The mightiest cousins, furthest removed, in nature's great
+family become conscious of the tie. Among those huge piles of primordial
+upheaval, amid those gigantic silences and elongated fields of distance the
+littlenesses of men are precipitated as one chemical throws down a sediment from
+another. They moved reverently, as in a temple. Their souls were uplifted in unison
+with the stately heights. They travelled in a zone of majesty and peace.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">To Armstrong the woman seemed almost a holy thing. Yet bathed in the white, still
+dignity of her martyrdom that purified her earthly beauty and gave out, it seemed,
+an aura of transcendent loveliness, in those first hours of companionship she drew
+from him an adoration that was half human love, half the worship of a descended
+goddess.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Never yet since her rescue had she smiled. Over her dress she still wore the robe of
+leopard skins, for the mountain air was cold. She looked to be some splendid
+princess belonging to those wild and awesome altitudes. The spirit of the region
+chimed with hers. Her eyes were always turned upon the sombre cliffs, the blue
+gorges and the snow-clad turrets, looking a sublime melancholy equal to their own.
+At times on the journey she sang thrilling te deums and misereres that struck the
+true note of the hills, and made their route seem like a solemn march down a
+cathedral aisle. The rescued one spoke but seldom, her mood partaking of the hush
+of nature that surrounded them. Armstrong looked upon her as an angel. He could
+not bring himself to the sacrilege of attempting to woo her as other women may be
+wooed. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">On the third day they had descended as far as the <i>tierra templada</i>, the zona of the
+table lands and foot hills. The mountains were receding in their rear, but still
+towered, exhibiting yet impressively their formidable heads. Here they met signs of
+man. They saw the white houses of coffee plantations gleam across the clearings.
+They struck into a road where they met travellers and pack-mules. Cattle were
+grazing on the slopes. They passed a little village where the round-eyed <i>ni&ntilde;os</i>
+shrieked and called at sight of them.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mlle. Giraud laid aside her leopard-skin robe. It seemed to be a trifle incongruous
+now. In the mountains it had appeared fitting and natural. And if Armstrong was
+not mistaken she laid aside with it something of the high dignity of her demeanour.
+As the country became more populous and significant of comfortable life he saw,
+with a feeling of joy, that the exalted princess and priestess of the Andean peaks
+was changing to a woman&mdash;an earth woman, but no less enticing. A little colour
+crept to the surface of her marble cheek. She arranged the conventional dress that
+the removal of the robe now disclosed with the solicitous touch of one who is
+conscious of the eyes of others. She smoothed the careless sweep of her hair. A
+mundane interest, long latent in the chilling atmosphere of the ascetic peaks,
+showed in her eyes.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">This thaw in his divinity sent Armstrong's heart going faster. So might an Arctic
+explorer thrill at his first ken of green fields and liquescent waters. They were on a
+lower plane of earth and life and were succumbing to its peculiar, subtle influence.
+The austerity of the hills no longer thinned the air they breathed. About them was
+the breath of fruit and corn and builded homes, the comfortable smell of smoke and
+warm earth and the consolations man has placed between himself and the dust of
+his brother earth from which he sprung. While traversing those awful mountains,
+Mile. Giraud had seemed to be wrapped in their spirit of reverent reserve. Was this
+that same woman&mdash;now palpitating, warm, eager, throbbing with conscious life and
+charm, feminine to her finger-tips? Pondering over this, Armstrong felt certain
+misgivings intrude upon his thoughts. He wished he could stop there with this
+changing creature, descending no farther. Here was the elevation and environment
+to which her nature seemed to respond with its best. He feared to go down upon the
+man-dominated levels. Would her spirit not yield still further in that artificial zone
+to which they were descending?</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Now from a little plateau they saw the sea flash at the edge of the green lowlands.
+Mile. Giraud gave a little, catching sigh. </span></p>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh! look, Mr. Armstrong, there is the sea! Isn't it lovely? I'm so tired of
+mountains." She heaved a pretty shoulder in a gesture of repugnance. "Those
+horrid Indians! Just think of what I suffered! Although I suppose I attained my
+ambition of becoming a stellar attraction, I wouldn't care to repeat the engagement.
+It was very nice of you to bring me away. Tell me, Mr. Armstrong&mdash;honestly, now
+&mdash;do I look such an awful, awful fright? I haven't looked into a mirror, you know,
+for months."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Armstrong made answer according to his changed moods. Also he laid his hand
+upon hers as it rested upon the horn of her saddle. Luis was at the head of the pack
+train and could not see. She allowed it to remain there, and her eyes smiled frankly
+into his.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Then at sundown they dropped upon the coast level under the palms and lemons
+among the vivid greens and scarlets and ochres of the <i>tierra caliente</i>. They rode
+into Macuto, and saw the line of volatile bathers frolicking in the surf. The
+mountains were very far away. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mlle. Giraud's eyes were shining with a joy that could not have existed under the
+chaperonage of the mountain-tops. There were other spirits calling to her&mdash;nymphs
+of the orange groves, pixies from the chattering surf, imps, born of the music, the
+perfumes, colours and the insinuating presence of humanity. She laughed aloud,
+musically, at a sudden thought.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Won't there be a sensation?" she called to Armstrong. "Don't I wish I had an
+engagement just now, though! What a picnic the press agent would have! 'Held a
+prisoner by a band of savage Indians subdued by the spell of her wonderful
+voice'&mdash;wouldn't that make great stuff? But I guess I quit the game winner,
+anyhow&mdash;there ought to be a couple of thousand dollars in that sack of gold dust I
+collected as encores, don't you think?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He left her at the door of the little Hotel de Buen Descansar, where she had stopped
+before. Two hours later he returned to the hotel. He glanced in at the open door of
+the little combined reception room and cafe.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Half a dozen of Macuto's representative social and official <i>caballeros</i> were
+distributed about the room. Se&ntilde;or Villablanca, the wealthy rubber concessionist,
+reposed his fat figure on two chairs, with an emollient smile beaming upon his
+chocolate-coloured face. Guilbert, the French mining engineer, leered through his
+polished nose-glasses. Colonel Mendez, of the regular army, in gold-laced uniform
+and fatuous grin, was busily extracting corks from champagne bottles. Other
+patterns of Macutian gallantry and fashion pranced and posed. The air was hazy
+with cigarette smoke. Wine dripped upon the floor. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Perched upon a table in the centre of the room in an attitude of easy pre&euml;minence
+was Mlle. Giraud. A chic costume of white lawn and cherry ribbons supplanted her
+travelling garb. There was a suggestion of lace, and a frill or two, with a discreet,
+small implication of hand-embroidered pink hosiery. Upon her lap rested a guitar.
+In her face was the light of resurrection, the peace of elysium attained through fire
+and suffering. She was singing to a lively accompaniment a little song:</span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<blockquote>
+<span style="font-size: 14pt">
+"<i>When you see de big round moon</i><br>
+<i>&nbsp;&nbsp;Comin' up like a balloon,</i><br>
+<i>&nbsp;&nbsp;Dis nigger skips fur to kiss de lips</i><br>
+<i>&nbsp;&nbsp;Ob his stylish, black-faced coon.</i>"<br>
+</span>
+</blockquote>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The singer caught sight of Armstrong.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Hi! there, Johnny," she called; "I've been expecting you for an hour. What kept
+you? Gee! but these smoked guys are the slowest you ever saw. They ain't on, at
+all. Come along in, and I'll make this coffee-coloured old sport with the gold
+epaulettes open one for you right off the ice."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Thank you," said Armstrong; "not just now, I believe. I've several things to attend
+to."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He walked out and down the street, and met Rucker coming up from the Consulate.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Play you a game of billiards," said Armstrong. "I want something to take the taste
+of the sea level out of my mouth."</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="6"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+VI<br>
+<br>
+"GIRL"<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In gilt letters on the ground glass of the door of room No. 962 were the words:
+"Robbins &amp; Hartley, Brokers." The clerks had gone. It was past five, and with the
+solid tramp of a drove of prize Percherons, scrub-women were invading the
+cloud-capped twenty-story office building. A puff of red-hot air flavoured with
+lemon peelings, soft-coal smoke and train oil came in through the half-open
+windows. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Robbins, fifty, something of an overweight beau, and addicted to first nights and
+hotel palm-rooms, pretended to be envious of his partner's commuter's joys.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Going to be something doing in the humidity line to-night," he said. "You
+out-of-town chaps will be the people, with your katydids and moonlight and long
+drinks and things out on the front porch." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Hartley, twenty-nine, serious, thin, good-looking, nervous, sighed and frowned a
+little.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Yes," said he, "we always have cool nights in Floralhurst, especially in the winter."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A man with an air of mystery came in the door and went up to Hartley. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I've found where she lives," he announced in the portentous half-whisper that
+makes the detective at work a marked being to his fellow men.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Hartley scowled him into a state of dramatic silence and quietude. But by that time
+Robbins had got his cane and set his tie pin to his liking, and with a debonair nod
+went out to his metropolitan amusements.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Here is the address," said the detective in a natural tone, being deprived of an
+audience to foil.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Hartley took the leaf torn out of the sleuth's dingy memorandum book. On it were
+pencilled the words "Vivienne Arlington, No. 341 East &ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;th Street, care of Mrs.
+McComus."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Moved there a week ago," said the detective. "Now, if you want any shadowing
+done, Mr. Hartley, I can do you as fine a job in that line as anybody in the city. It
+will be only $7 a day and expenses. Can send in a daily typewritten report,
+covering&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You needn't go on," interrupted the broker. "It isn't a case of that kind. I merely
+wanted the address. How much shall I pay you?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"One day's work," said the sleuth. "A tenner will cover it." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Hartley paid the man and dismissed him. Then he left the office and boarded a
+Broadway car. At the first large crosstown artery of travel he took an eastbound car
+that deposited him in a decaying avenue, whose ancient structures once sheltered
+the pride and glory of the town.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Walking a few squares, he came to the building that he sought. It was a new
+flathouse, bearing carved upon its cheap stone portal its sonorous name, "The
+Vallambrosa." Fire-escapes zigzagged down its front&mdash;these laden with household
+goods, drying clothes, and squalling children evicted by the midsummer heat. Here
+and there a pale rubber plant peeped from the miscellaneous mass, as if wondering
+to what kingdom it belonged&mdash;vegetable, animal or artificial. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Hartley pressed the "McComus" button. The door latch clicked
+spasmodically&mdash;now hospitably, now doubtfully, as though in anxiety whether it
+might be admitting friends or duns. Hartley entered and began to climb the stairs
+after the manner of those who seek their friends in city flat-houses&mdash;which is the
+manner of a boy who climbs an apple-tree, stopping when he comes upon what he
+wants. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">On the fourth floor he saw Vivienne standing in an open door. She invited him
+inside, with a nod and a bright, genuine smile. She placed a chair for him near a
+window, and poised herself gracefully upon the edge of one of those
+Jekyll-and-Hyde pieces of furniture that are masked and mysteriously hooded,
+unguessable bulks by day and inquisitorial racks of torture by night.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Hartley cast a quick, critical, appreciative glance at her before speaking, and told
+himself that his taste in choosing had been flawless.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Vivienne was about twenty-one. She was of the purest Saxon type. Her hair was a
+ruddy golden, each filament of the neatly gathered mass shining with its own lustre
+and delicate graduation of colour. In perfect harmony were her ivory-clear
+complexion and deep sea-blue eyes that looked upon the world with the ingenuous
+calmness of a mermaid or the pixie of an undiscovered mountain stream. Her
+frame was strong and yet possessed the grace of absolute naturalness. And yet with
+all her Northern clearness and frankness of line and colouring, there seemed to be
+something of the tropics in her&mdash;something of languor in the droop of her pose, of
+love of ease in her ingenious complacency of satisfaction and comfort in the mere
+act of breathing&mdash;something that seemed to claim for her a right as a perfect work of
+nature to exist and be admired equally with a rare flower or some beautiful,
+milk-white dove among its sober-hued companions.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She was dressed in a white waist and dark skirt&mdash;that discreet masquerade of
+goose-girl and duchess.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Vivienne," said Hartley, looking at her pleadingly, "you did not answer my last
+letter. It was only by nearly a week's search that I found where you had moved to.
+Why have you kept me in suspense when you knew how anxiously I was waiting to
+see you and hear from you?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The girl looked out the window dreamily.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mr. Hartley," she said hesitatingly, "I hardly know what to say to you. I realize all
+the advantages of your offer, and sometimes I feel sure that I could be contented
+with you. But, again, I am doubtful. I was born a city girl, and I am afraid to bind
+myself to a quiet suburban life."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"My dear girl," said Hartley, ardently, "have I not told you that you shall have
+everything that your heart can desire that is in my power to give you? You shall
+come to the city for the theatres, for shopping and to visit your friends as often as
+you care to. You can trust me, can you not?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"To the fullest," she said, turning her frank eyes upon him with a smile. "I know
+you are the kindest of men, and that the girl you get will be a lucky one. I learned
+all about you when I was at the Montgomerys'."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ah!" exclaimed Hartley, with a tender, reminiscent light in his eye; "I remember
+well the evening I first saw you at the Montgomerys'. Mrs. Montgomery was
+sounding your praises to me all the evening. And she hardly did you justice. I shall
+never forget that supper. Come, Vivienne, promise me. I want you. You'll never
+regret coming with me. No one else will ever give you as pleasant a home." </span></p>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The girl sighed and looked down at her folded hands.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A sudden jealous suspicion seized Hartley.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Tell me, Vivienne," he asked, regarding her keenly, "is there another&mdash;is there some
+one else ?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A rosy flush crept slowly over her fair cheeks and neck.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You shouldn't ask that, Mr. Hartley," she said, in some confusion. "But I will tell
+you. There is one other&mdash;but he has no right&mdash;I have promised him nothing."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"His name?" demanded Hartley, sternly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Townsend."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Rafford Townsend!" exclaimed Hartley, with a grim tightening of his jaw. "How
+did that man come to know you? After all I've done for him&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"His auto has just stopped below," said Vivienne, bending over the window-sill.
+"He's coming for his answer. Oh I don't know what to do!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The bell in the flat kitchen whirred. Vivienne hurried to press the latch button.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Stay here," said Hartley. "I will meet him in the hall." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Townsend, looking like a Spanish grandee in his light tweeds, Panama hat and
+curling black mustache, came up the stairs three at a time. He stopped at sight of
+Hartley and looked foolish.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Go back," said Hartley, firmly, pointing downstairs with his forefinger.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Hullo!" said Townsend, feigning surprise. "What's up? What are you doing here,
+old man?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Go back," repeated Hartley, inflexibly. "The Law of the Jungle. Do you want the
+Pack to tear you in pieces? The kill is mine." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I came here to see a plumber about the bathroom connections," said Townsend,
+bravely.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"All right," said Hartley. "You shall have that lying plaster to stick upon your
+traitorous soul. But, go back." Townsend went downstairs, leaving a bitter word to
+be wafted up the draught of the staircase. Hartley went back to his wooing.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Vivienne," said he, masterfully. "I have got to have you. I will take no more
+refusals or dilly-dallying."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"When do you want me?" she asked.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Now. As soon as you can get ready."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She stood calmly before him and looked him in the eye.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Do you think for one moment," she said, "that I would enter your home while
+H&eacute;loise is there?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Hartley cringed as if from an unexpected blow. He folded his arms and paced the
+carpet once or twice.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"She shall go," he declared grimly. Drops stood upon his brow. "Why should I let
+that woman make my life miserable? Never have I seen one day of freedom from
+trouble since I have known her. You are right, Vivienne. H&eacute;loise must be sent
+away before I can take you home. But she shall go. I have decided. I will turn her
+from my doors." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"When will you do this?" asked the girl.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Hartley clinched his teeth and bent his brows together.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"To-night," he said, resolutely. "I will send her away to-night." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Then," said Vivienne, "my answer is 'yes.' Come for me when you will."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She looked into his eyes with a sweet, sincere light in her own. Hartley could
+scarcely believe that her surrender was true, it was so swift and complete.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Promise me," he said feelingly, "on your word and honour." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"On my word and honour," repeated Vivienne, softly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At the door he turned and gazed at her happily, but yet as one who scarcely trusts
+the foundations of his joy.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"To-morrow," he said, with a forefinger of reminder uplifted. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"To-morrow," she repeated with a smile of truth and candour. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In an hour and forty minutes Hartley stepped off the train at Floralhurst. A brisk
+walk of ten minutes brought him to the gate of a handsome two-story cottage set
+upon a wide and well-tended lawn. Halfway to the house he was met by a woman
+with jet-black braided hair and flowing white summer gown, who half strangled
+him without apparent cause.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When they stepped into the hall she said:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mamma's here. The auto is coming for her in half an hour. She came to dinner,
+but there's no dinner."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I've something to tell you," said Hartley. "I thought to break it to you gently, but
+since your mother is here we may as well out with it." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He stooped and whispered something at her ear.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">His wife screamed. Her mother came running into the hall. The dark-haired
+woman screamed again&mdash;the joyful scream of a well-beloved and petted woman.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, mamma!" she cried ecstatically, "what do you think? Vivienne is coming to
+cook for us! She is the one that stayed with the Montgomerys a whole year. And
+now, Billy, dear," she concluded, "you must go right down into the kitchen and
+discharge H&eacute;loise. She has been drunk again the whole day long."</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="7"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+VII<br>
+<br>
+SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The season of irresponsibility is at hand. Come, let us twine round our brows
+wreaths of poison ivy (that is for idiocy), and wander hand in hand with sociology
+in the summer fields.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Likely as not the world is flat. The wise men have tried to prove that it is round,
+with indifferent success. They pointed out to us a ship going to sea, and bade us
+observe that, at length, the convexity of the earth hid from our view all but the
+vessel's topmast. But we picked up a telescope and looked, and saw the decks and
+hull again. Then the wise men said: "Oh, pshaw! anyhow, the variation of the
+intersection of the equator and the ecliptic proves it." We could not see this through
+our telescope, so we remained silent. But it stands to reason that, if the world were
+round, the queues of Chinamen would stand straight up from their heads instead of
+hanging down their backs, as travellers assure us they do.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Another hot-weather corroboration of the flat theory is the fact that all of life, as we
+know it, moves in little, unavailing circles. More justly than to anything else, it can
+be likened to the game of baseball. Crack! we hit the ball, and away we go. If we
+earn a run (in life we call it success) we get back to the home plate and sit upon a
+bench. If we are thrown out, we walk back to the home plate&mdash;and sit upon a
+bench.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The circumnavigators of the alleged globe may have sailed the rim of a watery
+circle back to the same port again. The truly great return at the high tide of their
+attainments to the simplicity of a child. The billionaire sits down at his mahogany
+to his bowl of bread and milk. When you reach the end of your career, just take
+down the sign "Goal" and look at the other side of it. You will find "Beginning
+Point" there. It has been reversed while you were going around the track. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But this is humour, and must be stopped. Let us get back to the serious questions
+that arise whenever Sociology turns summer boarder. You are invited to consider
+the scene of the story&mdash;wild, Atlantic waves, thundering against a wooded and
+rock-bound shore&mdash;in the Greater City of New York.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The town of Fishampton, on the south shore of Long Island, is noted for its clam
+fritters and the summer residence of the Van Plushvelts. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Van Plushvelts have a hundred million dollars, and their name is a household
+word with tradesmen and photographers.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">On the fifteenth of June the Van Plushvelts boarded up the front door of their city
+house, carefully deposited their cat on the sidewalk, instructed the caretaker not to
+allow it to eat any of the ivy on the walls, and whizzed away in a 40-horse-power to
+Fishampton to stray alone in the shade&mdash;Amaryllis not being in their class. If you
+are a subscriber to the <i>Toadies' Magazine</i>, you have often&mdash;You say you are not?
+Well, you buy it at a news-stand, thinking that the newsdealer is not wise to you.
+But he knows about it all. HE knows&mdash;HE knows! I say that you have often seen in
+the <i>Toadies' Magazine</i> pictures of the Van Plushvelts' summer home; so it will not
+be described here. Our business is with young Haywood Van Plushvelt, sixteen
+years old, heir to the century of millions, darling of the financial gods and great
+grandson of Peter Van Plushvelt, former owner of a particularly fine cabbage patch
+that has been ruined by an intrusive lot of downtown skyscrapers.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One afternoon young Haywood Van Plushvelt strolled out between the granite gate
+posts of "Dolce far Niente"&mdash;that's what they called the place; and it was an
+improvement on dolce Far Rockaway, I can tell you.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Haywood walked down into the village. He was human, after all, and his
+prospective millions weighed upon him. Wealth had wreaked upon him its
+direfullest. He was the product of private tutors. Even under his first hobby-horse
+had tan bark been strewn. He had been born with a gold spoon, lobster fork and
+fish-set in his mouth. For which I hope, later, to submit justification, I must ask
+your consideration of his haberdashery and tailoring.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Young Fortunatus was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a neat, white straw
+hat, neat low-cut tan shoes, of the well-known "immaculate" trade mark, a neat,
+narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried a slender, neat, bamboo cane.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Down Persimmon Street (there's never tree north of Hagerstown, Md.) came from
+the village "Smoky" Dodson, fifteen and a half, worst boy in Fishampton. "Smoky"
+was dressed in a ragged red sweater, wrecked and weather-worn golf cap, run-over
+shoes, and trousers of the "serviceable" brand. Dust, clinging to the moisture
+induced by free exercise, darkened wide areas of his face. "Smoky" carried a
+baseball bat, and a league ball that advertised itself in the rotundity of his trousers
+pocket. Haywood stopped and passed the time of day. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Going to play ball?" he asked.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Smoky's" eyes and countenance confronted him with a frank blue-and-freckled
+scrutiny.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Me?" he said, with deadly mildness; "sure not. Can't you see I've got a divin' suit
+on? I'm goin' up in a submarine balloon to catch butterflies with a two-inch auger.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Excuse me," said Haywood, with the insulting politeness of his caste, "for
+mistaking you for a gentleman. I might have known better."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"How might you have known better if you thought I was one?" said "Smoky,"
+unconsciously a logician.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"By your appearance," said Haywood. "No gentleman is dirty, ragged and a liar."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Smoky" hooted once like a ferry-boat, spat on his hand, got a firm grip on his
+baseball bat and then dropped it against the fence. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Say," said he, "I knows you. You're the pup that belongs in that swell private
+summer sanitarium for city-guys over there. I seen you come out of the gate. You
+can't bluff nobody because you're rich. And because you got on swell clothes.
+Arabella! Yah!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ragamuffin!" said Haywood.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Smoky" picked up a fence-rail splinter and laid it on his shoulder. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Dare you to knock it off," he challenged.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I wouldn't soil my hands with you," said the aristocrat.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"'Fraid," said "Smoky" concisely. "Youse city-ducks ain't got the I sand. I kin lick
+you with one-hand."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I don't wish to have any trouble with you," said Haywood. "I asked you a civil
+question; and you replied, like a&mdash;like a&mdash;a cad." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Wot's a cad?" asked "Smoky."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"A cad is a disagreeable person," answered Haywood, "who lacks manners and
+doesn't know his place. They sometimes play baseball." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I can tell you what a mollycoddle is," said "Smoky." "It's a monkey dressed up by
+its mother and sent out to pick daisies on the lawn." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"When you have the honour to refer to the members of my family," said Haywood,
+with some dim ideas of a code in his mind, "you'd better leave the ladies out of your
+remarks."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ho! ladies!" mocked the rude one. "I say ladies! I know what them rich women
+in the city does. They, drink cocktails and swear and give parties to gorillas. The
+papers say so."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Then Haywood knew that it must be. He took off his coat, folded it neatly and laid
+it on the roadside grass, placed his hat upon it and began to unknot his blue silk tie.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Hadn't yer better ring fer yer maid, Arabella?" taunted "Smoky." "Wot yer going to
+do&mdash;go to bed?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm going to give you a good trouncing," said the hero. He did not hesitate,
+although the enemy was far beneath him socially. He remembered that his father
+once thrashed a cabman, and the papers gave it two columns, first page. And the
+<i>Toadies' Magazine</i> had a special article on Upper Cuts by the Upper Classes, and
+ran new pictures of the Van Plushvelt country seat, at Fishampton.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Wot's trouncing?" asked "Smoky," suspiciously. "I don't want your old clothes.
+I'm no&mdash;oh, you mean to scrap! My, my! I won't do a thing to mamma's pet.
+Criminy! I'd hate to be a hand-laundered thing like you.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Smoky" waited with some awkwardness for his adversary to prepare for battle.
+His own decks were always clear for action. When he should spit upon the palm of
+his terrible right it was equivalent to "You may fire now, Gridley."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The hated patrician advanced, with his shirt sleeves neatly rolled up. "Smoky"
+waited, in an attitude of ease, expecting the affair to be conducted according to
+Fishampton's rules of war. These allowed combat to be prefaced by stigma,
+recrimination, epithet, abuse and insult gradually increasing in emphasis and
+degree. After a round of these "you're anothers" would come the chip knocked from
+the shoulder, or the advance across the "dare" line drawn with a toe on the ground.
+Next light taps given and taken, these also increasing in force until finally the blood
+was up and fists going at their best.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But Haywood did not know Fishampton's rules. Noblesse oblige kept a faint smile
+on his face as he walked slowly up to "Smoky" and said: </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Going to play ball?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Smoky" quickly understood this to be a putting of the previous question, giving
+him the chance to make practical apology by answering it with civility and
+relevance.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Listen this time," said he. "I'm goin' skatin' on the river. Don't you see me
+automobile with Chinese lanterns on it standin' and waitin' for me?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Haywood knocked him down.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Smoky" felt wronged. To thus deprive him of preliminary wrangle and
+objurgation was to send an armoured knight full tilt against a crashing lance without
+permitting him first to caracole around the list to the flourish of trumpets. But he
+scrambled up and fell upon his foe, head, feet and fists.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The fight lasted one round of an hour and ten minutes. It was lengthened until it
+was more like a war or a family feud than a fight. Haywood had learned some of
+the science of boxing and wrestling from his tutors, but these he discarded for the
+more instinctive methods of battle handed down by the cave-dwelling Van
+Plushvelts.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">So, when he found himself, during the m&ecirc;l&eacute;e, seated upon the kicking and roaring
+"Smoky's" chest, he improved the opportunity by vigorously kneading handfuls of
+sand and soil into his adversary's ears, eyes and mouth, and when "Smoky" got the
+proper leg hold and "turned" him, he fastened both hands in the Plushvelt hair and
+pounded the Plushvelt head against the lap of mother earth. Of course, the strife
+was not incessantly active. There were seasons when one sat upon the other,
+holding him down, while each blew like a grampus, spat out the more
+inconveniently large sections of gravel and earth, and strove to subdue the spirit of
+his opponent with a frightful and soul-paralyzing glare. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At last, it seemed that in the language of the ring, their efforts lacked steam. They
+broke away, and each disappeared in a cloud as he brushed away the dust of the
+conflict. As soon as his breath permitted, Haywood walked close to "Smoky" and
+said:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Going to play ball?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Smoky" looked pensively at the sky, at his bat lying on the ground, and at the
+"leaguer" rounding his pocket.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Sure," he said, offhandedly. "The 'Yellowjackets' plays the 'Long Islands.' I'm
+cap'n of the 'Long Islands.'"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I guess I didn't mean to say you were ragged," said Haywood. "But you are dirty,
+you know."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Sure," said "Smoky." "Yer get that way knockin' around. Say, I don't believe
+them New York papers about ladies drinkin' and havin' monkeys dinin' at the table
+with 'em. I guess they're lies, like they print about people eatin' out of silver plates,
+and ownin' dogs that cost $100."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Certainly," said Haywood. "What do you play on your team?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ketcher. Ever play any?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Never in my life," said Haywood. "I've never known any fellows except one or
+two of my cousins."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Jer like to learn? We're goin' to have a practice-game before the match. Wanter
+come along? I'll put yer in left-field, and yer won't be long ketchin' on."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'd like it bully," said Haywood. "I've always wanted to play baseball."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The ladies' maids of New York and the families of Western mine owners with
+social ambitions will remember well the sensation that was created by the report
+that the young multi-millionaire, Haywood Van Plushvelt, was playing ball with the
+village youths of Fishampton. It was conceded that the millennium of democracy
+had come. Reporters and photographers swarmed to the island. The papers printed
+half-page pictures of him as short-stop stopping a hot grounder. The <i>Toadies'
+Magazine</i> got out a Bat and Ball number that covered the subject historically,
+beginning with the vampire bat and ending with the Patriarchs' ball&mdash;illustrated with
+interior views of the Van Plushvelt country seat. Ministers, educators and
+sociologists everywhere hailed the event as the tocsin call that proclaimed the
+universal brotherhood of man.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One afternoon I was reclining under the trees near the shore at Fishampton in the
+esteemed company of an eminent, bald-headed young sociologist. By way of note it
+may be inserted that all sociologists are more or less bald, and exactly thirty-two.
+Look 'em over. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The sociologist was citing the Van Plushvelt case as the most important "uplift"
+symptom of a generation, and as an excuse for his own existence.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Immediately before us were the village baseball grounds. And now came the
+sportive youth of Fishampton and distributed themselves, shouting, about the
+diamond.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"There," said the sociologist, pointing, "there is young Van Plushvelt."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I raised myself (so far a cosycophant with Mary Ann) and gazed. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Young Van Plushvelt sat upon the ground. He was dressed in a ragged red sweater,
+wrecked and weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and trousers of the
+"serviceable" brand. Dust clinging to the moisture induced by free exercise,
+darkened wide areas of his face. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"That is he," repeated the sociologist. If he had said "him" I could have been less
+vindictive.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">On a bench, with an air, sat the young millionaire's chum. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a neat white straw hat, neat
+low-cut tan shoes, linen of the well-known "immaculate" trade mark, a neat, narrow
+four-in-hand tie, and carried a slender, neat bamboo cane.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I laughed loudly and vulgarly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What you want to do," said I to the sociologist, "is to establish a reformatory for
+the Logical Vicious Circle. Or else I've got wheels. It looks to me as if things are
+running round and round in circles instead of getting anywhere."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What do you mean?" asked the man of progress.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Why, look what he has done to 'Smoky'," I replied.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You will always be a fool," said my friend, the sociologist, getting up and walking
+away.</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="8"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+VIII<br>
+<br>
+THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It looked like a good thing: but wait till I tell you. We were down South, in
+Alabama&mdash;Bill Driscoll and myself&mdash;when this kidnapping idea struck us. It was, as
+Bill afterward expressed it, "during a moment of temporary mental apparition"; but
+we didn't find that out till later.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">There was a town down there, as flat as a flannel-cake, and called Summit, of
+course. It contained inhabitants of as undeleterious and self-satisfied a class of
+peasantry as ever clustered around a Maypole.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Bill and me had a joint capital of about six hundred dollars, and we needed just two
+thousand dollars more to pull off a fraudulent town-lot scheme in Western Illinois
+with. We talked it over on the front steps of the hotel. Philoprogenitiveness, says
+we, is strong in semi-rural communities; therefore and for other reasons, a
+kidnapping project ought to do better there than in the radius of newspapers that
+send reporters out in plain clothes to stir up talk about such things. We knew that
+Summit couldn't get after us with anything stronger than constables and maybe
+some lackadaisical bloodhounds and a diatribe or two in the <i>Weekly Farmers'
+Budget</i>. So, it looked good. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">We selected for our victim the only child of a prominent citizen named Ebenezer
+Dorset. The father was respectable and tight, a mortgage fancier and a stern,
+upright collection-plate passer and forecloser. The kid was a boy of ten, with
+bas-relief freckles, and hair the colour of the cover of the magazine you buy at the
+news-stand when you want to catch a train. Bill and me figured that Ebenezer
+would melt down for a ransom of two thousand dollars to a cent. But wait till I tell
+you.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">About two miles from Summit was a little mountain, covered with a dense cedar
+brake. On the rear elevation of this mountain was a cave. There we stored
+provisions. One evening after sundown, we drove in a buggy past old Dorset's
+house. The kid was in the street, throwing rocks at a kitten on the opposite fence.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Hey, little boy!" says Bill, "would you like to have a bag of candy and a nice
+ride?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The boy catches Bill neatly in the eye with a piece of brick. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"That will cost the old man an extra five hundred dollars," says Bill, climbing over
+the wheel.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">That boy put up a fight like a welter-weight cinnamon bear; but, at last, we got him
+down in the bottom of the buggy and drove away. We took him up to the cave and
+I hitched the horse in the cedar brake. After dark I drove the buggy to the little
+village, three miles away, where we had hired it, and walked back to the mountain.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Bill was pasting court-plaster over the scratches and bruises on his features. There
+was a fire burning behind the big rock at the entrance of the cave, and the boy was
+watching a pot of boiling coffee, with two buzzard tail-feathers stuck in his red
+hair. He points a stick at me when I come up, and says:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ha! cursed paleface, do you dare to enter the camp of Red Chief, the terror of the
+plains?</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"He's all right now," says Bill, rolling up his trousers and examining some bruises
+on his shins. "We're playing Indian. We're making Buffalo Bill's show look like
+magic-lantern views of Palestine in the town hall. I'm Old Hank, the Trapper, Red
+Chief's captive, and I'm to be scalped at daybreak. By Geronimo! that kid can kick
+hard." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Yes, sir, that boy seemed to be having the time of his life. The fun of camping out
+in a cave had made him forget that he was a captive himself. He immediately
+christened me Snake-eye, the Spy, and announced that, when his braves returned
+from the warpath, I was to be broiled at the stake at the rising of the sun.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Then we had supper; and he filled his mouth full of bacon and bread and gravy, and
+began to talk. He made a during-dinner speech something like this:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I like this fine. I never camped out before; but I had a pet 'possum once, and I was
+nine last birthday. I hate to go to school. Rats ate up sixteen of Jimmy Talbot's
+aunt's speckled hen's eggs. Are there any real Indians in these woods? I want some
+more gravy. Does the trees moving make the wind blow? We had five puppies.
+What makes your nose so red, Hank? My father has lots of money. Are the stars
+hot? I whipped Ed Walker twice, Saturday. I don't like girls. You dassent catch
+toads unless with a string. Do oxen make any noise? Why are oranges round? Have
+you got beds to sleep on in this cave? Amos Murray has got six toes. A parrot can
+talk, but a monkey or a fish can't. How many does it take to make twelve?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Every few minutes he would remember that he was a pesky redskin, and pick up his
+stick rifle and tiptoe to the mouth of the cave to rubber for the scouts of the hated
+paleface. Now and then he would let out a war-whoop that made Old Hank the
+Trapper shiver. That boy had Bill terrorized from the start.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Red Chief," says I to the kid, "would you like to go home?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Aw, what for?" says he. "I don't have any fun at home. I hate to go to school. I
+like to camp out. You won't take me back home again, Snake-eye, will you?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Not right away," says I. "We'll stay here in the cave a while." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"All right!" says he. "That'll be fine. I never had such fun in all my life."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">We went to bed about eleven o'clock. We spread down some wide blankets and
+quilts and put Red Chief between us. We weren't afraid he'd run away. He kept us
+awake for three hours, jumping up and reaching for his rifle and screeching: "Hist!
+pard," in mine and Bill's ears, as the fancied crackle of a twig or the rustle of a leaf
+revealed to his young imagination the stealthy approach of the outlaw band. At last,
+I fell into a troubled sleep, and dreamed that I had been kidnapped and chained to a
+tree by a ferocious pirate with red hair.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Just at daybreak, I was awakened by a series of awful screams from Bill. They
+weren't yells, or howls, or shouts, or whoops, or yawps, such as you'd expect from a
+manly set of vocal organs&mdash;they were simply indecent, terrifying, humiliating
+screams, such as women emit when they see ghosts or caterpillars. It's an awful
+thing to hear a strong, desperate, fat man scream incontinently in a cave at
+daybreak. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I jumped up to see what the matter was. Red Chief was sitting on Bill's chest, with
+one hand twined in Bill's hair. In the other he had the sharp case-knife we used for
+slicing bacon; and he was industriously and realistically trying to take Bill's scalp,
+according to the sentence that had been pronounced upon him the evening before. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I got the knife away from the kid and made him lie down again. But, from that
+moment, Bill's spirit was broken. He laid down on his side of the bed, but he never
+closed an eye again in sleep as long as that boy was with us. I dozed off for a while,
+but along toward sun-up I remembered that Red Chief had said I was to be burned
+at the stake at the rising of the sun. I wasn't nervous or afraid; but I sat up and lit
+my pipe and leaned against a rock.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What you getting up so soon for, Sam?" asked Bill.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Me?" says I. "Oh, I got a kind of a pain in my shoulder. I thought sitting up
+would rest it."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You're a liar!" says Bill. "You're afraid. You was to be burned at sunrise, and
+you was afraid he'd do it. And he would, too, if he could find a match. Ain't it
+awful, Sam? Do you think anybody will pay out money to get a little imp like that
+back home?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Sure," said I. "A rowdy kid like that is just the kind that parents dote on. Now,
+you and the Chief get up and cook breakfast, while I go up on the top of this
+mountain and reconnoitre."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I went up on the peak of the little mountain and ran my eye over the contiguous
+vicinity. Over toward Summit I expected to see the sturdy yeomanry of the village
+armed with scythes and pitchforks beating the countryside for the dastardly
+kidnappers. But what I saw was a peaceful landscape dotted with one man
+ploughing with a dun mule. Nobody was dragging the creek; no couriers dashed
+hither and yon, bringing tidings of no news to the distracted parents. There was a
+sylvan attitude of somnolent sleepiness pervading that section of the external
+outward surface of Alabama that lay exposed to my view. "Perhaps," says I to
+myself, "it has not yet been discovered that the wolves have borne away the tender
+lambkin from the fold. Heaven help the wolves!" says I, and I went down the
+mountain to breakfast. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When I got to the cave I found Bill backed up against the side of it, breathing hard,
+and the boy threatening to smash him with a rock half as big as a cocoanut.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"He put a red-hot boiled potato down my back," explained Bill, "and then mashed it
+with his foot; and I boxed his ears. Have you got a gun about you, Sam?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I took the rock away from the boy and kind of patched up the argument. "I'll fix
+you," says the kid to Bill. "No man ever yet struck the Red Chief but what he got
+paid for it. You better beware!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">After breakfast the kid takes a piece of leather with strings wrapped around it out of
+his pocket and goes outside the cave unwinding it. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What's he up to now?" says Bill, anxiously. "You don't think he'll run away, do
+you, Sam?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"No fear of it," says I. "He don't seem to be much of a home body. But we've got to
+fix up some plan about the ransom. There don't seem to be much excitement
+around Summit on account of his disappearance; but maybe they haven't realized
+yet that he's gone. His folks may think he's spending the night with Aunt Jane or
+one of the neighbours. Anyhow, he'll be missed to-day. To-night we must get a
+message to his father demanding the two thousand dollars for his return." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Just then we heard a kind Of war-whoop, such as David might have emitted when
+he knocked out the champion Goliath. It was a sling that Red Chief had pulled out
+of his pocket, and he was whirling it around his head.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I dodged, and heard a heavy thud and a kind of a sigh from Bill, like a horse gives
+out when you take his saddle off. A niggerhead rock the size of an egg had caught
+Bill just behind his left ear. He loosened himself all over and fell in the fire across
+the frying pan of hot water for washing the dishes. I dragged him out and poured
+cold water on his head for half an hour.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">By and by, Bill sits up and feels behind his ear and says: "Sam, do you know who
+my favourite Biblical character is?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Take it easy," says I. "You'll come to your senses presently." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"King Herod," says he. "You won't go away and leave me here alone, will you,
+Sam?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I went out and caught that boy and shook him until his freckles rattled.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"If you don't behave," says I, "I'll take you straight home. Now, are you going to be
+good, or not?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I was only funning," says he sullenly. "I didn't mean to hurt Old Hank. But what
+did he hit me for? I'll behave, Snake-eye, if you won't send me home, and if you'll
+let me play the Black Scout to-day." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I don't know the game," says I. "That's for you and Mr. Bill to decide. He's your
+playmate for the day. I'm going away for a while, on business. Now, you come in
+and make friends with him and say you are sorry for hurting him, or home you go,
+at once."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I made him and Bill shake hands, and then I took Bill aside and told him I was
+going to Poplar Cove, a little village three miles from the cave, and find out what I
+could about how the kidnapping had been regarded in Summit. Also, I thought it
+best to send a peremptory letter to old man Dorset that day, demanding the ransom
+and dictating how it should be paid.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You know, Sam," says Bill, "I've stood by you without batting an eye in
+earthquakes, fire and flood&mdash;in poker games, dynamite outrages, police raids, train
+robberies and cyclones. I never lost my nerve yet till we kidnapped that two-legged
+skyrocket of a kid. He's got me going. You won't leave me long with him, will
+you, Sam?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'll be back some time this afternoon," says I. "You must keep the boy amused and
+quiet till I return. And now we'll write the letter to old Dorset."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Bill and I got paper and pencil and worked on the letter while Red Chief, with a
+blanket wrapped around him, strutted up and down, guarding the mouth of the
+cave. Bill begged me tearfully to make the ransom fifteen hundred dollars instead
+of two thousand. "I ain't attempting," says he, "to decry the celebrated moral aspect
+of parental affection, but we're dealing with humans, and it ain't human for anybody
+to give up two thousand dollars for that forty-pound chunk of freckled wildcat. I'm
+willing to take a chance at fifteen hundred dollars. You can charge the difference
+up to me."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">So, to relieve Bill, I acceded, and we collaborated a letter that ran this way:</span></p>
+<br>
+<blockquote>
+<span style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Ebenezer Dorset, Esq.:</i><br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We have your boy concealed in a place far from Summit. It is useless for you or the most
+skilful detectives to attempt to find him. Absolutely, the only terms on which you can
+have him restored to you are these: We demand fifteen hundred dollars in large bills for
+his return; the money to be left at midnight to-night at the same spot and in the same box
+as your reply&mdash;as hereinafter described. If you agree to these terms, send your answer in
+writing by a solitary messenger to-night at half-past eight o'clock. After crossing Owl
+Creek, on the road to Poplar Cove, there are three large trees about a hundred yards apart,
+close to the fence of the wheat field on the right-hand side. At the bottom of the
+fence-post, opposite the third tree, will be found a small pasteboard box.<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The messenger will place the answer in this box and return immediately to Summit. <br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If you attempt any treachery or fail to comply with our demand as stated, you will never
+see your boy again.<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If you pay the money as demanded, he will be returned to you safe and well within
+three hours. These terms are final, and if you do not accede to them no
+further communication will be attempted.<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;TWO DESPERATE MEN.<br>
+</span>
+</blockquote>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I addressed this letter to Dorset, and put it in my pocket. As I was about to start, the
+kid comes up to me and says:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Aw, Snake-eye, you said I could play the Black Scout while you was gone."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Play it, of course," says I. "Mr. Bill will play with you. What kind of a game is
+it?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm the Black Scout," says Red Chief, "and I have to ride to the stockade to warn
+the settlers that the Indians are coming. I'm tired of playing Indian myself. I want to
+be the Black Scout."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"All right," says I. "It sounds harmless to me. I guess Mr. Bill will help you foil the
+pesky savages."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What am I to do?" asks Bill, looking at the kid suspiciously. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You are the hoss," says Black Scout. "Get down on your hands and knees. How
+can I ride to the stockade without a hoss?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You'd better keep him interested," said I, "till we get the scheme going. Loosen
+up."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Bill gets down on his all fours, and a look comes in his eye like a rabbit's when you
+catch it in a trap.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"How far is it to the stockade, kid?" he asks, in a husky manner of voice.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ninety miles," says the Black Scout. "And you have to hump yourself to get there
+on time. Whoa, now!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Black Scout jumps on Bill's back and digs his heels in his side. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"For Heaven's sake," says Bill, "hurry back, Sam, as soon as you can. I wish we
+hadn't made the ransom more than a thousand. Say, you quit kicking me or I'll get
+up and warm you good."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I walked over to Poplar Cove and sat around the postoffice and store, talking with
+the chawbacons that came in to trade. One whiskerando says that he hears Summit
+is all upset on account of Elder Ebenezer Dorset's boy having been lost or stolen.
+That was all I wanted to know. I bought some smoking tobacco, referred casually to
+the price of black-eyed peas, posted my letter surreptitiously and came away. The
+postmaster said the mail-carrier would come by in an hour to take the mail on to
+Summit.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When I got back to the cave Bill and the boy were not to be found. I explored the
+vicinity of the cave, and risked a yodel or two, but there was no response.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">So I lighted my pipe and sat down on a mossy bank to await developments.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In about half an hour I heard the bushes rustle, and Bill wabbled out into the little
+glade in front of the cave. Behind him was the kid, stepping softly like a scout, with
+a broad grin on his face. Bill stopped, took off his hat and wiped his face with a
+red handkerchief. The kid stopped about eight feet behind him.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Sam," says Bill, "I suppose you'll think I'm a renegade, but I couldn't help it. I'm a
+grown person with masculine proclivities and habits of self-defense, but there is a
+time when all systems of egotism and predominance fail. The boy is gone. I have
+sent him home. All is off. There was martyrs in old times," goes on Bill, "that
+suffered death rather than give up the particular graft they enjoyed. None of 'em
+ever was subjugated to such supernatural tortures as I have been. I tried to be
+faithful to our articles of depredation; but there came a limit."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What's the trouble, Bill?" I asks him.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I was rode," says Bill, "the ninety miles to the stockade, not barring an inch. Then,
+when the settlers was rescued, I was given oats. Sand ain't a palatable substitute.
+And then, for an hour I had to try to explain to him why there was nothin' in holes,
+how a road can run both ways and what makes the grass green. I tell you, Sam, a
+human can only stand so much. I takes him by the neck of his clothes and drags
+him down the mountain. On the way he kicks my legs black-and-blue from the
+knees down; and I've got to have two or three bites on my thumb and hand
+cauterized.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"But he's gone"&mdash;continues Bill&mdash;"gone home. I showed him the road to Summit and
+kicked him about eight feet nearer there at one kick. I'm sorry we lose the ransom;
+but it was either that or Bill Driscoll to the madhouse."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Bill is puffing and blowing, but there is a look of ineffable peace and growing
+content on his rose-pink features.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Bill," says I, "there isn't any heart disease in your family, is there?</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"No," says Bill, "nothing chronic except malaria and accidents. Why?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Then you might turn around," says I, "and have a took behind you." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Bill turns and sees the boy, and loses his complexion and sits down plump on the
+round and begins to pluck aimlessly at grass and little sticks. For an hour I was
+afraid for his mind. And then I told him that my scheme was to put the whole job
+through immediately and that we would get the ransom and be off with it by
+midnight if old Dorset fell in with our proposition. So Bill braced up enough to
+give the kid a weak sort of a smile and a promise to play the Russian in a Japanese
+war with him is soon as he felt a little better.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I had a scheme for collecting that ransom without danger of being caught by
+counterplots that ought to commend itself to professional kidnappers. The tree
+under which the answer was to be left&mdash;and the money later on&mdash;was close to the
+road fence with big, bare fields on all sides. If a gang of constables should be
+watching for any one to come for the note they could see him a long way off
+crossing the fields or in the road. But no, sirree! At half-past eight I was up in that
+tree as well hidden as a tree toad, waiting for the messenger to arrive.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Exactly on time, a half-grown boy rides up the road on a bicycle, locates the
+pasteboard box at the foot of the fence-post, slips a folded piece of paper into it and
+pedals away again back toward Summit.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I waited an hour and then concluded the thing was square. I slid down the tree, got
+the note, slipped along the fence till I struck the woods, and was back at the cave in
+another half an hour. I opened the note, got near the lantern and read it to Bill. It
+was written with a pen in a crabbed hand, and the sum and substance of it was this: </span></p>
+<br>
+<blockquote>
+<span style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Two Desperate Men.<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Gentlemen:</i>
+I received your letter to-day by post, in regard to the ransom you ask for the
+return of my son. I think you are a little high in your demands, and I hereby make you a
+counter-proposition, which I am inclined to believe you will accept. You bring Johnny
+home and pay me two hundred and fifty dollars in cash, and I agree to take him off your
+hands. You had better come at night, for the neighbours believe he is lost, and I couldn't
+be responsible for what they would do to anybody they saw bringing him back. Very
+respectfully,<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;EBENEZER DORSET.<br>
+</span>
+</blockquote>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Great pirates of Penzance!" says I; "of all the impudent&mdash;" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But I glanced at Bill, and hesitated. He had the most appealing look in his eyes I
+ever saw on the face of a dumb or a talking brute. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Sam," says he, "what's two hundred and fifty dollars, after all? We've got the
+money. One more night of this kid will send me to a bed in Bedlam. Besides being
+a thorough gentleman, I think Mr. Dorset is a spendthrift for making us such a
+liberal offer. You ain't going to let the chance go, are you?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Tell you the truth, Bill," says I, "this little he ewe lamb has somewhat got on my
+nerves too. We'll take him home, pay the ransom and make our get-away."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">We took him home that night. We got him to go by telling him that his father had
+bought a silver-mounted rifle and a pair of moccasins for him, and we were going
+to hunt bears the next day.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It was just twelve o'clock when we knocked at Ebenezer's front door. Just at the
+moment when I should have been abstracting the fifteen hundred dollars from the
+box under the tree, according to the original proposition, Bill was counting out two
+hundred and fifty dollars into Dorset's hand.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When the kid found out we were going to leave him at home he started up a howl
+like a calliope and fastened himself as tight as a leech to Bill's leg. His father peeled
+him away gradually, like a porous plaster.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"How long can you hold him?" asks Bill.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm not as strong as I used to be," says old Dorset, "but I think I can promise you
+ten minutes."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Enough," says Bill. "In ten minutes I shall cross the Central, Southern and Middle
+Western States, and be legging it trippingly for the Canadian border."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">And, as dark as it was, and as fat as Bill was, and as good a runner as I am, he was
+a good mile and a half out of Summit before I could catch up with him.</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="9"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+IX<br>
+<br>
+THE MARRY MONTH OF MAY<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Prithee, smite the poet in the eye when he would sing to you praises of the month of
+May. It is a month presided over by the spirits of mischief and madness. Pixies and
+flibbertigibbets haunt the budding woods: Puck and his train of midgets are busy in
+town and country. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In May nature holds up at us a chiding finger, bidding us remember that we are not
+gods, but overconceited members of her own great family. She reminds us that we
+are brothers to the chowder-doomed clam and the donkey; lineal scions of the pansy
+and the chimpanzee, and but cousins-german to the cooing doves, the quacking
+ducks and the housemaids and policemen in the parks.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In May Cupid shoots blindfolded&mdash;millionaires marry stenographers; wise
+professors woo white-aproned gum-chewers behind quick-lunch counters;
+schoolma'ams make big bad boys remain after school; lads with ladders steal lightly
+over lawns where Juliet waits in her trellissed window with her telescope packed;
+young couples out for a walk come home married; old chaps put on white spats and
+promenade near the Normal School; even married men, grown unwontedly tender
+and sentimental, whack their spouses on the back and growl: "How goes it, old
+girl:"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">This May, who is no goddess, but Circe, masquerading at the dance given in honour
+of the fair d&eacute;butante, Summer, puts the kibosh on us all.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Old Mr. Coulson groaned a little, and then sat up straight in his invalid's chair. He
+had the gout very bad in one foot, a house near Gramercy Park, half a million
+dollars and a daughter. And he had a housekeeper, Mrs. Widdup. The fact and the
+name deserve a sentence each. They have it.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When May poked Mr. Coulson he became elder brother to the turtle-dove. In the
+window near which he sat were boxes of jonquils, of hyacinths, geraniums and
+pansies. The breeze brought their odour into the room. Immediately there was a
+well-contested round between the breath of the flowers and the able and active
+effluvium from gout liniment. The liniment won easily; but not before the flowers
+got an uppercut to old Mr. Coulson's nose. The deadly work of the implacable,
+false enchantress May was done.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Across the park to the olfactories of Mr. Coulson came other unmistakable,
+characteristic, copyrighted smells of spring that belong to
+the-big-city-above-the-Subway, alone. The smells of hot asphalt, underground
+caverns, gasoline, patchouli, orange peel, sewer gas, Albany grabs, Egyptian
+cigarettes, mortar and the undried ink on newspapers. The inblowing air was sweet
+and mild. Sparrows wrangled happily everywhere outdoors. Never trust May.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mr. Coulson twisted the ends of his white mustache, cursed his foot, and pounded a
+bell on the table by his side.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In came Mrs. Widdup. She was comely to the eye, fair, flustered, forty and foxy.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Higgins is out, sir," she said, with a smile suggestive of vibratory massage. "He
+went to post a letter. Can I do anything for you, sir?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's time for my aconite," said old Mr. Coulson. "Drop it for me. The bottle's there.
+Three drops. In water. D&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash; that is, confound Higgins! There's nobody in this
+house cares if I die here in this chair for want of attention."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mrs. Widdup sighed deeply.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Don't be saying that, sir," she said. "There's them that would care more than any
+one knows. Thirteen drops, you said, sir?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Three," said old man Coulson.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He took his dose and then Mrs. Widdup's hand. She blushed. Oh, yes, it can be
+done. Just hold your breath and compress the diaphragm. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mrs. Widdup," said Mr. Coulson, "the springtime's full upon us." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ain't that right?" said Mrs. Widdup. "The air's real warm. And there's bock-beer
+signs on every corner. And the park's all yaller and pink and blue with flowers; and
+I have such shooting pains up my legs and body."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"'In the spring,'" quoted Mr. Coulson, curling his mustache, "'a y&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash; that is, a
+man's&mdash;fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.'" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Lawsy, now!" exclaimed Mrs. Widdup; "ain't that right? Seems like it's in the
+air."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"'In the spring,'" continued old Mr. Coulson, "'a livelier iris shines upon the
+burnished dove.'"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"They do be lively, the Irish," sighed Mrs. Widdup pensively. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mrs. Widdup," said Mr. Coulson, making a face at a twinge of his gouty foot, "this
+would be a lonesome house without you. I'm an&mdash;that is, I'm an elderly man&mdash;but
+I'm worth a comfortable lot of money. If half a million dollars' worth of
+Government bonds and the true affection of a heart that, though no longer beating
+with the first ardour of youth, can still throb with genuine&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The loud noise of an overturned chair near the porti&egrave;res of the adjoining room
+interrupted the venerable and scarcely suspecting victim of May.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In stalked Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson, bony, durable, tall, high-nosed,
+frigid, well-bred, thirty-five, in-the-neighbourhood-of-Gramercy-Parkish. She put
+up a lorgnette. Mrs. Widdup hastily stooped and arranged the bandages on Mr.
+Coulson's gouty foot. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I thought Higgins was with you," said Miss Van Meeker Constantia. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Higgins went out," explained her father, "and Mrs. Widdup answered the bell.
+That is better now, Mrs. Widdup, thank you. No; there is nothing else I require."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The housekeeper retired, pink under the cool, inquiring stare of Miss Coulson.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"This spring weather is lovely, isn't it, daughter?" said the old man, consciously
+conscious.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"That's just it," replied Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson, somewhat obscurely.
+"When does Mrs. Widdup start on her vacation, papa?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I believe she said a week from to-day," said Mr. Coulson. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Miss Van Meeker Constantia stood for a minute at the window gazing, toward the
+little park, flooded with the mellow afternoon sunlight. With the eye of a botanist
+she viewed the flowers&mdash;most potent weapons of insidious May. With the cool
+pulses of a virgin of Cologne she withstood the attack of the ethereal mildness. The
+arrows of the pleasant sunshine fell back, frostbitten, from the cold panoply of her
+unthrilled bosom. The odour of the flowers waked no soft sentiments in the
+unexplored recesses of her dormant heart. The chirp of the sparrows gave her a
+pain. She mocked at May.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But although Miss Coulson was proof against the season, she was keen enough to
+estimate its power. She knew that elderly men and thick-waisted women jumped as
+educated fleas in the ridiculous train of May, the merry mocker of the months. She
+had heard of foolish old gentlemen marrying their housekeepers before. What a
+humiliating thing, after all, was this feeling called love!</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The next morning at 8 o'clock, when the iceman called, the cook told him that Miss
+Coulson wanted to see him in the basement.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Well, ain't I the Olcott and Depew; not mentioning the first name at all?" said the
+iceman, admiringly, of himself.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">As a concession he rolled his sleeves down, dropped his icehooks on a syringa and
+went back. When Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson addressed him he took off
+his hat.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"There is a rear entrance to this basement," said Miss Coulson, "which can be
+reached by driving into the vacant lot next door, where they are excavating for a
+building. I want you to bring in that way within two hours 1,000 pounds of ice.
+You may have to bring another man or two to help you. I will show you where I
+want it placed. I also want 1,000 pounds a day delivered the same way for the next
+four days. Your company may charge the ice on our regular bill. This is for your
+extra trouble."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Miss Coulson tendered a ten-dollar bill. The iceman bowed, and held his hat in his
+two hands behind him.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Not if you'll excuse me, lady. It'll be a pleasure to fix things up for you any way
+you please."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Alas for May!</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">About noon Mr. Coulson knocked two glasses off his table, broke the spring of his
+bell and yelled for Higgins at the same time. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Bring an axe," commanded Mr. Coulson, sardonically, "or send out for a quart of
+prussic acid, or have a policeman come in and shoot me. I'd rather that than be
+frozen to death."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It does seem to be getting cool, Sir," said Higgins. "I hadn't noticed it before. I'll
+close the window, Sir."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Do," said Mr. Coulson. "They call this spring, do they? If it keeps up long I'll go
+back to Palm Beach. House feels like a morgue." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Later Miss Coulson dutifully came in to inquire how the gout was progressing.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"'Stantia," said the old man, "how is the weather outdoors?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Bright," answered Miss Coulson, "but chilly."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Feels like the dead of winter to me," said Mr. Coulson.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"An instance," said Constantia, gazing abstractedly out the window, "of 'winter
+lingering in the lap of spring,' though the metaphor is not in the most refined taste."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A little later she walked down by the side of the little park and on westward to
+Broadway to accomplish a little shopping.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A little later than that Mrs. Widdup entered the invalid's room. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Did you ring, Sir?" she asked, dimpling in many places. "I asked Higgins to go to
+the drug store, and I thought I heard your bell." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I did not," said Mr. Coulson.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm afraid," said Mrs. Widdup, "I interrupted you sir, yesterday when you were
+about to say something."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"How comes it, Mrs. Widdup," said old man Coulson sternly, "that I find it so cold
+in this house?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Cold, Sir?" said the housekeeper, "why, now, since you speak of it it do seem cold
+in this room. But, outdoors it's as warm and fine as June, sir. And how this
+weather do seem to make one's heart jump out of one's shirt waist, sir. And the ivy
+all leaved out on the side of the house, and the hand-organs playing, and the
+children dancing on the sidewalk&mdash;'tis a great time for speaking out what's in the
+heart. You were saying yesterday, sir&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Woman!" roared Mr. Coulson; "you are a fool. I pay you to take care of this
+house. I am freezing to death in my own room, and you come in and drivel to me
+about ivy and hand-organs. Get me an overcoat at once. See that all doors and
+windows are closed below. An old, fat, irresponsible, one-sided object like you
+prating about springtime and flowers in the middle of winter! When Higgins comes
+back, tell him to bring me a hot rum punch. And now get out!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But who shall shame the bright face of May? Rogue though she be and disturber of
+sane men's peace, no wise virgins cunning nor cold storage shall make her bow her
+head in the bright galaxy of months. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Oh, yes, the story was not quite finished.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A night passed, and Higgins helped old man Coulson in the morning to his chair by
+the window. The cold of the room was gone. Heavenly odours and fragrant
+mildness entered.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In hurried Mrs. Widdup, and stood by his chair. Mr. Coulson reached his bony
+hand and grasped her plump one.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mrs. Widdup," he said, "this house would be no home without you. I have half a
+million dollars. If that and the true affection of a heart no lonoer in its youthful
+prime, but still not cold, could&mdash;" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I found out what made it cold," said Mrs. Widdup, leanin' against his chair.
+"'Twas ice&mdash;tons of it&mdash;in the basement and in the furnace room, everywhere. I shut
+off the registers that it was coming through into your room, Mr. Coulson, poor soul!
+And now it's Maytime again." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"A true heart," went on old man Coulson, a little wanderingly, "that the springtime
+has brought to life again, and&mdash;but what will my daughter say, Mrs. Widdup?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Never fear, sir," said Mrs. Widdup, cheerfully. "Miss Coulson, she ran away with
+the iceman last night, sir!"</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="10"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+X<br>
+<br>
+A TECHNICAL ERROR<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I never cared especially for feuds, believing them to be even more overrated
+products of our country than grapefruit, scrapple, or honeymoons. Nevertheless, if I
+may be allowed, I will tell you of an Indian Territory feud of which I was
+press-agent, camp-follower, and inaccessory during the fact.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I was on a visit to Sam Durkee's ranch, where I had a great time falling off
+unmanicured ponies and waving my bare hand at the lower jaws of wolves about
+two miles away. Sam was a hardened person of about twenty-five, with a
+reputation for going home in the dark with perfect equanimity, though often with
+reluctance.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Over in the Creek Nation was a family bearing the name of Tatum. I was told that
+the Durkees and Tatums had been feuding for years. Several of each family had
+bitten the grass, and it was expected that more Nebuchadnezzars would follow. A
+younger generation of each family was growing up, and the grass was keeping pace
+with them. But I gathered that they had fought fairly; that they had not lain in
+cornfields and aimed at the division of their enemies' suspenders in the back&mdash;partly,
+perhaps, because there were no cornfields, and nobody wore more than one
+suspender. Nor had any woman or child of either house ever been harmed. In
+those days&mdash;and you will find it so yet&mdash;their women were safe.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Sam Durkee had a girl. (If it were an all-fiction magazine that I expect to sell this
+story to, I should say, "Mr. Durkee rejoiced in a fianc&eacute;e.") Her name was Ella
+Baynes. They appeared to be devoted to each other, and to have perfect confidence
+in each other, as all couples do who are and have or aren't and haven't. She was
+tolerably pretty, with a heavy mass of brown hair that helped her along. He
+introduced me to her, which seemed not to lessen her preference for him; so I
+reasoned that they were surely soul-mates.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Miss Baynes lived in Kingfisher, twenty miles from the ranch. Sam lived on a
+gallop between the two places.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One day there came to Kingfisher a courageous young man, rather small, with
+smooth face and regular features. He made many inquiries about the business of the
+town, and especially of the inhabitants cognominally. He said he was from
+Muscogee, and he looked it, with his yellow shoes and crocheted four-in-hand. I
+met him once when I rode in for the mail. He said his name was Beverly Travers,
+which seemed rather improbable.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">There were active times on the ranch, just then, and Sam was too busy to go to town
+often. As an incompetent and generally worthless guest, it devolved upon me to
+ride in for little things such as post cards, barrels of flour, baking-powder,
+smoking-tobacco, and&mdash;letters from Ella.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One day, when I was messenger for half a gross of cigarette papers and a couple of
+wagon tires, I saw the alleged Beverly Travers in a yellow-wheeled buggy with Ella
+Baynes, driving about town as ostentatiously as the black, waxy mud would permit.
+I knew that this information would bring no balm of Gilead to Sam's soul, so I
+refrained from including it in the news of the city that I retailed on my return. But
+on the next afternoon an elongated ex-cowboy of the name of Simmons, an old-time
+pal of Sam's, who kept a feed store in Kingfisher, rode out to the ranch and rolled
+and burned many cigarettes before he would talk. When he did make oration, his
+words were these:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Say, Sam, there's been a description of a galoot miscallin' himself Bevel-edged
+Travels impairing the atmospheric air of Kingfisher for the past two weeks. You
+know who he was? He was not otherwise than Ben Tatum, from the Creek Nation,
+son of old Gopher Tatum that your Uncle Newt shot last February. You know what
+he done this morning? He killed your brother Lester&mdash;shot him in the co't-house
+yard." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I wondered if Sam had heard. He pulled a twig from a mesquite bush, chewed it
+gravely, and said:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"He did, did he? He killed Lester?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The same," said Simmons. "And he did more. He run away with your girl, the
+same as to say Miss Ella Baynes. I thought you might like to know, so I rode out to
+impart the information."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I am much obliged, Jim," said Sam, taking the chewed twig from his mouth. "Yes,
+I'm glad you rode Out. Yes, I'm right glad." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Well, I'll be ridin' back, I reckon. That boy I left in the feed store don't know hay
+from oats. He shot Lester in the back." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Shot him in the back?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Yes, while he was hitchin' his hoss."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm much obliged, Jim."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I kind of thought you'd like to know as soon as you could." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Come in and have some coffee before you ride back, Jim?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Why, no, I reckon not; I must get back to the store."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"And you say&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Yes, Sam. Everybody seen 'em drive away together in a buckboard, with a big
+bundle, like clothes, tied up in the back of it. He was drivin' the team he brought
+over with him from Muscogee. They'll be hard to overtake right away."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"And which&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I was goin' on to tell you. They left on the Guthrie road; but there's no tellin' which
+forks they'll take&mdash;you know that." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"All right, Jim; much obliged."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You're welcome, Sam."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Simmons rolled a cigarette and stabbed his pony with both heels. Twenty yards
+away he reined up and called back:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You don't want no&mdash;assistance, as you might say?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Not any, thanks."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I didn't think you would. Well, so long!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Sam took out and opened a bone-handled pocket-knife and scraped a dried piece of
+mud from his left boot. I thought at first he was going to swear a vendetta on the
+blade of it, or recite "The Gipsy's Curse." The few feuds I had ever seen or read
+about usually opened that way. This one seemed to be presented with a new
+treatment. Thus offered on the stage, it would have been hissed off, and one of
+Belasco's thrilling melodramas demanded instead.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I wonder," said Sam, with a profoundly thoughtful expression, "if the cook has any
+cold beans left over!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He called Wash, the Negro cook, and finding that he had some, ordered him to heat
+up the pot and make some strong coffee. Then we went into Sam's private room,
+where he slept, and kept his armoury, dogs, and the saddles of his favourite mounts.
+He took three or four six-shooters out of a bookcase and began to look them over,
+whistling "The Cowboy's Lament" abstractedly. Afterward he ordered the two best
+horses on the ranch saddled and tied to the hitching-post. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Now, in the feud business, in all sections of the country, I have observed that in one
+particular there is a delicate but strict etiquette belonging. You must not mention
+the word or refer to the subject in the presence of a feudist. It would be more
+reprehensible than commenting upon the mole on the chin of your rich aunt. I
+found, later on, that there is another unwritten rule, but I think that belongs solely to
+the West.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It yet lacked two hours to supper-time; but in twenty minutes Sam and I were
+plunging deep into the reheated beans, hot coffee, and cold beef.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Nothing like a good meal before a long ride," said Sam. "Eat hearty." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I had a sudden suspicion.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Why did you have two horses saddled?" I asked.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"One, two&mdash;one, two," said Sam. "You can count, can't you?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">His mathematics carried with it a momentary qualm and a lesson. The thought had
+not occurred to him that the thought could possibly occur to me not to ride at his
+side on that red road to revenge and justice. It was the higher calculus. I was
+booked for the trail. I began to eat more beans.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In an hour we set forth at a steady gallop eastward. Our horses were Kentucky-bred,
+strengthened by the mesquite grass of the west. Ben Tatum's steeds may have been
+swifter, and he had a good lead; but if he had heard the punctual thuds of the hoofs
+of those trailers of ours, born in the heart of feudland, he might have felt that
+retribution was creeping up on the hoof-prints of his dapper nags. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I knew that Ben Tatum's card to play was flight&mdash;flight until he came within the
+safer territory of his own henchmen and supporters. He knew that the man pursuing
+him would follow the trail to any end where it might lead.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">During the ride Sam talked of the prospect for rain, of the price of beef, and of the
+musical glasses. You would have thought he had never had a brother or a
+sweetheart or an enemy on earth. There are some subjects too big even for the
+words in the "Unabridged." Knowing this phase of the feud code, but not having
+practised it sufficiently, I overdid the thing by telling some slightly funny anecdotes.
+Sam laughed at exactly the right place&mdash;laughed with his mouth. When I caught
+sight of his mouth, I wished I had been blessed with enough sense of humour to
+have suppressed those anecdotes.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Our first sight of them we had in Guthrie. Tired and hungry, we stumbled,
+unwashed, into a little yellow-pine hotel and sat at a table. In the opposite corner
+we saw the fugitives. They were bent upon their meal, but looked around at times
+uneasily.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The girl was dressed in brown&mdash;one of these smooth, half-shiny, silky-looking
+affairs with lace collar and cuffs, and what I believe they call an accordion-plaited
+skirt. She wore a thick brown veil down to her nose, and a broad-brimmed straw
+hat with some kind of feathers adorning it. The man wore plain, dark clothes, and
+his hair was trimmed very short. He was such a man as you might see anywhere. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">There they were&mdash;the murderer and the woman he had stolen. There we were&mdash;the
+rightful avenger, according to the code, and the supernumerary who writes these
+words.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">For one time, at least, in the heart of the supernumerary there rose the killing
+instinct. For one moment he joined the force of combatants&mdash;orally.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What are you waiting for, Sam?" I said in a whisper. "Let him have it now!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Sam gave a melancholy sigh.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You don't understand; but <i>he</i> does," he said. "<i>He</i> knows. Mr. Tenderfoot, there's
+a rule out here among white men in the Nation that you can't shoot a man when he's
+with a woman. I never knew it to be broke yet. You <i>can't</i> do it. You've got to get
+him in a gang of men or by himself. That's why. He knows it, too. We all know.
+So, that's Mr. Ben Tatum! One of the 'pretty men'! I'll cut him out of the herd
+before they leave the hotel, and regulate his account!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">After supper the flying pair disappeared quickly. Although Sam haunted lobby and
+stairway and halls half the night, in some mysterious way the fugitives eluded him;
+and in the morning the veiled lady in the brown dress with the accordion-plaited
+skirt and the dapper young man with the close-clipped hair, and the buckboard with
+the prancing nags, were gone.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It is a monotonous story, that of the ride; so it shall be curtailed. Once again we
+overtook them on a road. We were about fifty yards behind. They turned in the
+buckboard and looked at us; then drove on without whipping up their horses. Their
+safety no longer lay in speed. Ben Tatum knew. He knew that the only rock of
+safety left to him was the code. There is no doubt that, had he been alone, the
+matter would have been settled quickly with Sam Durkee in the usual way; but he
+had something at his side that kept still the trigger-finger of both. It seemed likely
+that he was no coward.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">So, you may perceive that woman, on occasions, may postpone instead of
+precipitating conflict between man and man. But not willingly or consciously. She
+is oblivious of codes.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Five miles farther, we came upon the future great Western city of Chandler. The
+horses of pursuers and pursued were starved and weary. There was one hotel that
+offered danger to man and entertainment to beast; so the four of us met again in the
+dining room at the ringing of a bell so resonant and large that it had cracked the
+welkin long ago. The dining room was not as large as the one at Guthrie. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Just as we were eating apple pie&mdash;how Ben Davises and tragedy impinge upon each
+other!&mdash;I noticed Sam looking with keen intentness at our quarry where they were
+seated at a table across the room. The girl still wore the brown dress with lace
+collar and cuffs, and the veil drawn down to her nose. The man bent over his plate,
+with his close cropped head held low.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"There's a code," I heard Sam say, either to me or to himself, "that won't let you
+shoot a man in the company of a woman; but, by thunder, there ain't one to keep
+you from killing a woman in the company of a man!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">And, quicker than my mind could follow his argument, he whipped a Colt's
+automatic from under his left arm and pumped six bullets into the body that the
+brown dress covered&mdash;the brown dress with the lace collar and cuffs and the
+accordion-plaited skirt.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The young person in the dark sack suit, from whose head and from whose life a
+woman's glory had been clipped, laid her head on her arms stretched upon the table;
+while people came running to raise Ben Tatum from the floor in his feminine
+masquerade that had given Sam the opportunity to set aside, technically, the
+obligations of the code. </span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="11"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+XI<br>
+<br>
+SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Few young couples in the Big-City-of-Bluff began their married existence with
+greater promise of happiness than did Mr. and Mrs. Claude Turpin. They felt no
+especial animosity toward each other; they were comfortably established in a
+handsome apartment house that had a name and accommodations like those of a
+sleeping-car; they were living as expensively as the couple on the next floor above
+who had twice their income; and their marriage had occurred on a wager, a
+ferry-boat and first acquaintance, thus securing a sensational newspaper notice with
+their names attached to pictures of the Queen of Roumania and M. Santos-Dumont.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Turpin's income was $200 per month. On pay day, after calculating the amounts
+due for rent, instalments on furniture and piano, gas, and bills owed to the florist,
+confectioner, milliner, tailor, wine merchant and cab company, the Turpins would
+find that they still had $200 left to spend. How to do this is one of the secrets of
+metropolitan life.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The domestic life of the Turpins was a beautiful picture to see. But you couldn't
+gaze upon it as you could at an oleograph of "Don't Wake Grandma," or "Brooklyn
+by Moonlight."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">You had to blink when looked at it; and you heard a fizzing sound just like the
+machine with a "scope" at the end of it. Yes; there wasn't much repose about the
+picture of the Turpins' domestic life. It was something like "Spearing Salmon in the
+Columbia River," or "Japanese Artillery in Action."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Every day was just like another; as the days are in New York. In the morning
+Turpin would take bromo-seltzer, his pocket change from under the clock, his hat,
+no breakfast and his departure for the office. At noon Mrs. Turpin would get out of
+bed and humour, put on a kimono, airs, and the water to boil for coffee.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Turpin lunched downtown. He came home at 6 to dress for dinner. They always
+dined out. They strayed from the chop-house to chop-sueydom, from terrace to
+table d'h&ocirc;te, from rathskeller to roadhouse, from caf&eacute; to casino, from Maria's to the
+Martha Washington. Such is domestic life in the great city. Your vine is the
+mistletoe; your fig tree bears dates. Your household gods are Mercury and John
+Howard Payne. For the wedding march you now hear only "Come with the Gypsy
+Bride." You rarely dine at the same place twice in succession. You tire of the food;
+and, besides, you want to give them time for the question of that souvenir silver
+sugar bowl to blow over.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Turpins were therefore happy. They made many warm and delightful friends,
+some of whom they remembered the next day. Their home life was an ideal one,
+according to the rules and regulations of the Book of Bluff.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">There came a time when it dawned upon Turpin that his wife was getting away
+with too much money. If you belong to the near-swell class in the Big City, and
+your income is $200 per month, and you find at the end of the month, after looking
+over the bills for current expenses, that you, yourself, have spent $150, you very
+naturally wonder what has become of the other $50. So you suspect your wife. And
+perhaps you give her a hint that something needs explanation.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I say, Vivien," said Turpin, one afternoon when they were enjoying in rapt silence
+the peace and quiet of their cozy apartment, "you've been creating a hiatus big
+enough for a dog to crawl through in this month's honorarium. You haven't been
+paying your dressmaker anything on account, have you?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">There was a moment's silence. No sounds could be heard except the breathing of
+the fox terrier, and the subdued, monotonous sizzling of Vivien's fulvous locks
+against the insensate curling irons. Claude Turpin, sitting upon a pillow that he had
+thoughtfully placed upon the convolutions of the apartment sofa, narrowly watched
+the riante, lovely face of his wife.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Claudie, dear," said she, touching her finger to her ruby tongue and testing the
+unresponsive curling irons, "you do me an injustice. Mme. Toinette has not seen a
+cent of mine since the day you paid your tailor ten dollars on account."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Turpin's suspicions were allayed for the time. But one day soon there came an
+anonymous letter to him that read:</span></p>
+<br>
+<blockquote>
+<span style="font-size: 12pt">
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Watch your wife. She is blowing in your money secretly. I was a sufferer just as you
+are. The place is No. 345 Blank Street. A word to the wise, etc.<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A MAN WHO KNOWS.<br>
+</span>
+</blockquote>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Turpin took this letter to the captain of police of the precinct that he lived in.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"My precinct is as clean as a hound's tooth," said the captain. "The lid's shut down
+as close there as it is over the eye of a Williamsburg girl when she's kissed at a
+party. But if you think there's anything queer at the address, I'll go there with ye."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">On the next afternoon at 3, Turpin and the captain crept softly up the stairs of No.
+345 Blank Street. A dozen plain-clothes men, dressed in full police uniforms, so as
+to allay suspicion, waited in the hall below.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At the top of the stairs was a door, which was found to be locked. The captain took
+a key from his pocket and unlocked it. The two men entered.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">They found themselves in a large room, occupied by twenty or twenty-five
+elegantly clothed ladies. Racing charts hung against the walls, a ticker clicked in
+one corner; with a telephone receiver to his ear a man was calling out the various
+positions of the horses in a very exciting race. The occupants of the room looked
+up at the intruders; but, as if reassured by the sight of the captain's uniform, they
+reverted their attention to the man at the telephone.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You see," said the captain to Turpin, "the value of an anonymous letter! No
+high-minded and self-respecting gentleman should consider one worthy of notice. Is
+your wife among this assembly, Mr. Turpin?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"She is not," said Turpin.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"And if she was," continued the captain, "would she be within the reach of the
+tongue of slander? These ladies constitute a Browning Society. They meet to
+discuss the meaning of the great poet. The telephone is connected with Boston,
+whence the parent society transmits frequently its interpretations of the poems. Be
+ashamed of yer suspicions, Mr. Turpin."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Go soak your shield," said Turpin. "Vivien knows how to take care of herself in a
+pool-room. She's not dropping anything on the ponies. There must be something
+queer going on here."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Nothing but Browning," said the captain. "Hear that?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Thanatopsis by a nose," drawled the man at the telephone. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"That's not Browning; that's Longfellow," said Turpin, who sometimes read books.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Back to the pasture!" exclaimed the captain. "Longfellow made the
+pacing-to-wagon record of 7.53 'way back in 1868."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I believe there's something queer about this joint," repeated Turpin. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I don't see it," said the captain.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I know it looks like a pool-room, all right," persisted Turpin, "but that's all a blind.
+Vivien has been dropping a lot of coin somewhere. I believe there's some
+under-handed work going on here."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A number of racing sheets were tacked close together, covering a large space on one
+of the walls. Turpin, suspicious, tore several of them down. A door, previously
+hidden, was revealed. Turpin placed an ear to the crack and listened intently. He
+heard the soft hum of many voices, low and guarded laughter, and a sharp, metallic
+clicking and scraping as if from a multitude of tiny but busy objects.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"My God! It is as I feared!" whispered Turpin to himself. "Summon your men at
+once!" he called to the captain. "She is in there, I know."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At the blowing of the captain's whistle the uniformed plain-clothes men rushed up
+the stairs into the pool-room. When they saw the betting paraphernalia distributed
+around they halted, surprised and puzzled to know why they had been summoned.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But the captain pointed to the locked door and bade them break it down. In a few
+moments they demolished it with the axes they carried. Into the other room sprang
+Claude Turpin, with the captain at his heels.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The scene was one that lingered long in Turpin's mind. Nearly a score of
+women&mdash;women expensively and fashionably clothed, many beautiful and of refined
+appearance&mdash;had been seated at little marble-topped tables. When the police burst
+open the door they shrieked and ran here and there like gayly plumed birds that had
+been disturbed in a tropical grove. Some became hysterical; one or two fainted;
+several knelt at the feet of the officers and besought them for mercy on account of
+their families and social position.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A man who had been seated behind a desk had seized a roll of currency as large as
+the ankle of a Paradise Roof Gardens chorus girl and jumped out of the window.
+Half a dozen attendants huddled at one end of the room, breathless from fear.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Upon the tables remained the damning and incontrovertible evidences of the guilt of
+the habitu&eacute;es of that sinister room&mdash;dish after dish heaped high with ice cream, and
+surrounded by stacks of empty ones, scraped to the last spoonful.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ladies," said the captain to his weeping circle of prisoners, "I'll not hold any of
+yez. Some of yez I recognize as having fine houses and good standing in the
+community, with hard-working husbands and childer at home. But I'll read ye a bit
+of a lecture before ye go. In the next room there's a 20-to-1 shot just dropped in
+under the wire three lengths ahead of the field. Is this the way ye waste your
+husbands' money instead of helping earn it? Home wid yez! The lid's on the
+ice-cream freezer in this precinct."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Claude Turpin's wife was among the patrons of the raided room. He led her to their
+apartment in stem silence. There she wept so remorsefully and besought his
+forgiveness so pleadingly that he forgot his just anger, and soon he gathered his
+penitent golden-haired Vivien in his arms and forgave her.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Darling," she murmured, half sobbingly, as the moonlight drifted through the open
+window, glorifying her sweet, upturned face, "I know I done wrong. I will never
+touch ice cream again. I forgot you were not a millionaire. I used to go there every
+day. But to-day I felt some strange, sad presentiment of evil, and I was not myself.
+I ate only eleven saucers."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Say no more," said Claude, gently as he fondly caressed her waving curls.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"And you are sure that you fully forgive me?" asked Vivien, gazing at him
+entreatingly with dewy eyes of heavenly blue.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Almost sure, little one," answered Claude, stooping and lightly touching her snowy
+forehead with his lips. "I'll let you know later on. I've got a month's salary down on
+Vanilla to win the three-year-old steeplechase to-morrow; and if the ice-cream
+hunch is to the good you are It again&mdash;see?"</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="12"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+XII<br>
+<br>
+THE WHIRLIGIG OF LIFE<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Justice-of-the-Peace Benaja Widdup sat in the door of his office smoking his
+elder-stem pipe. Half-way to the zenith the Cumberland range rose blue-gray in the
+afternoon haze. A speckled hen swaggered down the main street of the
+"settlement," cackling foolishly. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Up the road came a sound of creaking axles, and then a slow cloud of dust, and
+then a bull-cart bearing Ransie Bilbro and his wife. The cart stopped at the Justice's
+door, and the two climbed down. Ransie was a narrow six feet of sallow brown
+skin and yellow hair. The imperturbability of the mountains hung upon him like a
+suit of armour. The woman was calicoed, angled, snuff-brushed, and weary with
+unknown desires. Through it all gleamed a faint protest of cheated youth
+unconscious of its loss.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Justice of the Peace slipped his feet into his shoes, for the sake of dignity, and
+moved to let them enter.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"We-all," said the woman, in a voice like the wind blowing through pine boughs,
+"wants a divo'ce." She looked at Ransie to see if he noted any flaw or ambiguity or
+evasion or partiality or self-partisanship in her statement of their business.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"A divo'ce," repeated Ransie, with a solemn nod. "We-all can't git along together
+nohow. It's lonesome enough fur to live in the mount'ins when a man and a woman
+keers fur one another. But when she's a-spittin' like a wildcat or a-sullenin' like a
+hoot-owl in the cabin, a man ain't got no call to live with her."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"When he's a no-'count varmint," said the woman, "without any especial warmth,
+a-traipsin' along of scalawags and moonshiners and a-layin' on his back pizen 'ith
+co'n whiskey, and a-pesterin' folks with a pack o' hungry, triflin' houn's to feed!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"When she keeps a-throwin' skillet lids," came Ransie's antiphony, "and slings b'ilin'
+water on the best coon-dog in the Cumberlands, and sets herself agin' cookin' a
+man's victuals, and keeps him awake o' nights accusin' him of a sight of doin's!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"When he's al'ays a-fightin' the revenues, and gits a hard name in the mount'ins fur
+a mean man, who's gwine to be able fur to sleep o' nights?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Justice of the Peace stirred deliberately to his duties. He placed his one chair
+and a wooden stool for his petitioners. He opened his book of statutes on the table
+and scanned the index. Presently he wiped his spectacles and shifted his inkstand. </span></p>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The law and the statutes," said he, "air silent on the subjeck of divo'ce as fur as the
+jurisdiction of this co't air concerned. But, accordin' to equity and the Constitution
+and the golden rule, it's a bad barg'in that can't run both ways. If a justice of the
+peace can marry a couple, it's plain that he is bound to be able to divo'ce 'em. This
+here office will issue a decree of divo'ce and abide by the decision of the Supreme
+Co't to hold it good."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Ransie Bilbro drew a small tobacco-bag from his trousers pocket. Out of this he
+shook upon the table a five-dollar note. "Sold a b'arskin and two foxes fur that," he
+remarked. "It's all the money we got." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The regular price of a divo'ce in this co't," said the Justice, "air five dollars." He
+stuffed the bill into the pocket of his homespun vest with a deceptive air of
+indifference. With much bodily toil and mental travail he wrote the decree upon
+half a sheet of foolscap, and then copied it upon the other. Ransie Bilbro and his
+wife listened to his reading of the document that was to give them freedom: </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Know all men by these presents that Ransie Bilbro and his wife, Ariela Bilbro, this
+day personally appeared before me and promises that hereinafter they will neither
+love, honour, nor obey each other, neither for better nor worse, being of sound mind
+and body, and accept summons for divorce according to the peace and dignity of
+the State. Herein fail not, so help you God. Benaja Widdup, justice of the peace in
+and for the county of Piedmont, State of Tennessee."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Justice was about to hand one of the documents to Ransie. The voice of Ariela
+delayed the transfer. Both men looked at her. Their dull masculinity was confronted
+by something sudden and unexpected in the woman.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Judge, don't you give him that air paper yit. 'Tain't all settled, nohow. I got to
+have my rights first. I got to have my ali-money. 'Tain't no kind of a way to do fur a
+man to divo'ce his wife 'thout her havin' a cent fur to do with. I'm a-layin' off to be
+a-goin' up to brother Ed's up on Hogback Mount'in. I'm bound fur to hev a pa'r of
+shoes and some snuff and things besides. Ef Rance kin affo'd a divo'ce, let him pay
+me ali-money."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Ransie Bilbro was stricken to dumb perplexity. There had been no previous hint of
+alimony. Women were always bringing up startling and unlooked-for issues.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Justice Benaja Widdup felt that the point demanded judicial decision. The
+authorities were also silent on the subject of alimony. But the woman's feet were
+bare. The trail to Hogback Mountain was steep and flinty.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ariela Bilbro," he asked, in official tones, "how much did you 'low would be good
+and sufficient ali-money in the case befo' the co't." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I 'lowed," she answered, "fur the shoes and all, to say five dollars. That ain't much
+fur ali-money, but I reckon that'll git me to up brother Ed's."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The amount," said the Justice, "air not onreasonable. Ransie Bilbro, you air
+ordered by the co't to pay the plaintiff the sum of five dollars befo' the decree of
+divo'ce air issued."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I hain't no mo' money," breathed Ransie, heavily. "I done paid you all I had."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Otherwise," said the Justice, looking severely over his spectacles, "you air in
+contempt of co't."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I reckon if you gimme till to-morrow," pleaded the husband, "I mout be able to
+rake or scrape it up somewhars. I never looked for to be a-payin' no ali-money."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The case air adjourned," said Benaja Widdup, "till to-morrow, when you-all will
+present yo'selves and obey the order of the co't. Followin' of which the decrees of
+divo'ce will be delivered." He sat down in the door and began to loosen a
+shoestring.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"We mout as well go down to Uncle Ziah's," decided Ransie, "and spend the night."
+He climbed into the cart on one side, and Ariela climbed in on the other. Obeying
+the flap of his rope, the little red bull slowly came around on a tack, and the cart
+crawled away in the nimbus arising from its wheels.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup smoked his elder-stem pipe. Late in the
+afternoon he got his weekly paper, and read it until the twilight dimmed its lines.
+Then he lit the tallow candle on his table, and read until the moon rose, marking the
+time for supper. He lived in the double log cabin on the slope near the girdled
+poplar. Going home to supper he crossed a little branch darkened by a laurel thicket.
+The dark figure of a man stepped from the laurels and pointed a rifle at his breast.
+His hat was pulled down low, and something covered most of his face.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I want yo' money," said the figure, "'thout any talk. I'm gettin' nervous, and my
+finger's a-wabblin' on this here trigger." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I've only got f-f-five dollars," said the Justice, producing it from his vest pocket.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Roll it up," came the order, "and stick it in the end of this here gun-bar'l."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The bill was crisp and new. Even fingers that were clumsy and trembling found
+little difficulty in making a spill of it and inserting it (this with less ease) into the
+muzzle of the rifle. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Now I reckon you kin be goin' along," said the robber.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Justice lingered not on his way.</span></p>
+
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The next day came the little red bull, drawing the cart to the office door. Justice
+Benaja Widdup had his shoes on, for he was expecting the visit. In his presence
+Ransie Bilbro handed to his wife a five-dollar bill. The official's eye sharply
+viewed it. It seemed to curl up as though it had been rolled and inserted into the
+end of a gun-barrel. But the Justice refrained from comment. It is true that other
+bills might be inclined to curl. He handed each one a decree of divorce. Each stood
+awkwardly silent, slowly folding the guarantee of freedom. The woman cast a shy
+glance full of constraint at Ransie. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I reckon you'll be goin' back up to the cabin," she said, along 'ith the bull-cart.
+There's bread in the tin box settin' on the shelf. I put the bacon in the b'ilin'-pot to
+keep the hounds from gittin' it. Don't forget to wind the clock to-night."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You air a-goin' to your brother Ed's?" asked Ransie, with fine unconcern.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I was 'lowin' to get along up thar afore night. I ain't sayin' as they'll pester
+theyselves any to make me welcome, but I hain't nowhar else fur to go. It's a right
+smart ways, and I reckon I better be goin'. I'll be a-sayin' good-bye, Ranse&mdash;that is,
+if you keer fur to say so."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I don't know as anybody's a hound dog," said Ransie, in a martyr's voice, "fur to
+not want to say good-bye&mdash;'less you air so anxious to git away that you don't want
+me to say it."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Ariela was silent. She folded the five-dollar bill and her decree carefully, and
+placed them in the bosom of her dress. Benaja Widdup watched the money
+disappear with mournful eyes behind his spectacles. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">And then with his next words he achieved rank (as his thoughts ran) with either the
+great crowd of the world's sympathizers or the little crowd of its great financiers.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Be kind o' lonesome in the old cabin to-night, Ranse," he said. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Ransie Bilbro stared out at the Cumberlands, clear blue now in the sunlight. He did
+not look at Ariela.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I 'low it might be lonesome," he said; "but when folks gits mad and wants a
+divo'ce, you can't make folks stay."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"There's others wanted a divo'ce," said Ariela, speaking to the wooden stool.
+"Besides, nobody don't want nobody to stay."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Nobody never said they didn't."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Nobody never said they did. I reckon I better start on now to brother Ed's."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Nobody can't wind that old clock."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Want me to go back along 'ith you in the cart and wind it fur you, Ranse?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The mountaineer's countenance was proof against emotion. But he reached out a
+big hand and enclosed Ariela's thin brown one. Her soul peeped out once through
+her impassive face, hallowing it.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Them hounds shan't pester you no more," said Ransie. "I reckon I been mean and
+low down. You wind that clock, Ariela."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"My heart hit's in that cabin, Ranse," she whispered, "along 'ith you. I ai'nt a-goin'
+to git mad no more. Le's be startin', Ranse, so's we kin git home by sundown." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup interposed as they started for the door,
+forgetting his presence. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"In the name of the State of Tennessee," he said, "I forbid you-all to be a-defyin' of
+its laws and statutes. This co't is mo' than willin' and full of joy to see the clouds of
+discord and misunderstandin' rollin' away from two lovin' hearts, but it air the duty
+of the co't to p'eserve the morals and integrity of the State. The co't reminds you
+that you air no longer man and wife, but air divo'ced by regular decree, and as such
+air not entitled to the benefits and 'purtenances of the mattermonal estate."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Ariela caught Ransie's arm. Did those words mean that she must lose him now
+when they had just learned the lesson of life?</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"But the co't air prepared," went on the Justice, "fur to remove the disabilities set up
+by the decree of divo'ce. The co't air on hand to perform the solemn ceremony of
+marri'ge, thus fixin' things up and enablin' the parties in the case to resume the
+honour'ble and elevatin' state of mattermony which they desires. The fee fur
+performin' said ceremony will be, in this case, to wit, five dollars." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Ariela caught the gleam of promise in his words. Swiftly her hand went to her
+bosom. Freely as an alighting dove the bill fluttered to the Justice's table. Her
+sallow cheek coloured as she stood hand in hand with Ransie and listened to the
+reuniting words.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Ransie helped her into the cart, and climbed in beside her. The little red bull turned
+once more, and they set out, hand-clasped, for the mountains.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup sat in his door and took off his shoes. Once
+again he fingered the bill tucked down in his vest pocket. Once again he smoked
+his elder-stem pipe. Once again the speckled hen swaggered down the main street
+of the "settlement," cackling foolishly.</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="13"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+XIII<br>
+<br>
+A SACRIFICE HIT<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The editor of the <i>Hearthstone Magazine</i> has his own ideas about the selection of
+manuscript for his publication. His theory is no secret; in fact, he will expound it to
+you willingly sitting at his mahogany desk, smiling benignantly and tapping his
+knee gently with his gold-rimmed eye-glasses.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The <i>Hearthstone</i>," he will say, "does not employ a staff of readers. We obtain
+opinions of the manuscripts submitted to us directly from types of the various
+classes of our readers."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">That is the editor's theory; and this is the way he carries it out: </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When a batch of MSS. is received the editor stuffs every one of his pockets full of
+them and distributes them as he goes about during the day. The office employees,
+the hall porter, the janitor, the elevator man, messenger boys, the waiters at the caf&eacute;
+where the editor has luncheon, the man at the news-stand where he buys his
+evening paper, the grocer and milkman, the guard on the 5.30 uptown elevated
+train, the ticket-chopper at Sixty &ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;th street, the cook and maid at his home&mdash;these
+are the readers who pass upon MSS. sent in to the <i>Hearthstone Magazine</i>. If his
+pockets are not entirely emptied by the time he reaches the bosom of his family the
+remaining ones are handed over to his wife to read after the baby goes to sleep. A
+few days later the editor gathers in the MSS. during his regular rounds and
+considers the verdict of his assorted readers.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">This system of making up a magazine has been very successful; and the circulation,
+paced by the advertising rates, is making a wonderful record of speed.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The <i>Hearthstone</i> Company also publishes books, and its imprint is to be found on
+several successful works&mdash;all recommended, says the editor, by the <i>Hearthstone's</i>
+army of volunteer readers. Now and then (according to talkative members of the
+editorial staff) the <i>Hearthstone</i> has allowed manuscripts to slip through its fingers
+on the advice of its heterogeneous readers, that afterward proved to be famous
+sellers when brought out by other houses.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">For instance (the gossips say), "The Rise and Fall of Silas Latham" was
+unfavourably passed upon by the elevator-man; the office-boy unanimously rejected
+"The Boss"; "In the Bishop's Carriage" was contemptuously looked upon by the
+street-car conductor; "The Deliverance" was turned down by a clerk in the
+subscription department whose wife's mother had just begun a two-months' visit at
+his home; "The Queen's Quair" came back from the janitor with the comment: "So
+is the book."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But nevertheless the <i>Hearthstone</i> adheres to its theory and system, and it will never
+lack volunteer readers; for each one of the widely scattered staff, from the young
+lady stenographer in the editorial office to the man who shovels in coal (whose
+adverse decision lost to the <i>Hearthstone</i> Company the manuscript of "The Under
+World"), has expectations of becoming editor of the magazine some day.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">This method of the <i>Hearthstone</i> was well known to Allen Slayton when he wrote
+his novelette entitled "Love Is All." Slayton had hung about the editorial offices of
+all the magazines so persistently that he was acquainted with the inner workings of
+every one in Gotham. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He knew not only that the editor of the Hearthstone handed his MSS. around among
+different types of people for reading, but that the stories of sentimental love-interest
+went to Miss Puffkin, the editor's stenographer. Another of the editor's peculiar
+customs was to conceal invariably the name of the writer from his readers of MSS.
+so that a glittering name might not influence the sincerity of their reports.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Slayton made "Love Is All" the effort of his life. He gave it six months of the best
+work of his heart and brain. It was a pure love-story, fine, elevated, romantic,
+passionate&mdash;a prose poem that set the divine blessing of love (I am transposing from
+the manuscript) high above all earthly gifts and honours, and listed it in the
+catalogue of heaven's choicest rewards. Slayton's literary ambition was intense. He
+would have sacrificed all other worldly possessions to have gained fame in his
+chosen art. He would almost have cut off his right hand, or have offered himself to
+the knife of the appendicitis fancier to have realized his dream of seeing one of his
+efforts published in the <i>Hearthstone</i>.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Slayton finished "Love Is All," and took it to the <i>Hearthstone</i> in person. The office
+of the magazine was in a large, conglomerate building, presided under by a janitor.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">As the writer stepped inside the door on his way to the elevator a potato masher
+flew through the hall, wrecking Slayton's hat, and smashing the glass of the door.
+Closely following in the wake of the utensil flew the janitor, a bulky, unwholesome
+man, suspenderless and sordid, panic-stricken and breathless. A frowsy, fat woman
+with flying hair followed the missile. The janitor's foot slipped on the tiled floor, he
+fell in a heap with an exclamation of despair. The woman pounced upon him and
+seized his hair. The man bellowed lustily. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Her vengeance wreaked, the virago rose and stalked triumphant as Minerva, back to
+some cryptic domestic retreat at the rear. The janitor got to his feet, blown and
+humiliated.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"This is married life," he said to Slayton, with a certain bruised humour. "That's the
+girl I used to lay awake of nights thinking about. Sorry about your hat, mister. Say,
+don't snitch to the tenants about this, will yer? I don't want to lose me job."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Slayton took the elevator at the end of the hall and went up to the offices of the
+<i>Hearthstone</i>. He left the MS. of "Love Is All" with the editor, who agreed to give
+him an answer as to its availability at the end of a week.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Slayton formulated his great winning scheme on his way down. It struck him with
+one brilliant flash, and he could not refrain from admiring his own genius in
+conceiving the idea. That very night he set about carrying it into execution.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Miss Puffkin, the <i>Hearthstone</i> stenographer, boarded in the same house with the
+author. She was an oldish, thin, exclusive, languishing, sentimental maid; and
+Slayton had been introduced to her some time before.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The writer's daring and self-sacrificing project was this: He knew that the editor of
+the <i>Hearthstone</i> relied strongly upon Miss Puffkin's judgment in the manuscript of
+romantic and sentimental fiction. Her taste represented the immense average of
+mediocre women who devour novels and stories of that type. The central idea and
+keynote of "Love Is All" was love at first sight&mdash;the enrapturing,</span></p>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">irresistible, soul-thrilling feeling that compels a man or a woman to recognize his or
+her spirit-mate as soon as heart speaks to heart. Suppose he should impress this
+divine truth upon Miss Puffkin personally!&mdash;would she not surely indorse her new
+and rapturous sensations by recommending highly to the editor of the <i>Hearthstone</i>
+the novelette "Love Is All"?</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Slayton thought so. And that night he took Miss Puffkin to the theatre. The next
+night he made vehement love to her in the dim parlour of the boarding-house. He
+quoted freely from "Love Is All"; and he wound up with Miss Puffkin's head on his
+shoulder, and visions of literary fame dancing in his head.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But Slayton did not stop at love-making. This, he said to himself, was the turning
+point of his life; and, like a true sportsman, he "went the limit." On Thursday night
+he and Miss Puffkin walked over to the Big Church in the Middle of the Block and
+were married. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Brave Slayton! Ch&acirc;teaubriand died in a garret, Byron courted a widow, Keats
+starved to death, Poe mixed his drinks, De Quincey hit the pipe, Ade lived in
+Chicago, James kept on doing it, Dickens wore white socks, De Maupassant wore a
+strait-jacket, Tom Watson became a Populist, Jeremiah wept, all these authors did
+these things for the sake of literature, but thou didst cap them all; thou marriedst a
+wife for to carve for thyself a niche in the temple of fame!</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">On Friday morning Mrs. Slayton said she would go over to the <i>Hearthstone</i> office,
+hand in one or two manuscripts that the editor had given to her to read, and resign her
+position as stenographer. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Was there anything&mdash;er&mdash;that&mdash;er&mdash;you particularly fancied in the stories you are
+going to turn in?" asked Slayton with a thumping heart.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"There was one&mdash;a novelette, that I liked so much," said his wife. "I haven't read
+anything in years that I thought was half as nice and true to life."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">That afternoon Slayton hurried down to the <i>Hearthstone</i> office. He felt that his
+reward was close at hand. With a novelette in the <i>Hearthstone</i>, literary reputation
+would soon be his.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The office boy met him at the railing in the outer office. It was not for unsuccessful
+authors to hold personal colloquy with the editor except at rare intervals.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Slayton, hugging himself internally, was nursing in his heart the exquisite hope of
+being able to crush the office boy with his forthcoming success.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He inquired concerning his novelette. The office boy went into the sacred precincts
+and brought forth a large envelope, thick with more than the bulk of a thousand
+checks.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The boss told me to tell you he's sorry," said the boy, "but your manuscript ain't
+available for the magazine."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Slayton stood, dazed. "Can you tell me," he stammered, "whether or no Miss
+Puff&mdash;that is my&mdash;I mean Miss Puffkin&mdash;handed in a novelette this morning that she
+had been asked to read?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Sure she did," answered the office boy wisely. "I heard the old man say that Miss
+Puffkin said it was a daisy. The name of it was, 'Married for the Mazuma, or a
+Working Girl's Triumph.'"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Say, you!" said the office boy confidentially, "your name's Slayton, ain't it? I
+guess I mixed cases on you without meanin' to do it. The boss give me some
+manuscript to hand around the other day and I got the ones for Miss Puffkin and the
+janitor mixed. I guess it's all right, though."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">And then Slayton looked closer and saw on the cover of his manuscript, under the
+title "Love Is All," the janitor's comment scribbled with a piece of charcoal:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The &ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash; you say!"</span></p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="14"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+XIV<br>
+<br>
+THE ROADS WE TAKE<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Twenty miles west of Tucson, the "Sunset Express" stopped at a tank to take on
+water. Besides the aqueous addition the engine of that famous flyer acquired some
+other things that were not good for it. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">While the fireman was lowering the feeding hose, Bob Tidball, "Shark" Dodson and
+a quarter-bred Creek Indian called John Big Dog climbed on the engine and showed
+the engineer three round orifices in pieces of ordnance that they carried. These
+orifices so impressed the engineer with their possibilities that he raised both hands
+in a gesture such as accompanies the ejaculation "Do tell!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At the crisp command of Shark Dodson, who was leader of the attacking force the
+engineer descended to the ground and uncoupled the engine and tender. Then John
+Big Dog, perched upon the coal, sportively held two guns upon the engine driver
+and the fireman, and suggested that they run the engine fifty yards away and there
+await further orders. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Shark Dodson and Bob Tidball, scorning to put such low-grade ore as the
+passengers through the mill, struck out for the rich pocket of the express car. They
+found the messenger serene in the belief that the "Sunset Express" was taking on
+nothing more stimulating and dangerous than aqua pura. While Bob was knocking
+this idea out of his head with the butt-end of his six-shooter Shark Dodson was
+already dosing the express-car safe with dynamite.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The safe exploded to the tune of $30,000, all gold and currency. The passengers
+thrust their heads casually out of the windows to look for the thunder-cloud. The
+conductor jerked at the bell-rope, which sagged down loose and unresisting, at his
+tug. Shark Dodson and Bob Tidball, with their booty in a stout canvas bag,
+tumbled out of the express car and ran awkwardly in their high-heeled boots to the
+engine.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The engineer, sullenly angry but wise, ran the engine, according to orders, rapidly
+away from the inert train. But before this was accomplished the express messenger,
+recovered from Bob Tidball's persuader to neutrality, jumped out of his car with a
+Winchester rifle and took a trick in the game. Mr. John Big Dog, sitting on the coal
+tender, unwittingly made a wrong lead by giving an imitation of a target, and the
+messenger trumped him. With a ball exactly between his shoulder blades the Creek
+chevalier of industry rolled off to the ground, thus increasing the share of his
+comrades in the loot by one-sixth each.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Two miles from the tank the engineer was ordered to stop.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The robbers waved a defiant adieu and plunged down the steep slope into the thick
+woods that lined the track. Five minutes of crashing through a thicket of chaparral
+brought them to open woods, where three horses were tied to low-hanging
+branches. One was waiting for John Big Dog, who would never ride by night or
+day again. This animal the robbers divested of saddle and bridle and set free. They
+mounted the other two with the bag across one pommel, and rode fast and with
+discretion through the forest and up a primeval, lonely gorge. Here the animal that
+bore Bob Tidball slipped on a mossy boulder and broke a foreleg. They shot him
+through the head at once and sat down to hold a council of flight. Made secure for
+the present by the tortuous trail they had travelled, the question of time was no
+longer so big. Many miles and hours lay between them and the spryest posse that
+could follow. Shark Dodson's horse, with trailing rope and dropped bridle, panted
+and cropped thankfully of the grass along the stream in the gorge. Bob Tidball
+opened the sack, drew out double handfuls of the neat packages of currency and the
+one sack of gold and chuckled with the glee of a child.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Say, you old double-decked pirate," he called joyfully to Dodson, "you said we
+could do it&mdash;you got a head for financing that knocks the horns off of anything in
+Arizona."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What are we going to do about a hoss for you, Bob? We ain't got long to wait here.
+They'll be on our trail before daylight in the mornin'."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, I guess that cayuse of yourn'll carry double for a while," answered the
+sanguine Bob. "We'll annex the first animal we come across. By jingoes, we made
+a haul, didn't we? Accordin' to the marks on this money there's $30,000&mdash;$15,000
+apiece!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's short of what I expected," said Shark Dodson, kicking softly at the packages
+with the toe of his boot. And then he looked pensively at the wet sides of his tired
+horse.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Old Bolivar's mighty nigh played out," he said, slowly. "I wish that sorrel of yours
+hadn't got hurt."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"So do I," said Bob, heartily, "but it can't be helped. Bolivar's got plenty of
+bottom&mdash;he'll get us both far enough to get fresh mounts. Dang it, Shark, I can't help
+thinkin' how funny it is that an Easterner like you can come out here and give us
+Western fellows cards and spades in the desperado business. What part of the East
+was you from, anyway?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"New York State," said Shark Dodson, sitting down on a boulder and chewing a
+twig. "I was born on a farm in Ulster County. I ran away from home when I was
+seventeen. It was an accident my coming West. I was walkin' along the road with
+my clothes in a bundle, makin' for New York City. I had an idea of goin' there and
+makin' lots of money. I always felt like I could do it. I came to a place one evenin'
+where the road forked and I didn't know which fork to take. I studied about it for
+half an hour, and then I took the left-hand. That night I run into the camp of a Wild
+West show that was travellin' among the little towns, and I went West with it. I've
+often wondered if I wouldn't have turned out different if I'd took the other road."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, I reckon you'd have ended up about the same," said Bob Tidball, cheerfully
+philosophical. "It ain't the roads we take; it's what's inside of us that makes us turn
+out the way we do."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Shark Dodson got up and leaned against a tree.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'd a good deal rather that sorrel of yourn hadn't hurt himself, Bob," he said again,
+almost pathetically.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Same here," agreed Bob; "he was sure a first-rate kind of a crowbait. But Bolivar,
+he'll pull us through all right. Reckon we'd better be movin' on, hadn't we, Shark?
+I'll bag this boodle ag'in and we'll hit the trail for higher timber."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Bob Tidball replaced the spoil in the bag and tied the mouth of it tightly with a cord.
+When he looked up the most prominent object that he saw was the muzzle of Shark
+Dodson's .45 held upon him without a waver.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Stop your funnin'," said Bob, with a grin. "We got to be hittin' the breeze."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Set still," said Shark. "You ain't goin' to hit no breeze, Bob. I hate to tell you, but
+there ain't any chance for but one of us. Bolivar, he's plenty tired, and he can't carry
+double."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"We been pards, me and you, Shark Dodson, for three year," Bob said quietly.
+"We've risked our lives together time and again. I've always give you a square deal,
+and I thought you was a man. I've heard some queer stories about you shootin' one
+or two men in a peculiar way, but I never believed 'em. Now if you're just havin' a
+little fun with me, Shark, put your gun up, and we'll get on Bolivar and vamose. If
+you mean to shoot&mdash;shoot, you blackhearted son of a tarantula!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Shark Dodson's face bore a deeply sorrowful look. "You don't know how bad I
+feel," he sighed, "about that sorrel of yourn breakin' his leg, Bob."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The expression on Dodson's face changed in an instant to one of cold ferocity
+mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed itself for a moment
+like an evil face in the window of a reputable house.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Truly Bob Tidball was never to "hit the breeze" again. The deadly .45 of the false
+friend cracked and filled the gorge with a roar that the walls hurled back with
+indignant echoes. And Bolivar, unconscious accomplice, swiftly bore away the last
+of the holders-up of the "Sunset Express," not put to the stress of "carrying double." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But as "Shark" Dodson galloped away the woods seemed to fade from his view; the
+revolver in his right hand turned to the curved arm of a mahogany chair; his saddle
+was strangely upholstered, and he opened his eyes and saw his feet, not in stirrups,
+but resting quietly on the edge of a quartered-oak desk.</span></p>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I am telling you that Dodson, of the firm of Dodson &amp; Decker, Wall Street brokers,
+opened his eyes. Peabody, the confidential clerk, was standing by his chair,
+hesitating to speak. There was a confused hum of wheels below, and the sedative
+buzz of an electric fan. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ahem! Peabody," said Dodson, blinking. "I must have fallen asleep. I had a most
+remarkable dream. What is it, Peabody?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mr. Williams, sir, of Tracy &amp; Williams, is outside. He has come to settle his deal
+in X. Y. Z. The market caught him short, sir, if you remember."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Yes, I remember. What is X. Y. Z. quoted at to-day, Peabody?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"One eighty-five, sir."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Then that's his price."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Excuse me," said Peabody, rather nervously "for speaking of it, but I've been
+talking to Williams. He's an old friend of yours, Mr. Dodson, and you practically
+have a corner in X. Y. Z. I thought you might&mdash;that is, I thought you might not
+remember that he sold you the stock at 98. If he settles at the market price it will
+take every cent he has in the world and his home too to deliver the shares." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The expression on Dodson's face changed in an instant to one of cold ferocity
+mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed itself for a moment
+like an evil face in the window of a reputable house.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"He will settle at one eighty-five," said Dodson. "Bolivar cannot carry double."</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="15"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+XV<br>
+<br>
+A BLACKJACK BARGAINER<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The most disreputable thing in Yancey Goree's law office was Goree himself,
+sprawled in his creaky old arm-chair. The rickety little office, built of red brick,
+was set flush with the street&mdash;the main street of the town of Bethel.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Bethel rested upon the foot-hills of the Blue Ridge. Above it the mountains were
+piled to the sky. Far below it the turbid Catawba gleamed yellow along its
+disconsolate valley.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The June day was at its sultriest hour. Bethel dozed in the tepid shade. Trade was
+not. It was so still that Goree, reclining in his chair, distinctly heard the clicking of
+the chips in the grand-jury room, where the "court-house gang" was playing poker.
+From the open back door of the office a well-worn path meandered across the
+grassy lot to the court-house. The treading out of that path had cost Goree all he
+ever had&mdash;first inheritance of a few thousand dollars, next the old family home, and,
+latterly the last shreds of his self-respect and manhood. The "gang" had cleaned him
+out. The broken gambler had turned drunkard and parasite; he had lived to see this
+day come when the men who had stripped him denied him a seat at the game. His
+word was no longer to be taken. The daily bouts at cards had arranged itself
+accordingly, and to him was assigned the ignoble part of the onlooker. The sheriff,
+the county clerk, a sportive deputy, a gay attorney, and a chalk-faced man hailing
+"from the valley," sat at table, and the sheared one was thus tacitly advised to go
+and grow more wool.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Soon wearying of his ostracism, Goree had departed for his office, muttering to
+himself as he unsteadily traversed the unlucky pathway. After a drink of corn
+whiskey from a demijohn under the table, he had flung himself into the chair,
+staring, in a sort of maudlin apathy, out at the mountains immersed in the summer
+haze. The little white patch he saw away up on the side of Blackjack was Laurel,
+the village near which he had been born and bred. There, also, was the birthplace
+of the feud between the Gorees and the Coltranes. Now no direct heir of the Gorees
+survived except this plucked and singed bird of misfortune. To the Coltranes, also,
+but one male supporter was left&mdash;Colonel Abner Coltrane, a man of substance and
+standing, a member of the State Legislature, and a contemporary with Goree's
+father. The feud had been a typical one of the region; it had left a red record of
+hate, wrong and slaughter.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But Yancey Goree was not thinking of feuds. His befuddled brain was hopelessly
+attacking the problem of the future maintenance of himself and his favourite follies.
+Of late, old friends of the family had seen to it that he had whereof to eat and a
+place to sleep&mdash;but whiskey they would not buy for him, and he must have whiskey.
+His law business was extinct; no case had been intrusted to him in two years. He
+had been a borrower and a sponge, and it seemed that if he fell no lower it would be
+from lack of opportunity. One more chance&mdash;he was saying to himself&mdash;if he had
+one more stake at the game, he thought he could win; but he had nothing left to sell,
+and his credit was more than exhausted.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He could not help smiling, even in his misery, as he thought of the man to whom,
+six months before, he had sold the old Goree homestead. There had come from
+"back yan'" in the mountains two of the strangest creatures, a man named Pike
+Garvey and his wife. "Back yan'," with a wave of the hand toward the hills, was
+understood among the mountaineers to designate the remotest fastnesses, the
+unplumbed gorges, the haunts of lawbreakers, the wolf's den, and the boudoir of the
+bear. In the cabin far up on Blackjack's shoulder, in the wildest part of these
+retreats, this odd couple had lived for twenty years. They had neither dog nor
+children to mitigate the heavy silence of the hills. Pike Garvey was little known in
+the settlements, but all who had dealt with him pronounced him "crazy as a loon."
+He acknowledged no occupation save that of a squirrel hunter, but he "moonshined"
+occasionally by way of diversion. Once the "revenues" had dragged him from his
+lair, fighting silently and desperately like a terrier, and he had been sent to state's
+prison for two years. Released, he popped back into his hole like an angry weasel.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Fortune, passing over many anxious wooers, made a freakish flight into Blackjack's
+bosky pockets to smile upon Pike and his faithful partner. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One day a party of spectacled, knickerbockered, and altogether absurd prospectors
+invaded the vicinity of the Garvey's cabin. Pike lifted his squirrel rifle off the hooks
+and took a shot at them at long range on the chance of their being revenues. Happily
+he missed, and the unconscious agents of good luck drew nearer, disclosing their
+innocence of anything resembling law or justice. Later on, they offered the Garveys
+an enormous quantity of ready, green, crisp money for their thirty-acre patch of
+cleared land, mentioning, as an excuse for such a mad action, some irrelevant and
+inadequate nonsense about a bed of mica underlying the said property.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When the Garveys became possessed of so many dollars that they faltered in
+computing them, the deficiencies of life on Blackjack began to grow prominent.
+Pike began to talk of new shoes, a hogshead of tobacco to set in the corner, a new
+lock to his rifle; and, leading Martella to a certain spot on the mountain-side, he
+pointed out to her how a small cannon&mdash;doubtless a thing not beyond the scope of
+their fortune in price&mdash;might be planted so as to command and defend the sole
+accessible trail to the cabin, to the confusion of revenues and meddling strangers
+forever.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But Adam reckoned without his Eve. These things represented to him the applied
+power of wealth, but there slumbered in his dingy cabin an ambition that soared far
+above his primitive wants. Somewhere in Mrs. Garvey's bosom still survived a spot
+of femininity unstarved by twenty years of Blackjack. For so long a time the
+sounds in her ears had been the scaly-barks dropping in the woods at noon, and the
+wolves singing among the rocks at night, and it was enough to have purged her of
+vanities. She had grown fat and sad and yellow and dull. But when the means
+came, she felt a rekindled desire to assume the perquisites of her sex&mdash;to sit at tea
+tables; to buy futile things; to whitewash the hideous veracity of life with a little
+form and ceremony. So she coldly vetoed Pike's proposed system of fortifications,
+and announced that they would descend upon the world, and gyrate socially. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">And thus, at length, it was decided, and the thing done. The village of Laurel was
+their compromise between Mrs. Garvey's preference for one of the large valley
+towns and Pike's hankering for primeval solitudes. Laurel yielded a halting round of
+feeble social distractions comportable with Martella's ambitions, and was not
+entirely without recommendation to Pike, its contiguity to the mountains presenting
+advantages for sudden retreat in case fashionable society should make it advisable.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Their descent upon Laurel had been coincident with Yancey Goree's feverish desire
+to convert property into cash, and they bought the old Goree homestead, paying four
+thousand dollars ready money into the spendthrift's shaking hands.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Thus it happened that while the disreputable last of the Gorees sprawled in his
+disreputable office, at the end of his row, spurned by the cronies whom he had
+gorged, strangers dwelt in the halls of his fathers.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A cloud of dust was rolling, slowly up the parched street, with something travelling
+in the midst of it. A little breeze wafted the cloud to one side, and a new, brightly
+painted carryall, drawn by a slothful gray horse, became visible. The vehicle
+deflected from the middle of the street as it neared Goree's office, and stopped in the
+gutter directly in front of his door.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">On the front seat sat a gaunt, tall man, dressed in black broadcloth, his rigid hands
+incarcerated in yellow kid gloves. On the back seat was a lady who triumphed over
+the June heat. Her stout form was armoured in a skin-tight silk dress of the
+description known as "changeable," being a gorgeous combination of shifting hues.
+She sat erect, waving a much-ornamented fan, with her eyes fixed stonily far down
+the street. However Martella Garvey's heart might be rejoicing at the pleasures of
+her new life, Blackjack had done his work with her exterior. He had carved her
+countenance to the image of emptiness and inanity; had imbued her with the
+stolidity of his crags, and the reserve of his hushed interiors. She always seemed to
+hear, whatever her surroundings were, the scaly-barks falling and pattering down
+the mountain-side. She could always hear the awful silence of Blackjack
+sounding through the stillest of nights.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Goree watched this solemn equipage, as it drove to his door, with only faint interest;
+but when the lank driver wrapped the reins about his whip, awkwardly descended,
+and stepped into the office, he rose unsteadily to receive him, recognizing Pike
+Garvey, the new, the transformed, the recently civilized.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The mountaineer took the chair Goree offered him. They who cast doubts upon
+Garvey's soundness of mind had a strong witness in the man's countenance. His
+face was too long, a dull saffron in hue, and immobile as a statue's. Pale-blue,
+unwinking round eyes without lashes added to the singularity of his gruesome
+visage. Goree was at a loss to account for the visit.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Everything all right at Laurel, Mr. Garvey?" he inquired. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Everything all right, sir, and mighty pleased is Missis Garvey and me with the
+property. Missis Garvey likes yo' old place, and she likes the neighbourhood.
+Society is what she 'lows she wants, and she is gettin' of it. The Rogerses, the
+Hapgoods, the Pratts and the Troys hev been to see Missis Garvey, and she hev et
+meals to most of thar houses. The best folks hev axed her to differ'nt kinds of
+doin's. I cyan't say, Mr. Goree, that sech things suits me&mdash;fur me, give me them
+thar." Garvey's huge, yellow-gloved hand flourished in the direction of the
+mountains. "That's whar I b'long, 'mongst the wild honey bees and the b'ars. But
+that ain't what I come fur to say, Mr. Goree. Thar's somethin' you got what me and
+Missis Garvey wants to buy."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Buy!" echoed Goree. "From me?" Then he laughed harshly. "I reckon you are
+mistaken about that. I reckon you are mistaken about that. I sold out to you, as you
+yourself expressed it, 'lock, stock and barrel.' There isn't even a ramrod left to sell."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You've got it; and we 'uns want it. 'Take the money,' says Missis Garvey, 'and buy
+it fa'r and squar'.'"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Goree shook his head. "The cupboard's bare," he said.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"We've riz," pursued the mountaineer, undeflected from his object, "a heap. We
+was pore as possums, and now we could hev folks to dinner every day. We been
+recognized, Missis Garvey says, by the best society. But there's somethin' we need
+we ain't got. She says it ought to been put in the 'ventory ov the sale, but it tain't
+thar. 'Take the money, then,' says she, 'and buy it fa'r and squar'."' </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Out with it," said Goree, his racked nerves growing impatient. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Garvey threw his slouch hat upon the table, and leaned forward, fixing his
+unblinking eyes upon Goree's.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"There's a old feud," he said distinctly and slowly, "'tween you 'uns and the
+Coltranes."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Goree frowned ominously. To speak of his feud to a feudist is a serious breach of
+the mountain etiquette. The man from "back yan'" knew it as well as the lawyer did.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Na offense," he went on "but purely in the way of business. Missis Garvey hev
+studied all about feuds. Most of the quality folks in the mountains hev 'em. The
+Settles and the Goforths, the Rankins and the Boyds, the Silers and the Galloways,
+hev all been cyarin' on feuds f'om twenty to a hundred year. The last man to drap
+was when yo' uncle, Jedge Paisley Goree, 'journed co't and shot Len Coltrane f'om
+the bench. Missis Garvey and me, we come f'om the po' white trash. Nobody
+wouldn't pick a feud with we 'uns, no mo'n with a fam'ly of tree-toads. Quality
+people everywhar, says Missis Garvey, has feuds. We 'uns ain't quality, but we're
+buyin' into it as fur as we can. 'Take the money, then,' says Missis Garvey, 'and buy
+Mr. Goree's feud, fa'r and squar'.'"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The squirrel hunter straightened a leg half across the room, drew a roll of bills from
+his pocket, and threw them on the table. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Thar's two hundred dollars, Mr. Goree; what you would call a fa'r price for a feud
+that's been 'lowed to run down like yourn hev. Thar's only you left to cyar' on yo'
+side of it, and you'd make mighty po' killin'. I'll take it off yo' hands, and it'll set me
+and Missis Garvey up among the quality. Thar's the money."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The little roll of currency on the table slowly untwisted itself, writhing and jumping
+as its folds relaxed. In the silence that followed Garvey's last speech the rattling of
+the poker chips in the court-house could be plainly heard. Goree knew that the
+sheriff had just won a pot, for the subdued whoop with which he always greeted a
+victory floated across the square upon the crinkly heat waves. Beads of moisture
+stood on Goree's brow. Stooping, he drew the wicker-covered demijohn from under
+the table, and filled a tumbler from it. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"A little corn liquor, Mr. Garvey? Of course you are joking about&mdash;what you spoke
+of? Opens quite a new market, doesn't it? Feuds. Prime, two-fifty to three. Feuds,
+slightly damaged&mdash;two hundred, I believe you said, Mr. Garvey?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Goree laughed self-consciously.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The mountaineer took the glass Goree handed him, and drank the whisky without a
+tremor of the lids of his staring eyes. The lawyer applauded the feat by a look of
+envious admiration. He poured his own drink, and took it like a drunkard, by
+gulps, and with shudders at the smell and taste.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Two hundred," repeated Garvey. "Thar's the money."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A sudden passion flared up in Goree's brain. He struck the table with his fist. One
+of the bills flipped over and touched his hand. He flinched as if something had
+stung him.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Do you come to me," he shouted, "seriously with such a ridiculous, insulting,
+darned-fool proposition?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's fa'r and squar'," said the squirrel hunter, but he reached out his hand as if to
+take back the money; and then Goree knew that his own flurry of rage had not been
+from pride or resentment, but from anger at himself, knowing that he would set foot
+in the deeper depths that were being opened to him. He turned in an instant from
+an outraged gentleman to an anxious chafferer recommending his goods. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Don't be in a hurry, Garvey," he said, his face crimson and his speech thick. "I
+accept your p-p-proposition, though it's dirt cheap at two hundred. A t-trade's all
+right when both p-purchaser and b-buyer are s-satisfied. Shall I w-wrap it up for
+you, Mr. Garvey?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Garvey rose, and shook out his broadcloth. "Missis Garvey will be pleased. You
+air out of it, and it stands Coltrane and Garvey. Just a scrap ov writin', Mr. Goree,
+you bein' a lawyer, to show we traded." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Goree seized a sheet of paper and a pen. The money was clutched in his moist
+hand. Everything else suddenly seemed to grow trivial and light.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Bill of sale, by all means. 'Right, title, and interest in and to' . . . 'forever warrant
+and&mdash;' No, Garvey, we'll have to leave out that 'defend,'" said Goree with a loud
+laugh. "You'll have to defend this title yourself."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The mountaineer received the amazing screed that the lawyer handed him, folded it
+with immense labour, and laced it carefully in his pocket.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Goree was standing near the window. "Step here," he said, raising his finger, "and
+I'll show you your recently purchased enemy. There he goes, down the other side of
+the street."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The mountaineer crooked his long frame to look through the window in the
+direction indicated by the other. Colonel Abner Coltrane, an erect, portly gentleman
+of about fifty, wearing the inevitable long, double-breasted frock coat of the
+Southern lawmaker, and an old high silk hat, was passing on the opposite sidewalk.
+As Garvey looked, Goree glanced at his face. If there be such a thing as a yellow
+wolf, here was its counterpart. Garvey snarled as his unhuman eyes followed the
+moving figure, disclosing long, amber-coloured fangs.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Is that him? Why, that's the man who sent me to the pen'tentiary once!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"He used to be district attorney," said Goree carelessly. "And, by the way, he's a
+first-class shot."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I kin hit a squirrel's eye at a hundred yard," said Garvey. "So that thar's Coltrane!
+I made a better trade than I was thinkin'. I'll take keer ov this feud, Mr. Goree,
+better'n you ever did!" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He moved toward the door, but lingered there, betraying a slight perplexity.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Anything else to-day?" inquired Goree with frothy sarcasm. "Any family
+traditions, ancestral ghosts, or skeletons in the closet? Prices as low as the lowest."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Thar was another thing," replied the unmoved squirrel hunter, "that Missis Garvey
+was thinkin' of. 'Tain't so much in my line as t'other, but she wanted partic'lar that I
+should inquire, and ef you was willin', 'pay fur it,' she says, 'fa'r and squar'.' Thar's a
+buryin' groun', as you know, Mr. Goree, in the yard of yo' old place, under the
+cedars. Them that lies thar is yo' folks what was killed by the Coltranes. The
+monyments has the names on 'em. Missis Garvey says a fam'ly buryin' groun' is a
+sho' sign of quality. She says ef we git the feud, thar's somethin' else ought to go
+with it. The names on them monyments is 'Goree,' but they can be changed to ourn
+by&mdash;" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Go! Go!" screamed Goree, his face turning purple. He stretched out both hands
+toward the mountaineer, his fingers hooked and shaking. "Go, you ghoul! Even a
+Ch-Chinaman protects the g-graves of his ancestors&mdash;go!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The squirrel hunter slouched out of the door to his carryall. While he was climbing
+over the wheel Goree was collecting, with feverish celerity, the money that had
+fallen from his hand to the floor. As the vehicle slowly turned about, the sheep,
+with a coat of newly grown wool, was hurrying, in indecent haste, along the path to
+the court-house.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At three o'clock in the morning they brought him back to his office, shorn and
+unconscious. The sheriff, the sportive deputy, the county clerk, and the gay
+attorney carried him, the chalk-faced man "from the valley" acting as escort.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"On the table," said one of them, and they deposited him there among the litter of
+his unprofitable books and papers.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Yance thinks a lot of a pair of deuces when he's liquored up," sighed the sheriff
+reflectively.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Too much," said the gay attorney. "A man has no business to play poker who
+drinks as much as he does. I wonder how much he dropped to-night."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Close to two hundred. What I wonder is whar he got it. Yance ain't had a cent fur
+over a month, I know."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Struck a client, maybe. Well, let's get home before daylight. He'll be all right
+when he wakes up, except for a sort of beehive about the cranium."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The gang slipped away through the early morning twilight. The next eye to gaze
+upon the miserable Goree was the orb of day. He peered through the uncurtained
+window, first deluging the sleeper in a flood of faint gold, but soon pouring upon
+the mottled red of his flesh a searching, white, summer heat. Goree stirred, half
+unconsciously, among the table's d&eacute;bris, and turned his face from the window. His
+movement dislodged a heavy law book, which crashed upon the floor. Opening his
+eyes, he saw, bending over him, a man in a black frock coat. Looking higher, he
+discovered a well-worn silk hat, and beneath it the kindly, smooth face of Colonel
+Abner Coltrane.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A little uncertain of the outcome, the colonel waited for the other to make some sign
+of recognition. Not in twenty years had male members of these two families faced
+each other in peace. Goree's eyelids puckered as he strained his blurred sight
+toward this visitor, and then he smiled serenely.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Have you brought Stella and Lucy over to play?" he said calmly. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Do you know me, Yancey?" asked Coltrane.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Of course I do. You brought me a whip with a whistle in the end." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">So he had&mdash;twenty-four years ago; when Yancey's father was his best friend.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Goree's eyes wandered about the room. The colonel understood. "Lie still, and I'll
+bring you some," said he. There was a pump in the yard at the rear, and Goree
+closed his eyes, listening with rapture to the click of its handle, and the bubbling of
+the falling stream. Coltrane brought a pitcher of the cool water, and held it for him
+to drink. Presently Goree sat up&mdash;a most forlorn object, his summer suit of flax
+soiled and crumpled, his discreditable head tousled and unsteady. He tried to wave
+one of his hands toward the colonel. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ex-excuse&mdash;everything, will you?" he said. "I must have drunk too much whiskey
+last night, and gone to bed on the table." His brows knitted into a puzzled frown.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Out with the boys awhile?" asked Coltrane kindly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"No, I went nowhere. I haven't had a dollar to spend in the last two months. Struck
+the demijohn too often, I reckon, as usual." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Colonel Coltrane touched him on the shoulder.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"A little while ago, Yancey," he began, "you asked me if I had brought Stella and
+Lucy over to play. You weren't quite awake then, and must have been dreaming
+you were a boy again. You are awake now, and I want you to listen to me. I have
+come from Stella and Lucy to their old playmate, and to my old friend's son. They
+know that I am going to bring you home with me, and you will find them as ready
+with a welcome as they were in the old days. I want you to come to my house and
+stay until you are yourself again, and as much longer as you will. We heard of your
+being down in the world, and in the midst of temptation, and we agreed that you
+should come over and play at our house once more. Will you come, my boy? Will
+you drop our old family trouble and come with me?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Trouble!" said Goree, opening his eyes wide. "There was never any trouble
+between us that I know of. I'm sure we've always been the best friends. But, good
+Lord, Colonel, how could I go to your home as I am&mdash;a drunken wretch, a
+miserable, degraded spendthrift and gambler&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He lurched from the table into his armchair, and began to weep maudlin tears,
+mingled with genuine drops of remorse and shame. Coltrane talked to him
+persistently and reasonably, reminding him of the simple mountain pleasures of
+which he had once been so fond, and insisting upon the genuineness of the
+invitation.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Finally he landed Goree by telling him he was counting upon his help in the
+engineering and transportation of a large amount of felled timber from a high
+mountain-side to a waterway. He knew that Goree had once invented a device for
+this purpose&mdash;a series of slides and chutes upon which he had justly prided himself.
+In an instant the poor fellow, delighted at the idea of his being of use to any one,
+had paper spread upon the table, and was drawing rapid but pitifully shaky lines in
+demonstration of what he could and would do.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The man was sickened of the husks; his prodigal heart was turning again toward the
+mountains. His mind was yet strangely clogged, and his thoughts and memories
+were returning to his brain one by one, like carrier pigeons over a stormy sea. But
+Coltrane was satisfied with the progress he had made.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Bethel received the surprise of its existence that afternoon when a Coltrane and a
+Goree rode amicably together through the town. Side by side they rode, out from
+the dusty streets and gaping townspeople, down across the creek bridge, and up
+toward the mountain. The prodigal had brushed and washed and combed himself to
+a more decent figure, but he was unsteady in the saddle, and he seemed to be deep
+in the contemplation of some vexing problem. Coltrane left him in his mood,
+relying upon the influence of changed surroundings to restore his equilibrium.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Once Goree was seized with a shaking fit, and almost came to a collapse. He had to
+dismount and rest at the side of the road. The colonel, foreseeing such a condition,
+had provided a small flask of whisky for the journey but when it was offered to him
+Goree refused it almost with violence, declaring he would never touch it again. By
+and by he was recovered, and went quietly enough for a mile or two. Then he
+pulled up his horse suddenly, and said:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I lost two hundred dollars last night, playing poker. Now, where did I get that
+money?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Take it easy, Yancey. The mountain air will soon clear it up. We'll go fishing,
+first thing, at the Pinnacle Falls. The trout are jumping there like bullfrogs. We'll
+take Stella and Lucy along, and have a picnic on Eagle Rock. Have you forgotten
+how a hickory-cured-ham sandwich tastes, Yancey, to a hungry fisherman?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Evidently the colonel did not believe the story of his lost wealth; so Goree retired
+again into brooding silence.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">By late Afternoon they had travelled ten of the twelve miles between Bethel and
+Laurel. Half a mile this side of Laurel lay the old Goree place; a mile or two
+beyond the village lived the Coltranes. The road was now steep and laborious, but
+the compensations were many. The tilted aisles of the forest were opulent with leaf
+and bird and bloom. The tonic air put to shame the pharmacop&aelig;ia. The glades were
+dark with mossy shade, and bright with shy rivulets winking from the ferns and
+laurels. On the lower side they viewed, framed in the near foliage, exquisite
+sketches of the far valley swooning in its opal haze.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Coltrane was pleased to see that his companion was yielding to the spell of the hills
+and woods. For now they had but to skirt the base of Painter's Cliff; to cross Elder
+Branch and mount the hill beyond, and Goree would have to face the squandered
+home of his fathers. Every rock he passed, every tree, every foot of the rocky way,
+was familiar to him. Though he had forgotten the woods, they thrilled him like the
+music of "Home, Sweet Home."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">They rounded the cliff, descended into Elder Branch, and paused there to let the
+horses drink and splash in the swift water. On the right was a rail fence that
+cornered there, and followed the road and stream. Inclosed by it was the old apple
+orchard of the home place; the house was yet concealed by the brow of the steep
+hill. Inside and along the fence, pokeberries, elders, sassafras, and sumac grew
+high and dense. At a rustle of their branches, both Goree and Coltrane glanced up,
+and saw a long, yellow, wolfish face above the fence, staring at them with pale,
+unwinking eyes. The head quickly disappeared; there was a violent swaying of the
+bushes, and an ungainly figure ran up through the apple orchard in the direction of
+the house, zig-zagging among the trees.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"That's Garvey," said Coltrane; "the man you sold out to. There's no doubt but he's
+considerably cracked. I had to send him up for moonshining once, several years
+ago, in spite of the fact that I believed him irresponsible. Why, what's the matter,
+Yancey?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Goree was wiping his forehead, and his face had lost its colour. "Do I look queer,
+too?" he asked, trying to smile. "I'm just remembering a few more things." Some
+of the alcohol had evaporated from his brain. "I recollect now where I got that two
+hundred dollars."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Don't think of it," said Coltrane cheerfully. "Later on we'll figure it all out
+together."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">They rode out of the branch, and when they reached the foot of the hill Goree
+stopped again.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Did you ever suspect I was a very vain kind of fellow, Colonel?" he asked. "Sort
+of foolish proud about appearances?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The colonel's eyes refused to wander to the soiled, sagging suit of flax and the faded
+slouch hat.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It seems to me," he replied, mystified, but humouring him, "I remember a young
+buck about twenty, with the tightest coat, the sleekest hair, and the prancingest
+saddle horse in the Blue Ridge." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Right you are," said Goree eagerly. "And it's in me yet, though it don't show. Oh,
+I'm as vain as a turkey gobbler, and as proud as Lucifer. I'm going to ask you to
+indulge this weakness of mine in a little matter."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Speak out, Yancey. We'll create you Duke of Laurel and Baron of Blue Ridge, if
+you choose; and you shall have a feather out of Stella's peacock's tail to wear in
+your hat."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm in earnest. In a few minutes we'll pass the house up there on the hill where I
+was born, and where my people have lived for nearly a century. Strangers live there
+now&mdash;and look at me! I am about to show myself to them ragged and
+poverty-stricken, a wastrel and a beggar. Colonel Coltrane, I'm ashamed to do it. I
+want you to let me wear your coat and hat until we are out of sight beyond. I know
+you think it a foolish pride, but I want to make as good a showing as I can when I
+pass the old place."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Now, what does this mean?" said Coltrane to himself, as he compared his
+companion's sane looks and quiet demeanour with his strange request. But he was
+already unbuttoning the coat, assenting readily, as if the fancy were in no wise to be
+considered strange. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The coat and hat fitted Goree well. He buttoned the former about him with a look
+of satisfaction and dignity. He and Coltrane were nearly the same size&mdash;rather tall,
+portly, and erect. Twenty-five years were between them, but in appearance they
+might have been brothers. Goree looked older than his age; his face was puffy and
+lined; the colonel had the smooth, fresh complexion of a temperate liver. He put on
+Goree's disreputable old flax coat and faded slouch hat. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Now," said Goree, taking up the reins, "I'm all right. I want you to ride about ten
+feet in the rear as we go by, Colonel, so that they can get a good look at me. They'll
+see I'm no back number yet, by any means. I guess I'll show up pretty well to them
+once more, anyhow. Let's ride on."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He set out up the hill at a smart trot, the colonel following, as he had been
+requested.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Goree sat straight in the saddle, with head erect, but his eyes were turned to the
+right, sharply scanning every shrub and fence and hiding-place in the old homestead
+yard. Once he muttered to himself, "Will the crazy fool try it, or did I dream half of
+it?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It was when he came opposite the little family burying ground that he saw what he
+had been looking for&mdash;a puff of white smoke, coming from the thick cedars in one
+corner. He toppled so slowly to the left that Coltrane had time to urge his horse to
+that side, and catch him with one arm.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The squirrel hunter had not overpraised his aim. He had sent the bullet where he
+intended, and where Goree had expected that it would pass&mdash;through the breast of
+Colonel Abner Coltrane's black frock coat.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Goree leaned heavily against Coltrane, but he did not fall. The horses kept pace,
+side by side, and the Colonel's arm kept him steady. The little white houses of
+Laurel shone through the trees, half a mile away. Goree reached out one hand and
+groped until it rested upon Coltrane's fingers, which held his bridle.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Good friend," he said, and that was all.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Thus did Yancey Goree, as he rode past his old home, make, considering all things,
+the best showing that was in his power.</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="16"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+XVI<br>
+<br>
+THE SONG AND THE SERGEANT<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Half a dozen people supping at a table in one of the upper-Broadway all-night
+restaurants were making too much noise. Three times the manager walked past
+them with a politely warning glance; but their argument had waxed too warm to be
+quelled by a manager's gaze. It was midnight, and the restaurant was filled with
+patrons from the theatres of that district. Some among the dispersed audiences
+must have recognized among the quarrelsome sextet the faces of the players
+belonging to the Carroll Comedy Company.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Four of the six made up the company. Another was the author of the comedietta,
+"A Gay Coquette," which the quartette of players had been presenting with fair
+success at several vaudeville houses in the city. The sixth at the table was a person
+inconsequent in the realm of art, but one at whose bidding many lobsters had
+perished.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Loudly the six maintained their clamorous debate. No one of the Party was silent
+except when answers were stormed from him by the excited ones. That was the
+comedian of "A Gay Coquette." He was a young man with a face even too
+melancholy for his profession.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The oral warfare of four immoderate tongues was directed at Miss Clarice Carroll,
+the twinkling star of the small aggregation. Excepting the downcast comedian, all
+members of the party united in casting upon her with vehemence the blame of some
+momentous misfortune. Fifty times they told her: "It is your fault, Clarice&mdash;it is you
+alone who spoilt the scene. It is only of late that you have acted this way. At this
+rate the sketch will have to be taken off." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Miss Carroll was a match for any four. Gallic ancestry gave her a vivacity that
+could easily mount to fury. Her large eyes flashed a scorching denial at her
+accusers. Her slender, eloquent arms constantly menaced the tableware. Her high,
+clear soprano voice rose to what would have been a scream had it not possessed so
+pure a musical quality. She hurled back at the attacking four their denunciations in
+tones sweet, but of too great carrying power for a Broadway restaurant.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Finally they exhausted her patience both as a woman and an artist. She sprang up
+like a panther, managed to smash half a dozen plates and glasses with one royal
+sweep of her arm, and defied her critics. They rose and wrangled more loudly. The
+comedian sighed and looked a trifle sadder and disinterested. The manager came
+tripping and suggested peace. He was told to go to the popular synonym for war so
+promptly that the affair might have happened at The Hague. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Thus was the manager angered. He made a sign with his hand and a waiter slipped
+out of the door. In twenty minutes the party of six was in a police station facing a
+grizzled and philosophical desk sergeant.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Disorderly conduct in a restaurant," said the policeman who had brought the party
+in.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The author of "A Gay Coquette" stepped to the front. He wore nose-glasses and
+evening clothes, even if his shoes had been tans before they met the
+patent-leather-polish bottle.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mr. Sergeant," said he, out of his throat, like Actor Irving, "I would like to protest
+against this arrest. The company of actors who are performing in a little play that I
+have written, in company with a friend and myself were having a little supper. We
+became deeply interested in the discussion as to which one of the cast is responsible
+for a scene in the sketch that lately has fallen so flat that the piece is about to
+become a failure. We may have been rather noisy and intolerant of interruption by
+the restaurant people; but the matter was of considerable importance to all of us.
+You see that we are sober and are not the kind of people who desire to raise
+disturbances. I hope that the case will not be pressed and that we may be allowed to
+go."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Who makes the charge?" asked the sergeant.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Me," said a white-aproned voice in the rear. "De restaurant sent me to. De gang
+was raisin' a rough-house and breakin' dishes." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The dishes were paid for," said the playwright. "They were not broken purposely.
+In her anger, because we remonstrated with her for spoiling the scene, Miss&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's not true, sergeant," cried the clear voice of Miss Clarice Carroll. In a long coat
+of tan silk and a red-plumed hat, she bounded before the desk.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's not my fault," she cried indignantly. "How dare they say such a thing! I've
+played the title r&ocirc;le ever since it was staged, and if you want to know who made it a
+success, ask the public&mdash;that's all." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What Miss Carroll says is true in part," said the author. "For five months the
+comedietta was a drawing-card in the best houses. But during the last two weeks it
+has lost favour. There is one scene in it in which Miss Carroll made a big hit. Now
+she hardly gets a hand out of it. She spoils it by acting it entirely different from her
+old way."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It is not my fault," reiterated the actress.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"There are only two of you on in the scene," argued the playwright hotly, "you and
+Delmars, here&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Then it's his fault," declared Miss Carroll, with a lightning glance of scorn from
+her dark eyes. The comedian caught it, and gazed with increased melancholy at the
+panels of the sergeant's desk. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The night was a dull one in that particular police station. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The sergeant's long-blunted curiosity awoke a little.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I've heard you," he said to the author. And then he addressed the thin-faced and
+ascetic-looking lady of the company who played "Aunt Turnip-top" in the little
+comedy.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Who do you think spoils the scene you are fussing about?" he asked. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm no knocker," said that lady, "and everybody knows it. So, when I say that
+Clarice falls down every time in that scene I'm judging her art and not herself. She
+was great in it once. She does it something fierce now. It'll dope the show if she
+keeps it up."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The sergeant looked at the comedian.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You and the lady have this scene together, I understand. I suppose there's no use
+asking you which one of you queers it?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The comedian avoided the direct rays from the two fixed stars of Miss Carroll's
+eyes.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I don't know," he said, looking down at his patent-leather toes. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Are you one of the actors?" asked the sergeant of a dwarfish youth with a
+middle-aged face.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Why, say!" replied the last Thespian witness, "you don't notice any tin spear in my
+hands, do you? You haven't heard me shout: 'See, the Emperor comes!' since I've
+been in here, have you? I guess I'm on the stage long enough for 'em not to start a
+panic by mistaking me for a thin curl of smoke rising above the footlights."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"In your opinion, if you've got one," said the sergeant, "is the frost that gathers on
+the scene in question the work of the lady or the gentleman who takes part in it?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The middle-aged youth looked pained.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I regret to say," he answered, "that Miss Carroll seems to have lost her grip on that
+scene. She's all right in the rest of the play, but&mdash;but I tell you, sergeant, she can do
+it&mdash;she has done it equal to any of 'em&mdash;and she can do it again."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Miss Carroll ran forward, glowing and palpitating.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Thank you, Jimmy, for the first good word I've had in many a day," she cried.
+And then she turned her eager face toward the desk. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'll show you, sergeant, whether I am to blame. I'll show them whether I can do
+that scene. Come, Mr. Delmars; let us begin. You will let us, won't you, sergeant?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"How long will it take?" asked the sergeant, dubiously.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Eight minutes," said the playwright. "The entire play consumes but thirty."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You may go ahead," said the sergeant. "Most of you seem to side against the little
+lady. Maybe she had a right to crack up a saucer or two in that restaurant. We'll see
+how she does the turn before we take that up."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The matron of the police station had been standing near, listening to the singular
+argument. She came nigher and stood near the sergeant's chair. Two or three of the
+reserves strolled in, big and yawning. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Before beginning the scene," said the playwright, "and assuming that you have not
+seen a production of 'A Gay Coquette,' I will make a brief but necessary
+explanation. It is a musical-farce-comedy&mdash;burlesque-comedietta. As the title
+implies, Miss Carroll's r&ocirc;le is that of a gay, rollicking, mischievous, heartless
+coquette. She sustains that character throughout the entire comedy part of the
+production. And I have designed the extravaganza features so that she may
+preserve and present the same coquettish idea.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Now, the scene in which we take exception to Miss Carroll's acting is called the
+'gorilla dance.' She is costumed to represent a wood nymph, and there is a great
+song-and-dance scene with a gorilla&mdash;played by Mr. Delmars, the comedian. A
+tropical-forest stage is set. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"That used to get four and five recalls. The main thing was the acting and the
+dance&mdash;it was the funniest thing in New York for five months. Delmars's song, 'I'll
+Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home,' while he and Miss Carroll were cutting
+hide-and-seek capers among the tropical plants, was a winner."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What's the trouble with the scene now?" asked the sergeant. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Miss Carroll spoils it right in the middle of it," said the playwright wrathfully.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">With a wide gesture of her ever-moving arms the actress waved back the little group
+of spectators, leaving a space in front of the desk for the scene of her vindication or
+fall. Then she whipped off her long tan cloak and tossed it across the arm of the
+policeman who still stood officially among them.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Miss Carroll had gone to supper well cloaked, but in the costume of the tropic wood
+nymph. A skirt of fern leaves touched her knee; she was like a
+humming-bird&mdash;green and golden and purple.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">And then she danced a fluttering, fantastic dance, so agile and light and mazy in her
+steps that the other three members of the Carroll Comedy Company broke into
+applause at the art of it.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">And at the proper time Delmars leaped out at her side, mimicking the uncouth,
+hideous bounds of the gorilla so funnily that the grizzled sergeant himself gave a
+short laugh like the closing of a padlock. They danced together the gorilla dance,
+and won a hand from all.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Then began the most fantastic part of the scene&mdash;the wooing of the nymph by the
+gorilla. It was a kind of dance itself&mdash;eccentric and prankish, with the nymph in
+coquettish and seductive retreat, followed by the gorilla as he sang "I'll Woo Thee to
+My Sylvan Home."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The song was a lyric of merit. The words were non-sense, as befitted the play, but
+the music was worthy of something better. Delmars struck into it in a rich tenor
+that owned a quality that shamed the flippant words.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">During one verse of the song the wood nymph performed the grotesque evolutions
+designed for the scene. At the middle of the second verse she stood still, with a
+strange look on her face, seeming to gaze dreamily into the depths of the scenic
+forest. The gorilla's last leap had brought him to her feet, and there he knelt,
+holding her hand, until he had finished the haunting-lyric that was set in the absurd
+comedy like a diamond in a piece of putty.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When Delmars ceased Miss Carroll started, and covered a sudden flow of tears with
+both hands.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"There!" cried the playwright, gesticulating with violence; "there you have it,
+sergeant. For two weeks she has spoiled that scene in just that manner at every
+performance. I have begged her to consider that it is not Ophelia or Juliet that she
+is playing. Do you wonder now at our impatience? Tears for the gorilla song! The
+play is lost!" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Out of her bewitchment, whatever it was, the wood nymph flared suddenly, and
+pointed a desperate finger at Delmars.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It is you&mdash;you who have done this," she cried wildly. "You never sang that song
+that way until lately. It is your doing."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I give it up," said the sergeant.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">And then the gray-haired matron of the police station came forward from behind the
+sergeant's chair.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Must an old woman teach you all?" she said. She went up to Miss Carroll and
+took her hand.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The man's wearing his heart out for you, my dear. Couldn't you tell it the first note
+you heard him sing? All of his monkey flip-flops wouldn't have kept it from me.
+Must you be deaf as well as blind? That's why you couldn't act your part, child. Do
+you love him or must he be a gorilla for the rest of his days?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Miss Carroll whirled around and caught Delmars with a lightning glance of her eye.
+He came toward her, melancholy.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Did you hear, Mr. Delmars?" she asked, with a catching breath. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I did," said the comedian. "It is true. I didn't think there was any use. I tried to let
+you know with the song."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Silly!" said the matron; "why didn't you speak?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"No, no," cried the wood nymph, "his way was the best. I didn't know, but&mdash;it was
+just what I wanted, Bobby."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She sprang like a green grasshopper; and the comedian opened his arms,
+and&mdash;smiled.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Get out of this," roared the desk sergeant to the waiting waiter from the restaurant.
+"There's nothing doing here for you."</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="17"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+XVII<br>
+<br>
+ONE DOLLAR'S WORTH<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The judge of the United States court of the district lying along the Rio Grande
+border found the following letter one morning in his mail: </span></p>
+<br>
+<blockquote>
+<span style="font-size: 12pt">
+JUDGE:<br>
+<br>
+When you sent me up for four years you made a talk. Among other hard things, you
+called me a rattlesnake. Maybe I am one&mdash;anyhow, you hear me rattling now. One year
+after I got to the pen, my daughter died of&mdash;well, they said it was poverty and the disgrace
+together. You've got a daughter, Judge, and I'm going to make you know how it feels to
+lose one. And I'm going to bite that district attorney that spoke against me. I'm free now,
+and I guess I've turned to rattlesnake all right. I feel like one. I don't say much, but this is
+my rattle. Look out when I strike.<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yours respectfully,<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;RATTLESNAKE.<br>
+</span>
+</blockquote>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Judge Derwent threw the letter carelessly aside. It was nothing new to receive such
+epistles from desperate men whom he had been called upon to judge. He felt no
+alarm. Later on he showed the letter to Littlefield, the young district attorney, for
+Littlefield's name was included in the threat, and the judge was punctilious in
+matters between himself and his fellow men.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Littlefield honoured the rattle of the writer, as far as it concerned himself, with a
+smile of contempt; but he frowned a little over the reference to the Judge's daughter,
+for he and Nancy Derwent were to be married in the fall.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Littlefield went to the clerk of the court and looked over the records with him. They
+decided that the letter might have been sent by Mexico Sam, a half-breed border
+desperado who had been imprisoned for manslaughter four years before. Then
+official duties crowded the matter from his mind, and the rattle of the revengeful
+serpent was forgotten.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Court was in session at Brownsville. Most of the cases to be tried were charges of
+smuggling, counterfeiting, post-office robberies, and violations of Federal laws
+along the border. One case was that of a young Mexican, Rafael Ortiz, who had
+been rounded up by a clever deputy marshal in the act of passing a counterfeit silver
+dollar. He had been suspected of many such deviations from rectitude, but this was
+the first time that anything provable had been fixed upon him. Ortiz languished
+cozily in jail, smoking brown cigarettes and waiting for trial. Kilpatrick, the
+deputy, brought the counterfeit dollar and handed it to the district attorney in his
+office in the court-house. The deputy and a reputable druggist were prepared to
+swear that Ortiz paid for a bottle of medicine with it. The coin was a poor
+counterfeit, soft, dull-looking, and made principally of lead. It was the day before
+the morning on which the docket would reach the case of Ortiz, and the district
+attorney was preparing himself for trial. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Not much need of having in high-priced experts to prove the coin's queer, is there,
+Kil?" smiled Littlefield, as he thumped the dollar down upon the table, where it fell
+with no more ring than would have come from a lump of putty.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I guess the Greaser's as good as behind the bars," said the deputy, easing up his
+holsters. "You've got him dead. If it had been just one time, these Mexicans can't
+tell good money from bad; but this little yaller rascal belongs to a gang of
+counterfeiters, I know. This is the first time I've been able to catch him doing the
+trick. He's got a girl down there in them Mexican jacals on the river bank. I seen her
+one day when I was watching him. She's as pretty as a red heifer in a flower bed."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Littlefield shoved the counterfeit dollar into his pocket, and slipped his memoranda
+of the case into an envelope. Just then a bright, winsome face, as frank and jolly as
+a boy's, appeared in the doorway, and in walked Nancy Derwent.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, Bob, didn't court adjourn at twelve to-day until to-morrow?" she asked of
+Littlefield.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It did," said the district attorney, "and I'm very glad of it. I've got a lot of rulings to
+look up, and&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Now, that's just like you. I wonder you and father don't turn to law books or
+rulings or something! I want you to take me out plover-shooting this afternoon.
+Long Prairie is just alive with them. Don't say no, please! I want to try my new
+twelve-bore hammerless. I've sent to the livery stable to engage Fly and Bess for the
+buckboard; they stand fire so nicely. I was sure you would go."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">They were to be married in the fall. The glamour was at its height. The plovers won
+the day&mdash;or, rather, the afternoon&mdash;over the calf-bound authorities. Littlefield began
+to put his papers away. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">There was a knock at the door. Kilpatrick answered it. A beautiful, dark-eyed girl
+with a skin tinged with the faintest lemon colour walked into the room. A black
+shawl was thrown over her head and wound once around her neck.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She began to talk in Spanish, a voluble, mournful stream of melancholy music.
+Littlefield did not understand Spanish. The deputy did, and he translated her talk
+by portions, at intervals holding up his hand to check the flow of her words.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"She came to see you, Mr. Littlefield. Her name's Joya Trevi&ntilde;as. She wants to see
+you about&mdash;well, she's mixed up with that Rafael Ortiz. She's his&mdash;she's his girl. She
+says he's innocent. She says she made the money and got him to pass it. Don't you
+believe her, Mr. Littlefield. That's the way with these Mexican girls; they'll lie,
+steal, or kill for a fellow when they get stuck on him. Never trust a woman that's in
+love!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mr. Kilpatrick!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Nancy Derwent's indignant exclamation caused the deputy to flounder for a
+moment in attempting to explain that he had misquoted his own sentiments, and
+then he went on with the translation:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"She says she's willing to take his place in the jail if you'll let him out. She says she
+was down sick with the fever, and the doctor said she'd die if she didn't have
+medicine. That's why he passed the lead dollar on the drug store. She says it saved
+her life. This Rafael seems to be her honey, all right; there's a lot of stuff in her talk
+about love and such things that you don't want to hear." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It was an old story to the district attorney.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Tell her," said he, "that I can do nothing. The case comes up in the morning, and
+he will have to make his fight before the court." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Nancy Derwent was not so hardened. She was looking with sympathetic interest at
+Joya Trevi&ntilde;as and at Littlefield alternately. The deputy repeated the district
+attorney's words to the girl. She spoke a sentence or two in a low voice, pulled her
+shawl closely about her face, and left the room.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What did she say then?" asked the district attorney.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Nothing special," said the deputy. "She said: 'If the life of the one'&mdash;let's see how it
+went&mdash;'<i>Si la vida de ella a quien tu amas</i>&mdash;if the life of the girl you love is ever in
+danger, remember Rafael Ortiz.'"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Kilpatrick strolled out through the corridor in the direction of the marshal's office.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Can't you do anything for them, Bob?" asked Nancy. "It's such a little thing&mdash;just
+one counterfeit dollar&mdash;to ruin the happiness of two lives! She was in danger of
+death, and he did it to save her. Doesn't the law know the feeling of pity?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It hasn't a place in jurisprudence, Nan," said Littlefield, "especially <i>in re</i> the
+district attorney's duty. I'll promise you that the prosecution will not be vindictive;
+but the man is as good as convicted when the case is called. Witnesses will swear to
+his passing the bad dollar which I have in my pocket at this moment as 'Exhibit A.'
+There are no Mexicans on the jury, and it will vote Mr. Greaser guilty without
+leaving the box."</span></p>
+
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The plover-shooting was fine that afternoon, and in the excitement of the sport the
+case of Rafael and the grief of Joya Trevi&ntilde;as was forgotten. The district attorney
+and Nancy Derwent drove out from the town three miles along a smooth, grassy
+road, and then struck across a rolling prairie toward a heavy line of timber on Piedra
+Creek. Beyond this creek lay Long Prairie, the favourite haunt of the plover. As
+they were nearing the creek they heard the galloping of a horse to their right, and
+saw a man with black hair and a swarthy face riding toward the woods at a tangent,
+as if he had come up behind them.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I've seen that fellow somewhere," said Littlefield, who had a memory for faces,
+"but I can't exactly place him. Some ranchman, I suppose, taking a short cut home."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">They spent an hour on Long Prairie, shooting from the buckboard. Nancy Derwent,
+an active, outdoor Western girl, was pleased with her twelve-bore. She had bagged
+within two brace of her companion's score.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">They started homeward at a gentle trot. When within a hundred yards of Piedra
+Creek a man rode out of the timber directly toward them. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It looks like the man we saw coming over," remarked Miss Derwent. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">As the distance between them lessened, the district attorney suddenly pulled up his
+team sharply, with his eyes fixed upon the advancing horseman. That individual
+had drawn a Winchester from its scabbard on his saddle and thrown it over his arm.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Now I know you, Mexico Sam!" muttered Littlefield to himself. "It was you who
+shook your rattles in that gentle epistle."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mexico Sam did not leave things long in doubt. He had a nice eye in all matters
+relating to firearms, so when he was within good rifle range, but outside of danger
+from No. 8 shot, he threw up his Winchester and opened fire upon the occupants of
+the buckboard. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The first shot cracked the back of the seat within the two-inch space between the
+shoulders of Littlefield and Miss Derwent. The next went through the dashboard
+and Littlefield's trouser leg.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The district attorney hustled Nancy out of the buck-board to the ground. She was a
+little pale, but asked no questions. She had the frontier instinct that accepts
+conditions in an emergency without superfluous argument. They kept their guns in
+hand, and Littlefield hastily gathered some handfuls of cartridges from the
+pasteboard box on the seat and crowded them into his pockets.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Keep behind the horses, Nan," he commanded. "That fellow is a ruffian I sent to
+prison once. He's trying to get even. He knows our shot won't hurt him at that
+distance."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"All right, Bob," said Nancy steadily. "I'm not afraid. But you come close, too.
+Whoa, Bess; stand still, now!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She stroked Bess's mane. Littlefield stood with his gun ready, praying that the
+desperado would come within range.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But Mexico Sam was playing his vendetta along safe lines. He was a bird of
+different feather from the plover. His accurate eye drew an imaginary line of
+circumference around the area of danger from bird-shot, and upon this line lie rode.
+His horse wheeled to the right, and as his victims rounded to the safe side of their
+equine breast-work he sent a ball through the district attorney's hat. Once he
+miscalculated in making a d&eacute;tour, and over-stepped his margin. Littlefield's gun
+flashed, and Mexico Sam ducked his head to the harmless patter of the shot. A few
+of them stung his horse, which pranced promptly back to the safety line.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The desperado fired again. A little cry came from Nancy Derwent. Littlefield
+whirled, with blazing eyes, and saw the blood trickling down her cheek.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm not hurt, Bob&mdash;only a splinter struck me. I think he hit one of the
+wheel-spokes."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Lord!" groaned Littlefield. "If I only had a charge of buckshot!" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The ruffian got his horse still, and took careful aim. Fly gave a snort and fell in the
+harness, struck in the neck. Bess, now disabused of the idea that plover were being
+fired at, broke her traces and galloped wildly away. Mexican Sam sent a ball neatly
+through the fulness of Nancy Derwent's shooting jacket.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Lie down&mdash;lie down!" snapped Littlefield. "Close to the horse&mdash;flat on the
+ground&mdash;so." He almost threw her upon the grass against the back of the recumbent
+Fly. Oddly enough, at that moment the words of the Mexican girl returned to his
+mind:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"If the life of the girl you love is ever in danger, remember Rafael Ortiz."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Littlefield uttered an exclamation.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Open fire on him, Nan, across the horse's back. Fire as fast as you can! You can't
+hurt him, but keep him dodging shot for one minute while I try to work a little
+scheme."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Nancy gave a quick glance at Littlefield, and saw him take out his pocket-knife and
+open it. Then she turned her face to obey orders, keeping up a rapid fire at the
+enemy.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mexico Sam waited patiently until this innocuous fusillade ceased. He had plenty
+of time, and he did not care to risk the chance of a bird-shot in his eye when it
+could be avoided by a little caution. He pulled his heavy Stetson low down over his
+face until the shots ceased. Then he drew a little nearer, and fired with careful aim
+at what he could see of his victims above the fallen horse.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Neither of them moved. He urged his horse a few steps nearer. He saw the district
+attorney rise to one knee and deliberately level his shotgun. He pulled his hat down
+and awaited the harmless rattle of the tiny pellets.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The shotgun blazed with a heavy report. Mexico Sam sighed, turned limp all over,
+and slowly fell from his horse&mdash;a dead rattlesnake. </span></p>
+
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At ten o'clock the next morning court opened, and the case of the United States
+versus Rafael Ortiz was called. The district attorney, with his arm in a sling, rose
+and addressed the court.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"May it please your honour," he said, "I desire to enter a <i>nolle pros.</i> in this case.
+Even though the defendant should be guilty, there is not sufficient evidence in the
+hands of the government to secure a conviction. The piece of counterfeit coin upon
+the identity of which the case was built is not now available as evidence. I ask,
+therefore, that the case be stricken off."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At the noon recess Kilpatrick strolled into the district attorney's office.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I've just been down to take a squint at old Mexico Sam," said the deputy. "They've
+got him laid out. Old Mexico was a tough outfit, I reckon. The boys was wonderin'
+down there what you shot him with. Some said it must have been nails. I never see
+a gun carry anything to make holes like he had."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I shot him," said the district attorney, "with Exhibit A of your counterfeiting case.
+Lucky thing for me&mdash;and somebody else&mdash;that it was as bad money as it was! It
+sliced up into slugs very nicely. Say, Kil, can't you go down to the jacals and find
+where that Mexican girl lives? Miss Derwent wants to know."</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="18"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+XVIII<br>
+<br>
+A NEWSPAPER STORY<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At 8 A. M. it lay on Giuseppi's news-stand, still damp from the presses. Giuseppi,
+with the cunning of his ilk, philandered on the opposite corner, leaving his patrons
+to help themselves, no doubt on a theory related to the hypothesis of the watched
+pot.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">This particular newspaper was, according to its custom and design, an educator, a
+guide, a monitor, a champion and a household counsellor and <i>vade mecum</i>.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">From its many excellencies might be selected three editorials. One was in simple
+and chaste but illuminating language directed to parents and teachers, deprecating
+corporal punishment for children. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Another was an accusive and significant warning addressed to a notorious labour
+leader who was on the point of instigating his clients to a troublesome strike.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The third was an eloquent demand that the police force be sustained and aided in
+everything that tended to increase its efficiency as public guardians and servants.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Besides these more important chidings and requisitions upon the store of good
+citizenship was a wise prescription or form of procedure laid out by the editor of the
+heart-to-heart column in the specific case of a young man who had complained of
+the obduracy of his lady love, teaching him how he might win her.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Again, there was, on the beauty page, a complete answer to a young lady inquirer
+who desired admonition toward the securing of bright eyes, rosy cheeks and a
+beautiful countenance.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One other item requiring special cognizance was a brief "personal," running thus:</span></p>
+<br>
+<blockquote>
+<span style="font-size: 12pt">
+DEAR JACK:&mdash;Forgive me. You were right. Meet me corner Madison and &ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;th at 8.30
+this morning. We leave at noon. PENITENT.<br>
+</span>
+</blockquote>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At 8 o'clock a young man with a haggard look and the feverish gleam of unrest in
+his eye dropped a penny and picked up the top paper as he passed Giuseppi's stand.
+A sleepless night had left him a late riser. There was an office to be reached by
+nine, and a shave and a hasty cup of coffee to be crowded into the interval.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He visited his barber shop and then hurried on his way. He pocketed his paper,
+meditating a belated perusal of it at the luncheon hour. At the next corner it fell
+from his pocket, carrying with it his pair of new gloves. Three blocks he walked,
+missed the gloves and turned back fuming.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Just on the half-hour he reached the corner where lay the gloves and the paper. But
+he strangely ignored that which he had come to seek. He was holding two little
+hands as tightly as ever he could and looking into two penitent brown eyes, while
+joy rioted in his heart. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Dear Jack," she said, "I knew you would be here on time." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I wonder what she means by that," he was saying to himself; "but it's all right, it's
+all right."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A big wind puffed out of the west, picked up the paper from the sidewalk, opened it
+out and sent it flying and whirling down a side street. Up that street was driving a
+skittish bay to a spider-wheel buggy, the young man who had written to the
+heart-to-heart editor for a recipe that he might win her for whom he sighed.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The wind, with a prankish flurry, flapped the flying newspaper against the face of
+the skittish bay. There was a lengthened streak of bay mingled with the red of
+running gear that stretched itself out for four blocks. Then a water-hydrant played
+its part in the cosmogony, the buggy became matchwood as foreordained, and the
+driver rested very quietly where he had been flung on the asphalt in front of a
+certain brownstone mansion.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">They came out and had him inside very promptly. And there was one who made
+herself a pillow for his head, and cared for no curious eyes, bending over and
+saying, "Oh, it was you; it was you all the time, Bobby! Couldn't you see it? And if
+you die, why, so must I, and&mdash;" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But in all this wind we must hurry to keep in touch with our paper. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Policeman O'Brine arrested it as a character dangerous to traffic. Straightening its
+dishevelled leaves with his big, slow fingers, he stood a few feet from the family
+entrance of the Shandon Bells Caf&eacute;. One headline he spelled out ponderously: "The
+Papers to the Front in a Move to Help the Police."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But, whisht! The voice of Danny, the head bartender, through the crack of the
+door: "Here's a nip for ye, Mike, ould man."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Behind the widespread, amicable columns of the press Policeman O'Brine receives
+swiftly his nip of the real stuff. He moves away, stalwart, refreshed, fortified, to his
+duties. Might not the editor man view with pride the early, the spiritual, the literal
+fruit that had blessed his labours.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Policeman O'Brine folded the paper and poked it playfully under the arm of a small
+boy that was passing. That boy was named Johnny, and he took the paper home
+with him. His sister was named Gladys, and she had written to the beauty editor of
+the paper asking for the practicable touchstone of beauty. That was weeks ago, and
+she had ceased to look for an answer. Gladys was a pale girl, with dull eyes and a
+discontented expression. She was dressing to go up to the avenue to get some braid.
+Beneath her skirt she pinned two leaves of the paper Johnny had brought. When
+she walked the rustling sound was an exact imitation of the real thing.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">On the street she met the Brown girl from the flat below and stopped to talk. The
+Brown girl turned green. Only silk at $5 a yard could make the sound that she heard
+when Gladys moved. The Brown girl, consumed by jealousy, said something
+spiteful and went her way, with pinched lips.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Gladys proceeded toward the avenue. Her eyes now sparkled like jagerfonteins. A
+rosy bloom visited her cheeks; a triumphant, subtle, vivifying, smile transfigured
+her face. She was beautiful. Could the beauty editor have seen her then! There
+was something in her answer in the paper, I believe, about cultivating kind feelings
+toward others in order to make plain features attractive.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The labour leader against whom the paper's solemn and weighty editorial injunction
+was laid was the father of Gladys and Johnny. He picked up the remains of the
+journal from which Gladys had ravished a cosmetic of silken sounds. The editorial
+did not come under his eye, but instead it was greeted by one of those ingenious and
+specious puzzle problems that enthrall alike the simpleton and the sage. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The labour leader tore off half of the page, provided himself with table, pencil and
+paper and glued himself to his puzzle.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Three hours later, after waiting vainly for him at the appointed place, other more
+conservative leaders declared and ruled in favour of arbitration, and the strike with
+its attendant dangers was averted. Subsequent editions of the paper referred, in
+coloured inks, to the clarion tone of its successful denunciation of the labour
+leader's intended designs.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The remaining leaves of the active journal also went loyally to the proving of its
+potency.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When Johnny returned from school he sought a secluded spot and removed the
+missing columns from the inside of his clothing, where they had been artfully
+distributed so as to successfully defend such areas as are generally attacked during
+scholastic castigations. Johnny attended a private school and had had trouble with
+his teacher. As has been said, there was an excellent editorial against corporal
+punishment in that morning's issue, and no doubt it had its effect. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">After this can any one doubt the power of the press?</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="19"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+XIX<br>
+<br>
+TOMMY'S BURGLAR<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At ten o'clock P. M. Felicia, the maid, left by the basement door with the policeman
+to get a raspberry phosphate around the corner. She detested the policeman and
+objected earnestly to the arrangement. She pointed out, not unreasonably, that she
+might have been allowed to fall asleep over one of St. George Rathbone's novels on
+the third floor, but she was overruled. Raspberries and cops were not created for
+nothing.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The burglar got into the house without much difficulty; because we must have
+action and not too much description in a 2,000-word story. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In the dining room he opened the slide of his dark lantern. With a brace and
+centrebit he began to bore into the lock of the silver-closet.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Suddenly a click was heard. The room was flooded with electric light. The dark
+velvet porti&egrave;res parted to admit a fair-haired boy of eight in pink pajamas, bearing a
+bottle of olive oil in his hand. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Are you a burglar?" he asked, in a sweet, childish voice. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Listen to that," exclaimed the man, in a hoarse voice. "Am I a burglar? Wot do
+you suppose I have a three-days' growth of bristly beard on my face for, and a cap
+with flaps? Give me the oil, quick, and let me grease the bit, so I won't wake up
+your mamma, who is lying down with a headache, and left you in charge of Felicia
+who has been faithless to her trust."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, dear," said Tommy, with a sigh. "I thought you would be more up-to-date.
+This oil is for the salad when I bring lunch from the pantry for you. And mamma
+and papa have gone to the Metropolitan to hear De Reszke. But that isn't my fault.
+It only shows how long the story has been knocking around among the editors. If
+the author had been wise he'd have changed it to Caruso in the proofs."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Be quiet," hissed the burglar, under his breath. "If you raise an alarm I'll wring
+your neck like a rabbit's."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Like a chicken's," corrected Tommy. "You had that wrong. You don't wring
+rabbits' necks."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Aren't you afraid of me?" asked the burglar.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You know I'm not," answered Tommy. "Don't you suppose I know fact from
+fiction. If this wasn't a story I'd yell like an Indian when I saw you; and you'd
+probably tumble downstairs and get pinched on the sidewalk."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I see," said the burglar, "that you're on to your job. Go on with the performance."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Tommy seated himself in an armchair and drew his toes up under him. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Why do you go around robbing strangers, Mr. Burglar? Have you no friends?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I see what you're driving at," said the burglar, with a dark frown. "It's the same old
+story. Your innocence and childish insouciance is going to lead me back into an
+honest life. Every time I crack a crib where there's a kid around, it happens."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Would you mind gazing with wolfish eyes at the plate of cold beef that the butler
+has left on the dining table?" said Tommy. "I'm afraid it's growing late."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The burglar accommodated.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Poor man," said Tommy. "You must be hungry. If you will please stand in a
+listless attitude I will get you something to eat."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The boy brought a roast chicken, a jar of marmalade and a bottle of wine from the
+pantry. The burglar seized a knife and fork sullenly. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's only been an hour," he grumbled, "since I had a lobster and a pint of musty ale
+up on Broadway. I wish these story writers would let a fellow have a pepsin tablet,
+anyhow, between feeds." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"My papa writes books," remarked Tommy.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The burglar jumped to his feet quickly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You said he had gone to the opera," he hissed, hoarsely and with immediate
+suspicion.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I ought to have explained," said Tommy. "He didn't buy the tickets." The burglar
+sat again and toyed with the wishbone.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Why do you burgle houses?" asked the boy, wonderingly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Because," replied the burglar, with a sudden flow of tears. "God bless my little
+brown-haired boy Bessie at home."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ah," said Tommy, wrinkling his nose, "you got that answer in the wrong place.
+You want to tell your hard-luck story before you pull out the child stop."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, yes," said the burglar, "I forgot. Well, once I lived in Milwaukee, and&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Take the silver," said Tommy, rising from his chair.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Hold on," said the burglar. "But I moved away." I could find no other
+employment. For a while I managed to support my wife and child by passing
+confederate money; but, alas! I was forced to give that up because it did not belong
+to the union. I became desperate and a burglar."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Have you ever fallen into the hands of the police?" asked Tommy. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I said 'burglar,' not 'beggar,'" answered the cracksman.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"After you finish your lunch," said Tommy, "and experience the usual change of
+heart, how shall we wind up the story?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Suppose," said the burglar, thoughtfully, "that Tony Pastor turns out earlier than
+usual to-night, and your father gets in from 'Parsifal' at 10.30. I am thoroughly
+repentant because you have made me think of my own little boy Bessie, and&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Say," said Tommy, "haven't you got that wrong?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Not on your coloured crayon drawings by B. Cory Kilvert," said the burglar. "It's
+always a Bessie that I have at home, artlessly prattling to the pale-cheeked burglar's
+bride. As I was saying, your father opens the front door just as I am departing with
+admonitions and sandwiches that you have wrapped up for me. Upon recognizing
+me as an old Harvard classmate he starts back in&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Not in surprise?" interrupted Tommy, with wide, open eyes. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"He starts back in the doorway," continued the burglar. And then he rose to his feet
+and began to shout "Rah, rah, rah! rah, rah, rah! rah, rah, rah!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Well," said Tommy, wonderingly, "that's, the first time I ever knew a burglar to
+give a college yell when he was burglarizing a house, even in a story."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"That's one on you," said the burglar, with a laugh. "I was practising the
+dramatization. If this is put on the stage that college touch is about the only thing
+that will make it go."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Tommy looked his admiration.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You're on, all right," he said.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"And there's another mistake you've made," said the burglar. "You should have
+gone some time ago and brought me the $9 gold piece your mother gave you on
+your birthday to take to Bessie."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"But she didn't give it to me to take to Bessie," said Tommy, pouting. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Come, come!" said the burglar, sternly. "It's not nice of you to take advantage
+because the story contains an ambiguous sentence. You know what I mean. It's
+mighty little I get out of these fictional jobs, anyhow. I lose all the loot, and I have
+to reform every time; and all the swag I'm allowed is the blamed little fol-de-rols
+and luck-pieces that you kids hand over. Why, in one story, all I got was a kiss
+from a little girl who came in on me when I was opening a safe. And it tasted of
+molasses candy, too. I've a good notion to tie this table cover over your head and
+keep on into the silver-closet." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, no, you haven't," said Tommy, wrapping his arms around his knees. "Because
+if you did no editor would buy the story. You know you've got to preserve the
+unities."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"So've you," said the burglar, rather glumly. "Instead of sitting here talking
+impudence and taking the bread out of a poor man's mouth, what you'd like to be
+doing is hiding under the bed and screeching at the top of your voice."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You're right, old man," said Tommy, heartily. "I wonder what they make us do it
+for? I think the S. P. C. C. ought to interfere. I'm sure it's neither agreeable nor
+usual for a kid of my age to butt in when a full-grown burglar is at work and offer
+him a red sled and a pair of skates not to awaken his sick mother. And look how
+they make the burglars act! You'd think editors would know&mdash;but what's the use?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The burglar wiped his hands on the tablecloth and arose with a yawn. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Well, let's get through with it," he said. "God bless you, my little boy! you have
+saved a man from committing a crime this night. Bessie shall pray for you as soon
+as I get home and give her her orders. I shall never burglarize another house&mdash;at
+least not until the June magazines are out. It'll be your little sister's turn then to run
+in on me while I am abstracting the U. S. 4 per cent. from the tea urn and buy me
+off with her coral necklace and a falsetto kiss." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You haven't got all the kicks coming to you," sighed Tommy, crawling out of his
+chair. "Think of the sleep I'm losing. But it's tough on both of us, old man. I wish
+you could get out of the story and really rob somebody. Maybe you'll have the
+chance if they dramatize us." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Never!" said the burglar, gloomily. "Between the box office and my better
+impulses that your leading juveniles are supposed to awaken and the magazines that
+pay on publication, I guess I'll always be broke."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm sorry," said Tommy, sympathetically. "But I can't help myself any more than
+you can. It's one of the canons of household fiction that no burglar shall be
+successful. The burglar must be foiled by a kid like me, or by a young lady heroine,
+or at the last moment by his old pal, Red Mike, who recognizes the house as one in
+which he used to be the coachman. You have got the worst end of it in any kind of
+a story."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Well, I suppose I must be clearing out now," said the burglar, taking up his lantern
+and bracebit.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You have to take the rest of this chicken and the bottle of wine with you for Bessie
+and her mother," said Tommy, calmly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"But confound it," exclaimed the burglar, in an annoyed tone, "they don't want it.
+I've got five cases of Ch&acirc;teau de Beychsvelle at home that was bottled in 1853.
+That claret of yours is corked. And you couldn't get either of them to look at a
+chicken unless it was stewed in champagne. You know, after I get out of the story I
+don't have so many limitations. I make a turn now and then."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Yes, but you must take them," said Tommy, loading his arms with the bundles.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Bless you, young master!" recited the burglar, obedient. "Second-Story Saul will
+never forget you. And now hurry and let me out, kid. Our 2,000 words must be
+nearly up."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Tommy led the way through the hall toward the front door. Suddenly the burglar
+stopped and called to him softly: "Ain't there a cop out there in front somewhere
+sparking the girl?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Yes," said Tommy, "but what&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm afraid he'll catch me," said the burglar. "You mustn't forget that this is
+fiction."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Great head!" said Tommy, turning. "Come out by the back door." </span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="20"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+XX<br>
+<br>
+A CHAPARRAL CHRISTMAS GIFT<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The original cause of the trouble was about twenty years in growing. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At the end of that time it was worth it.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Had you lived anywhere within fifty miles of Sundown Ranch you would have
+heard of it. It possessed a quantity of jet-black hair, a pair of extremely frank,
+deep-brown eyes and a laugh that rippled across the prairie like the sound of a
+hidden brook. The name of it was Rosita McMullen; and she was the daughter of
+old man McMullen of the Sundown Sheep Ranch.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">There came riding on red roan steeds&mdash;or, to be more explicit, on a paint and a
+flea-bitten sorrel&mdash;two wooers. One was Madison Lane, and the other was the Frio
+Kid. But at that time they did not call him the Frio Kid, for he had not earned the
+honours of special nomenclature. His name was simply Johnny McRoy.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It must not be supposed that these two were the sum of the agreeable Rosita's
+admirers. The bronchos of a dozen others champed their bits at the long hitching
+rack of the Sundown Ranch. Many were the sheeps'-eyes that were cast in those
+savannas that did not belong to the flocks of Dan McMullen. But of all the
+cavaliers, Madison Lane and Johnny McRoy galloped far ahead, wherefore they are
+to be chronicled.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Madison Lane, a young cattleman from the Nueces country, won the race. He and
+Rosita were married one Christmas day. Armed, hilarious, vociferous,
+magnanimous, the cowmen and the sheepmen, laying aside their hereditary hatred,
+joined forces to celebrate the occasion. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Sundown Ranch was sonorous with the cracking of jokes and sixshooters, the shine
+of buckles and bright eyes, the outspoken congratulations of the herders of kine.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But while the wedding feast was at its liveliest there descended upon it Johnny
+McRoy, bitten by jealousy, like one possessed.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'll give you a Christmas present," he yelled, shrilly, at the door, with his .45 in his
+hand. Even then he had some reputation as an offhand shot.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">His first bullet cut a neat underbit in Madison Lane's right ear. The barrel of his
+gun moved an inch. The next shot would have been the bride's had not Carson, a
+sheepman, possessed a mind with triggers somewhat well oiled and in repair. The
+guns of the wedding party had been hung, in their belts, upon nails in the wall when
+they sat at table, as a concession to good taste. But Carson, with great promptness,
+hurled his plate of roast venison and frijoles at McRoy, spoiling his aim. The
+second bullet, then, only shattered the white petals of a Spanish dagger flower
+suspended two feet above Rosita's head.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The guests spurned their chairs and jumped for their weapons. It was considered an
+improper act to shoot the bride and groom at a wedding. In about six seconds there
+were twenty or so bullets due to be whizzing in the direction of Mr. McRoy.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'll shoot better next time," yelled Johnny; "and there'll be a next time." He backed
+rapidly out the door.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Carson, the sheepman, spurred on to attempt further exploits by the success of his
+plate-throwing, was first to reach the door. McRoy's bullet from the darkness laid
+him low.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The cattlemen then swept out upon him, calling for vengeance, for, while the
+slaughter of a sheepman has not always lacked condonement, it was a decided
+misdemeanour in this instance. Carson was innocent; he was no accomplice at the
+matrimonial proceedings; nor had any one heard him quote the line "Christmas
+comes but once a year" to the guests.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But the sortie failed in its vengeance. McRoy was on his horse and away, shouting
+back curses and threats as he galloped into the concealing chaparral.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">That night was the birthnight of the Frio Kid. He became the "bad man" of that
+portion of the State. The rejection of his suit by Miss McMullen turned him to a
+dangerous man. When officers went after him for the shooting of Carson, he killed
+two of them, and entered upon the life of an outlaw. He became a marvellous shot
+with either hand. He would turn up in towns and settlements, raise a quarrel at the
+slightest opportunity, pick off his man and laugh at the officers of the law. He was
+so cool, so deadly, so rapid, so inhumanly blood-thirsty that none but faint attempts
+were ever made to capture him. When he was at last shot and killed by a little
+one-armed Mexican who was nearly dead himself from fright, the Frio Kid had the
+deaths of eighteen men on his head. About half of these were killed in fair duels
+depending upon the quickness of the draw. The other half were men whom he
+assassinated from absolute wantonness and cruelty. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Many tales are told along the border of his impudent courage and daring. But he
+was not one of the breed of desperadoes who have seasons of generosity and even
+of softness. They say he never had mercy on the object of his anger. Yet at this
+and every Christmastide it is well to give each one credit, if it can be done, for
+whatever speck of good he may have possessed. If the Frio Kid ever did a kindly
+act or felt a throb of generosity in his heart it was once at such a time and season,
+and this is the way it happened.</span></p>
+
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One who has been crossed in love should never breathe the odour from the
+blossoms of the ratama tree. It stirs the memory to a dangerous degree.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One December in the Frio country there was a ratama tree in full bloom, for the
+winter had been as warm as springtime. That way rode the Frio Kid and his
+satellite and co-murderer, Mexican Frank. The kid reined in his mustang, and sat in
+his saddle, thoughtful and grim, with dangerously narrowing eyes. The rich, sweet
+scent touched him somewhere beneath his ice and iron.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I don't know what I've been thinking about, Mex," he remarked in his usual mild
+drawl, "to have forgot all about a Christmas present I got to give. I'm going to ride
+over to-morrow night and shoot Madison Lane in his own house. He got my
+girl&mdash;Rosita would have had me if he hadn't cut into the game. I wonder why I
+happened to overlook it up to now?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ah, shucks, Kid," said Mexican, "don't talk foolishness. You know you can't get
+within a mile of Mad Lane's house to-morrow night. I see old man Allen day before
+yesterday, and he says Mad is going to have Christmas doings at his house. You
+remember how you shot up the festivities when Mad was married, and about the
+threats you made? Don't you suppose Mad Lane'll kind of keep his eye open for a
+certain Mr. Kid? You plumb make me tired, Kid, with such remarks." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm going," repeated the Frio Kid, without heat, "to go to Madison Lane's
+Christmas doings, and kill him. I ought to have done it a long time ago. Why,
+Mex, just two weeks ago I dreamed me and Rosita was married instead of her and
+him; and we was living in a house, and I could see her smiling at me, and&mdash;oh!
+h&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;l, Mex, he got her; and I'll get him&mdash;yes, sir, on Christmas Eve he got her, and then's
+when I'll get him."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"There's other ways of committing suicide," advised Mexican. "Why don't you go
+and surrender to the sheriff?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'll get him," said the Kid.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Christmas Eve fell as balmy as April. Perhaps there was a hint of far-away
+frostiness in the air, but it tingles like seltzer, perfumed faintly with late prairie
+blossoms and the mesquite grass. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When night came the five or six rooms of the ranch-house were brightly lit. In one
+room was a Christmas tree, for the Lanes had a boy of three, and a dozen or more
+guests were expected from the nearer ranches.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At nightfall Madison Lane called aside Jim Belcher and three other cowboys
+employed on his ranch.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Now, boys," said Lane, "keep your eyes open. Walk around the house and watch
+the road well. All of you know the 'Frio Kid,' as they call him now, and if you see
+him, open fire on him without asking any questions. I'm not afraid of his coming
+around, but Rosita is. She's been afraid he'd come in on us every Christmas since
+we were married." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The guests had arrived in buckboards and on horseback, and were making
+themselves comfortable inside.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The evening went along pleasantly. The guests enjoyed and praised Rosita's
+excellent supper, and afterward the men scattered in groups about the rooms or on
+the broad "gallery," smoking and chatting. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Christmas tree, of course, delighted the youngsters, and above all were they
+pleased when Santa Claus himself in magnificent white beard and furs appeared
+and began to distribute the toys.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's my papa," announced Billy Sampson, aged six. "I've seen him wear 'em
+before."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Berkly, a sheepman, an old friend of Lane, stopped Rosita as she was passing by
+him on the gallery, where he was sitting smoking. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Well, Mrs. Lane," said he, "I suppose by this Christmas you've gotten over being
+afraid of that fellow McRoy, haven't you? Madison and I have talked about it, you
+know."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Very nearly," said Rosita, smiling, "but I am still nervous sometimes. I shall never
+forget that awful time when he came so near to killing us."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"He's the most cold-hearted villain in the world," said Berkly. "The citizens all
+along the border ought to turn out and hunt him down like a wolf."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"He has committed awful crimes," said Rosita, "but&mdash;I&mdash;don't&mdash;know.
+I think there is
+a spot of good somewhere in everybody. He was not always bad&mdash;that I know."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Rosita turned into the hallway between the rooms. Santa Claus, in muffling
+whiskers and furs, was just coming through.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I heard what you said through the window, Mrs. Lane," he said. "I was just going
+down in my pocket for a Christmas present for your husband. But I've left one for
+you, instead. It's in the room to your right."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, thank you, kind Santa Claus," said Rosita, brightly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Rosita went into the room, while Santa Claus stepped into the cooler air of the yard.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She found no one in the room but Madison.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Where is my present that Santa said he left for me in here?" she asked.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Haven't seen anything in the way of a present," said her husband, laughing, "unless
+he could have meant me."</span></p>
+
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The next day Gabriel Radd, the foreman of the X O Ranch, dropped into the
+post-office at Loma Alta.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Well, the Frio Kid's got his dose of lead at last," he remarked to the postmaster.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"That so? How'd it happen?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"One of old Sanchez's Mexican sheep herders did it!&mdash;think of it! the Frio Kid killed
+by a sheep herder! The Greaser saw him riding along past his camp about twelve
+o'clock last night, and was so skeered that he up with a Winchester and let him have
+it. Funniest part of it was that the Kid was dressed all up with white Angora-skin
+whiskers and a regular Santy Claus rig-out from head to foot. Think of the Frio Kid
+playing Santy!"</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="21"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+XXI<br>
+<br>
+A LITTLE LOCAL COLOUR<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I mentioned to Rivington that I was in search of characteristic New York scenes
+and incidents&mdash;something typical, I told him, without necessarily having to spell the
+first syllable with an "i." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, for your writing business," said Rivington; "you couldn't have applied to a
+better shop. What I don't know about little old New York wouldn't make a sonnet
+to a sunbonnet. I'll put you right in the middle of so much local colour that you
+won't know whether you are a magazine cover or in the erysipelas ward. When do
+you want to begin?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Rivington is a young-man-about-town and a New Yorker by birth, preference and
+incommutability.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I told him that I would be glad to accept his escort and guardianship so that I might
+take notes of Manhattan's grand, gloomy and peculiar idiosyncrasies, and that the
+time of so doing would be at his own convenience.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"We'll begin this very evening," said Rivington, himself interested, like a good
+fellow. "Dine with me at seven, and then I'll steer you up against metropolitan
+phases so thick you'll have to have a kinetoscope to record 'em."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">So I dined with Rivington pleasantly at his club, in Forty-eleventh street, and then
+we set forth in pursuit of the elusive tincture of affairs.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">As we came out of the club there stood two men on the sidewalk near the steps in
+earnest conversation.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"And by what process of ratiocination," said one of them, "do you arrive at the
+conclusion that the division of society into producing and non-possessing classes
+predicates failure when compared with competitive systems that are monopolizing
+in tendency and result inimically to industrial evolution?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, come off your perch!" said the other man, who wore glasses. "Your premises
+won't come out in the wash. You wind-jammers who apply bandy-legged theories
+to concrete categorical syllogisms send logical conclusions skallybootin' into the
+infinitesimal ragbag. You can't pull my leg with an old sophism with whiskers on it.
+You quote Marx and Hyndman and Kautsky&mdash;what are they?&mdash;shines! Tolstoi?&mdash;his
+garret is full of rats. I put it to you over the home-plate that the idea of a
+cooperative commonwealth and an abolishment of competitive systems simply takes
+the rag off the bush and gives me hyperesthesia of the roopteetoop! The skookum
+house for yours!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I stopped a few yards away and took out my little notebook. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, come ahead," said Rivington, somewhat nervously; "you don't want to listen to
+that."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Why, man," I whispered, "this is just what I do want to hear. These slang types
+are among your city's most distinguishing features. Is this the Bowery variety? I
+really must hear more of it."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"If I follow you," said the man who had spoken first, "you do not believe it possible
+to reorganize society on the basis of common interest?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Shinny on your own side!" said the man with glasses. "You never heard any such
+music from my foghorn. What I said was that I did not believe it practicable just
+now. The guys with wads are not in the frame of mind to slack up on the mazuma,
+and the man with the portable tin banqueting canister isn't exactly ready to join the
+Bible class. You can bet your variegated socks that the situation is all spifflicated up
+from the Battery to breakfast! What the country needs is for some bully old bloke
+like Cobden or some wise guy like old Ben Franklin to sashay up to the front and
+biff the nigger's head with the baseball. Do you catch my smoke? What?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Rivington pulled me by the arm impatiently.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Please come on," he said. "Let's go see something. This isn't what you want."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Indeed, it is," I said resisting. "This tough talk is the very stuff that counts. There
+is a picturesqueness about the speech of the lower order of people that is quite
+unique. Did you say that this is the Bowery variety of slang?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, well," said Rivington, giving it up, "I'll tell you straight. That's one of our
+college professors talking. He ran down for a day or two at the club. It's a sort of
+fad with him lately to use slang in his conversation. He thinks it improves language.
+The man he is talking to is one of New York's famous social economists. Now will
+you come on. You can't use that, you know."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"No," I agreed; "I can't use that. Would you call that typical of New York?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Of course not," said Rivington, with a sigh of relief. "I'm glad you see the
+difference. But if you want to hear the real old tough Bowery slang I'll take you
+down where you'll get your fill of it." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I would like it," I said; "that is, if it's the real thing. I've often read it in books, but I
+never heard it. Do you think it will be dangerous to go unprotected among those
+characters?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, no," said Rivington; "not at this time of night. To tell the truth, I haven't been
+along the Bowery in a long time, but I know it as well as I do Broadway. We'll look
+up some of the typical Bowery boys and get them to talk. It'll be worth your while.
+They talk a peculiar dialect that you won't hear anywhere else on earth." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Rivington and I went east in a Forty-second street car and then south on the Third
+avenue line.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At Houston street we got off and walked.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"We are now on the famous Bowery," said Rivington; "the Bowery celebrated in
+song and story."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">We passed block after block of "gents'" furnishing stores&mdash;the windows full of shirts
+with prices attached and cuffs inside. In other windows were neckties and no
+shirts. People walked up and down the sidewalks.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"In some ways," said I, "this reminds me of Kokomono, Ind., during the
+peach-crating season."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Rivington was nettled.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Step into one of these saloons or vaudeville shows," said he, "with a large roll of
+money, and see how quickly the Bowery will sustain its reputation."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You make impossible conditions," said I, coldly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">By and by Rivington stopped and said we were in the heart of the Bowery. There
+was a policeman on the corner whom Rivington knew. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Hallo, Donahue!" said my guide. "How goes it? My friend and I are down this
+way looking up a bit of local colour. He's anxious to meet one of the Bowery types.
+Can't you put us on to something genuine in that line&mdash;something that's got the
+colour, you know?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Policeman Donahue turned himself about ponderously, his florid face full of
+good-nature. He pointed with his club down the street. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Sure!" he said huskily. "Here comes a lad now that was born on the Bowery and
+knows every inch of it. If he's ever been above Bleecker street he's kept it to
+himself."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A man about twenty-eight or twenty-nine, with a smooth face, was sauntering
+toward us with his hands in his coat pockets. Policeman Donahue stopped him
+with a courteous wave of his club.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Evening, Kerry," he said. "Here's a couple of gents, friends of mine, that want to
+hear you spiel something about the Bowery. Can you reel 'em off a few yards?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Certainly, Donahue," said the young man, pleasantly. "Good evening, gentlemen,"
+he said to us, with a pleasant smile. Donahue walked off on his beat.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"This is the goods," whispered Rivington, nudging me with his elbow. "Look at his
+jaw!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Say, cull," said Rivington, pushing back his hat, "wot's doin'? Me and my friend's
+taking a look down de old line&mdash;see? De copper tipped us off dat you was wise to
+de bowery. Is dat right?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I could not help admiring Rivington's power of adapting himself to his
+surroundings.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Donahue was right," said the young man, frankly; "I was brought up on the
+Bowery. I have been news-boy, teamster, pugilist, member of an organized band of
+'toughs,' bartender, and a 'sport' in various meanings of the word. The experience
+certainly warrants the supposition that I have at least a passing acquaintance with a
+few phases of Bowery life. I will be pleased to place whatever knowledge and
+experience I have at the service of my friend Donahue's friends." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Rivington seemed ill at ease.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I say," he said&mdash;somewhat entreatingly, "I thought&mdash;you're not stringing us, are you?
+It isn't just the kind of talk we expected. You haven't even said 'Hully gee!' once.
+Do you really belong on the Bowery?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I am afraid," said the Bowery boy, smilingly, "that at some time you have been
+enticed into one of the dives of literature and had the counterfeit coin of the Bowery
+passed upon you. The 'argot' to which you doubtless refer was the invention of
+certain of your literary 'discoverers' who invaded the unknown wilds below Third
+avenue and put strange sounds into the mouths of the inhabitants. Safe in their
+homes far to the north and west, the credulous readers who were beguiled by this
+new 'dialect' perused and believed. Like Marco Polo and Mungo Park&mdash;pioneers
+indeed, but ambitious souls who could not draw the line of demarcation between
+discovery and invention&mdash;the literary bones of these explorers are dotting the
+trackless wastes of the subway. While it is true that after the publication of the
+mythical language attributed to the dwellers along the Bowery certain of its pat
+phrases and apt metaphors were adopted and, to a limited extent, used in this
+locality, it was because our people are prompt in assimilating whatever is to their
+commercial advantage. To the tourists who visited our newly discovered clime, and
+who expected a realization of their literary guide books, they supplied the demands
+of the market.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"But perhaps I am wandering from the question. In what way can I assist you,
+gentlemen? I beg you will believe that the hospitality of the street is extended to all.
+There are, I regret to say, many catchpenny places of entertainment, but I cannot
+conceive that they would entice you."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I felt Rivington lean somewhat heavily against me.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Say!" he remarked, with uncertain utterance; "come and have a drink with us." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Thank you, but I never drink. I find that alcohol, even in the smallest quantities,
+alters the perspective. And I must preserve my perspective, for I am studying the
+Bowery. I have lived in it nearly thirty years, and I am just beginning to understand
+its heartbeats. It is like a great river fed by a hundred alien streams. Each influx
+brings strange seeds on its flood, strange silt and weeds, and now and then a flower
+of rare promise. To construe this river requires a man who can build dykes against
+the overflow, who is a naturalist, a geologist, a humanitarian, a diver and a strong
+swimmer. I love my Bowery. It was my cradle and is my inspiration. I have
+published one book. The critics have been kind. I put my heart in it. I am writing
+another, into which I hope to put both heart and brain. Consider me your guide,
+gentlemen. Is there anything I can take you to see, any place to which I can conduct
+you?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">I was afraid to look at Rivington except with one eye.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Thanks," said Rivington. "We were looking up . . . that is . . . my friend . . .
+confound it; it's against all precedent, you know . . . awfully obliged . . . just the
+same."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"In case," said our friend, "you would like to meet some of our Bowery young men
+I would be pleased to have you visit the quarters of our East Side Kappa Delta Phi
+Society, only two blocks east of here." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Awfully sorry," said Rivington, "but my friend's got me on the jump to-night. He's
+a terror when he's out after local colour. Now, there's nothing I would like better
+than to drop in at the Kappa Delta Phi, but&mdash;some other time!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">We said our farewells and boarded a home-bound car. We had a rabbit on upper
+Broadway, and then I parted with Rivington on a street corner. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Well, anyhow," said he, braced and recovered, "it couldn't have happened
+anywhere but in little old New York."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Which to say the least, was typical of Rivington.</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="22"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+XXII<br>
+<br>
+GEORGIA'S RULING<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">If you should chance to visit the General Land Office, step into the draughtsmen's
+room and ask to be shown the map of Salado County. A leisurely
+German&mdash;possibly old Kampfer himself&mdash;will bring it to you. It will be four feet
+square, on heavy drawing-cloth. The lettering and the figures will be beautifully
+clear and distinct. The title will be in splendid, undecipherable German text,
+ornamented with classic Teutonic designs&mdash;very likely Ceres or Pomona leaning
+against the initial letters with cornucopias venting grapes and wieners. You must
+tell him that this is not the map you wish to see; that he will kindly bring you its
+official predecessor. He will then say, "Ach, so!" and bring out a map half the size
+of the first, dim, old, tattered, and faded.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">By looking carefully near its northwest corner you will presently come upon the
+worn contours of Chiquito River, and, maybe, if your eyes are good, discern the
+silent witness to this story.</span></p>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Commissioner of the Land Office was of the old style; his antique courtesy was
+too formal for his day. He dressed in fine black, and there was a suggestion of
+Roman drapery in his long coat-skirts. His collars were "undetached" (blame
+haberdashery for the word); his tie was a narrow, funereal strip, tied in the same
+knot as were his shoe-strings. His gray hair was a trifle too long behind, but he kept
+it smooth and orderly. His face was clean-shaven, like the old statesmen's. Most
+people thought it a stern face, but when its official expression was off, a few had
+seen altogether a different countenance. Especially tender and gentle it had appeared
+to those who were about him during the last illness of his only child.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Commissioner had been a widower for years, and his life, outside his official
+duties, had been so devoted to little Georgia that people spoke of it as a touching
+and admirable thing. He was a reserved man, and dignified almost to austerity, but
+the child had come below it all and rested upon his very heart, so that she scarcely
+missed the mother's love that had been taken away. There was a wonderful
+companionship between them, for she had many of his own ways, being thoughtful
+and serious beyond her years.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One day, while she was lying with the fever burning brightly in her checks, she said
+suddenly:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Papa, I wish I could do something good for a whole lot of children!" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What would you like to do, dear?" asked the Commissioner. "Give them a party?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, I don't mean those kind. I mean poor children who haven't homes, and aren't
+loved and cared for as I am. I tell you what, papa!" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What, my own child?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"If I shouldn't get well, I'll leave them you&mdash;not <i>give</i> you, but just lend you, for you
+must come to mamma and me when you die too. If you can find time, wouldn't you
+do something to help them, if I ask you, papa?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Hush, hush dear, dear child," said the Commissioner, holding her hot little hand
+against his cheek; "you'll get well real soon, and you and I will see what we can do
+for them together."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But in whatsoever paths of benevolence, thus vaguely premeditated, the
+Commissioner might tread, he was not to have the company of his beloved. That
+night the little frail body grew suddenly too tired to struggle further, and Georgia's
+exit was made from the great stage when she had scarcely begun to speak her little
+piece before the footlights. But there must be a stage manager who understands.
+She had given the cue to the one who was to speak after her.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A week after she was laid away, the Commissioner reappeared at the office, a little
+more courteous, a little paler and sterner, with the black frock-coat hanging a little
+more loosely from his tall figure. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">His desk was piled with work that had accumulated during the four heartbreaking
+weeks of his absence. His chief clerk had done what he could, but there were
+questions of law, of fine judicial decisions to be made concerning the issue of
+patents, the marketing and leasing of school lands, the classification into grazing,
+agricultural, watered, and timbered, of new tracts to be opened to settlers.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Commissioner went to work silently and obstinately, putting back his grief as
+far as possible, forcing his mind to attack the complicated and important business of
+his office. On the second day after his return he called the porter, pointed to a
+leather-covered chair that stood near his own, and ordered it removed to a lumber-room at the top of the building. In that chair Georgia would always sit when she
+came to the office for him of afternoons.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">As time passed, the Commissioner seemed to grow more silent, solitary, and
+reserved. A new phase of mind developed in him. He could not endure the
+presence of a child. Often when a clattering youngster belonging to one of the
+clerks would come chattering into the big business-room adjoining his little
+apartment, the Commissioner would steal softly and close the door. He would
+always cross the street to avoid meeting the school-children when they came
+dancing along in happy groups upon the sidewalk, and his firm mouth would close
+into a mere line.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It was nearly three months after the rains had washed the last dead flower-petals
+from the mound above little Georgia when the "land-shark" firm of Hamlin and
+Avery filed papers upon what they considered the "fattest" vacancy of the year.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It should not be supposed that all who were termed "land-sharks" deserved the
+name. Many of them were reputable men of good business character. Some of
+them could walk into the most august councils of the State and say: "Gentlemen, we
+would like to have this, and that, and matters go thus." But, next to a three years'
+drought and the boll-worm, the Actual Settler hated the Land-shark. The
+land-shark haunted the Land Office, where all the land records were kept, and
+hunted "vacancies"&mdash;that is, tracts of unappropriated public domain, generally
+invisible upon the official maps, but actually existing "upon the ground." The law
+entitled any one possessing certain State scrip to file by virtue of same upon any
+land not previously legally appropriated. Most of the scrip was now in the hands of
+the land-sharks. Thus, at the cost of a few hundred dollars, they often secured lands
+worth as many thousands. Naturally, the search for "vacancies" was lively.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But often&mdash;very often&mdash;the land they thus secured, though legally "unappropriated,"
+would be occupied by happy and contented settlers, who had laboured for years to
+build up their homes, only to discover that their titles were worthless, and to receive
+peremptory notice to quit. Thus came about the bitter and not unjustifiable hatred
+felt by the toiling settlers toward the shrewd and seldom merciful speculators who
+so often turned them forth destitute and homeless from their fruitless labours. The
+history of the state teems with their antagonism. Mr. Land-shark seldom showed his
+face on "locations" from which he should have to eject the unfortunate victims of a
+monstrously tangled land system, but let his emissaries do the work. There was
+lead in every cabin, moulded into balls for him; many of his brothers had enriched
+the grass with their blood. The fault of it all lay far back.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When the state was young, she felt the need of attracting newcomers, and of
+rewarding those pioneers already within her borders. Year after year she issued
+land scrip&mdash;Headrights, Bounties, Veteran Donations, Confederates; and to
+railroads, irrigation companies, colonies, and tillers of the soil galore. All required
+of the grantee was that he or it should have the scrip properly surveyed upon the
+public domain by the county or district surveyor, and the land thus appropriated
+became the property of him or it, or his or its heirs and assigns, forever.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In those days&mdash;and here is where the trouble began&mdash;the state's domain was
+practically inexhaustible, and the old surveyors, with princely&mdash;yea, even Western
+American&mdash;liberality, gave good measure and over-flowing. Often the jovial man of
+metes and bounds would dispense altogether with the tripod and chain. Mounted on
+a pony that could cover something near a "vara" at a step, with a pocket compass to
+direct his course, he would trot out a survey by counting the beat of his pony's
+hoofs, mark his corners, and write out his field notes with the complacency
+produced by an act of duty well performed. Sometimes&mdash;and who could blame the
+surveyor?&mdash;when the pony was "feeling his oats," he might step a little higher and
+farther, and in that case the beneficiary of the scrip might get a thousand or two
+more acres in his survey than the scrip called for. But look at the boundless leagues
+the state had to spare! However, no one ever had to complain of the pony
+under-stepping. Nearly every old survey in the state contained an excess of land.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In later years, when the state became more populous, and land values increased, this
+careless work entailed incalculable trouble, endless litigation, a period of riotous
+land-grabbing, and no little bloodshed. The land-sharks voraciously attacked these
+excesses in the old surveys, and filed upon such portions with new scrip as
+unappropriated public domain. Wherever the identifications of the old tracts were
+vague, and the corners were not to be clearly established, the Land Office would
+recognize the newer locations as valid, and issue title to the locators. Here was the
+greatest hardship to be found. These old surveys, taken from the pick of the land,
+were already nearly all occupied by unsuspecting and peaceful settlers, and thus
+their titles were demolished, and the choice was placed before them either to buy
+their land over at a double price or to vacate it, with their families and personal
+belongings, immediately. Land locators sprang up by hundreds. The country was
+held up and searched for "vacancies" at the point of a compass. Hundreds of
+thousands of dollars' worth of splendid acres were wrested from their innocent
+purchasers and holders. There began a vast hegira of evicted settlers in tattered
+wagons; going nowhere, cursing injustice, stunned, purposeless, homeless,
+hopeless. Their children began to look up to them for bread, and cry.</span></p>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It was in consequence of these conditions that Hamilton and Avery had filed upon a
+strip of land about a mile wide and three miles long, comprising about two thousand
+acres, it being the excess over complement of the Elias Denny three-league survey
+on Chiquito River, in one of the middle-western counties. This two-thousand-acre
+body of land was asserted by them to be vacant land, and improperly considered a
+part of the Denny survey. They based this assertion and their claim upon the land
+upon the demonstrated facts that the beginning corner of the Denny survey was
+plainly identified; that its field notes called to run west 5,760 varas, and then called
+for Chiquito River; thence it ran south, with the meanders&mdash;and so on&mdash;and that the
+Chiquito River was, on the ground, fully a mile farther west from the point reached
+by course and distance. To sum up: there were two thousand acres of vacant land
+between the Denny survey proper and Chiquito River.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One sweltering day in July the Commissioner called for the papers in connection
+with this new location. They were brought, and heaped, a foot deep, upon his
+desk&mdash;field notes, statements, sketches, affidavits, connecting lines&mdash;documents of
+every description that shrewdness and money could call to the aid of Hamlin and
+Avery. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The firm was pressing the Commissioner to issue a patent upon their location. They
+possesed inside information concerning a new railroad that would probably pass
+somewhere near this land. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The General Land Office was very still while the Commissioner was delving into
+the heart of the mass of evidence. The pigeons could be heard on the roof of the
+old, castle-like building, cooing and fretting. The clerks were droning everywhere,
+scarcely pretending to earn their salaries. Each little sound echoed hollow and loud
+from the bare, stone-flagged floors, the plastered walls, and the iron-joisted ceiling.
+The impalpable, perpetual limestone dust that never settled, whitened a long
+streamer of sunlight that pierced the tattered window-awning.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It seemed that Hamlin and Avery had builded well. The Denny survey was
+carelessly made, even for a careless period. Its beginning corner was identical with
+that of a well-defined old Spanish grant, but its other calls were sinfully vague. The
+field notes contained no other object that survived&mdash;no tree, no natural object save
+Chiquito River, and it was a mile wrong there. According to precedent, the Office
+would be justified in giving it its complement by course and distance, and
+considering the remainder vacant instead of a mere excess.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Actual Settler was besieging the office with wild protests <i>in re</i>. Having the
+nose of a pointer and the eye of a hawk for the land-shark, he had observed his
+myrmidons running the lines upon his ground. Making inquiries, he learned that the
+spoiler had attacked his home, and he left the plough in the furrow and took his pen
+in hand. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One of the protests the Commissioner read twice. It was from a woman, a widow,
+the granddaughter of Elias Denny himself. She told how her grandfather had sold
+most of the survey years before at a trivial price&mdash;land that was now a principality in
+extent and value. Her mother had also sold a part, and she herself had succeeded to
+this western portion, along Chiquito River. Much of it she had been forced to part
+with in order to live, and now she owned only about three hundred acres, on which
+she had her home. Her letter wound up rather pathetically:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I've got eight children, the oldest fifteen years. I work all day and half the night to
+till what little land I can and keep us in clothes and books. I teach my children too.
+My neighbours is all poor and has big families. The drought kills the crops every
+two or three years and then we has hard times to get enough to eat. There is ten
+families on this land what the land-sharks is trying to rob us of, and all of them got
+titles from me. I sold to them cheap, and they aint paid out yet, but part of them is,
+and if their land should be took from them I would die. My grandfather was an
+honest man, and he helped to build up this state, and he taught his children to be
+honest, and how could I make it up to them who bought from me? Mr.
+Commissioner, if you let them land-sharks take the roof from over my children and
+the little from them as they has to live on, whoever again calls this state great or its
+government just will have a lie in their mouths"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Commissioner laid this letter aside with a sigh. Many, many such letters he had
+received. He had never been hurt by them, nor had he ever felt that they appealed
+to him personally. He was but the state's servant, and must follow its laws. And
+yet, somehow, this reflection did not always eliminate a certain responsible feeling
+that hung upon him. Of all the state's officers he was supremest in his department,
+not even excepting the Governor. Broad, general land laws he followed, it was true,
+but he had a wide latitude in particular ramifications. Rather than law, what he
+followed was Rulings: Office Rulings and precedents. In the complicated and new
+questions that were being engendered by the state's development the</span></p>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Commissioner's ruling was rarely appealed from. Even the courts sustained it when
+its equity was apparent.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Commissioner stepped to the door and spoke to a clerk in the other
+room&mdash;spoke as he always did, as if he were addressing a prince of the blood:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mr. Weldon, will you be kind enough to ask Mr. Ashe, the state school-land
+appraiser, to please come to my office as soon as convenient?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Ashe came quickly from the big table where he was arranging his reports.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mr. Ashe," said the Commissioner, "you worked along the Chiquito River, in
+Salado County, during your last trip, I believe. Do you remember anything of the
+Elias Denny three-league survey?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Yes, sir, I do," the blunt, breezy, surveyor answered. "I crossed it on my way to
+Block H, on the north side of it. The road runs with the Chiquito River, along the
+valley. The Denny survey fronts three miles on the Chiquito."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It is claimed," continued the commissioner, "that it fails to reach the river by as
+much as a mile."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The appraiser shrugged his shoulder. He was by birth and instinct an Actual
+Settler, and the natural foe of the land-shark.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It has always been considered to extend to the river," he said, dryly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"But that is not the point I desired to discuss," said the Commissioner. "What kind
+of country is this valley portion of (let us say, then) the Denny tract?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The spirit of the Actual Settler beamed in Ashe's face.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Beautiful," he said, with enthusiasm. "Valley as level as this floor, with just a little
+swell on, like the sea, and rich as cream. Just enough brakes to shelter the cattle in
+winter. Black loamy soil for six feet, and then clay. Holds water. A dozen nice
+little houses on it, with windmills and gardens. People pretty poor, I guess&mdash;too far
+from market&mdash;but comfortable. Never saw so many kids in my life."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"They raise flocks?" inquired the Commissioner.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ho, ho! I mean two-legged kids," laughed the surveyor; "two-legged, and
+bare-legged, and tow-headed."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Children! oh, children!" mused the Commissioner, as though a new view had
+opened to him; "they raise children!</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's a lonesome country, Commissioner," said the surveyor. "Can you blame 'em?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I suppose," continued the Commissioner, slowly, as one carefully pursues
+deductions from a new, stupendous theory, "not all of them are tow-headed. It
+would not be unreasonable, Mr. Ashe, I conjecture, to believe that a portion of them
+have brown, or even black, hair." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Brown and black, sure," said Ashe; "also red."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"No doubt," said the Commissioner. "Well, I thank you for your courtesy in
+informing me, Mr. Ashe. I will not detain you any longer from your duties."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Later, in the afternoon, came Hamlin and Avery, big, handsome, genial, sauntering
+men, clothed in white duck and low-cut shoes. They permeated the whole office
+with an aura of debonair prosperity. They passed among the clerks and left a wake
+of abbreviated given names and fat brown cigars.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">These were the aristocracy of the land-sharks, who went in for big things. Full of
+serene confidence in themselves, there was no corporation, no syndicate, no railroad
+company or attorney general too big for them to tackle. The peculiar smoke of their
+rare, fat brown cigars was to be perceived in the sanctum of every department of
+state, in every committee-room of the Legislature, in every bank parlour and every
+private caucus-room in the state Capital. Always pleasant, never in a hurry, in
+seeming to possess unlimited leisure, people wondered when they gave their
+attention to the many audacious enterprises in which they were known to be
+engaged.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">By and by the two dropped carelessly into the Commissioner's room and reclined
+lazily in the big, leather-upholstered arm-chairs. They drawled a good-natured
+complaint of the weather, and Hamlin told the Commissioner an excellent story he
+had amassed that morning from the Secretary of State.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But the Commissioner knew why they were there. He had half promised to render
+a decision that day upon their location.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The chief clerk now brought in a batch of duplicate certificates for the
+Commissioner to sign. As he traced his sprawling signature, "Hollis Summerfield,
+Comr. Genl. Land Office," on each one, the chief clerk stood, deftly removing them
+and applying the blotter. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I notice," said the chief clerk, "you've been going through that Salado County
+location. Kampfer is making a new map of Salado, and I believe is platting in that
+section of the county now."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I will see it," said the Commissioner. A few moments later he went to the
+draughtsmen's room.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">As he entered he saw five or six of the draughtsmen grouped about Kampfer's desk,
+gargling away at each other in pectoral German, and gazing at something thereupon.
+At the Commissioner's approach they scattered to their several places. Kampfer, a
+wizened little German, with long, frizzled ringlets and a watery eye, began to
+stammer forth some sort of an apology, the Commissioner thought, for the
+congregation of his fellows about his desk.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Never mind," said the Commissioner, "I wish to see the map you are making"; and,
+passing around the old German, seated himself upon the high draughtsman's stool.
+Kampfer continued to break English in trying to explain.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Herr Gommissioner, I assure you blenty sat I haf not it bremeditated&mdash;sat it
+wass&mdash;sat it itself make. Look you! from se field notes wass it blatted&mdash;blease to
+observe se calls: South, 10 degrees west 1,050 varas; south, 10 degrees east 300
+varas; south, 100; south, 9 west, 200; south, 40 degrees west 400&mdash;and so on. Herr
+Gommissioner, nefer would I have&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Commissioner raised one white hand, silently, Kampfer dropped his pipe and
+fled.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">With a hand at each side of his face, and his elbows resting upon the desk, the
+Commissioner sat staring at the map which was spread and fastened there&mdash;staring
+at the sweet and living profile of little Georgia drawn thereupon&mdash;at her face,
+pensive, delicate, and infantile, outlined in a perfect likeness.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When his mind at length came to inquire into the reason of it, he saw that it must
+have been, as Kampfer had said, unpremeditated. The old draughtsman had been
+platting in the Elias Denny survey, and Georgia's likeness, striking though it was,
+was formed by nothing more than the meanders of Chiquito River. Indeed,
+Kampfer's blotter, whereon his preliminary work was done, showed the laborious
+tracings of the calls and the countless pricks of the compasses. Then, over his faint
+pencilling, Kampfer had drawn in India ink with a full, firm pen the similitude of
+Chiquito River, and forth had blossomed mysteriously the dainty, pathetic profile of
+the child.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Commissioner sat for half an hour with his face in his hands, gazing
+downward, and none dared approach him. Then he arose and walked out. In the
+business office he paused long enough to ask that the Denny file be brought to his
+desk.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He found Hamlin and Avery still reclining in their chairs, apparently oblivious of
+business. They were lazily discussing summer opera, it being, their habit&mdash;perhaps
+their pride also&mdash;to appear supernaturally indifferent whenever they stood with large
+interests imperilled. And they stood to win more on this stake than most people
+knew. They possessed inside information to the effect that a new railroad would,
+within a year, split this very Chiquito River valley and send land values ballooning
+all along its route. A dollar under thirty thousand profit on this location, if it should
+hold good, would be a loss to their expectations. So, while they chatted lightly and
+waited for the Commissioner to open the subject, there was a quick, sidelong
+sparkle in their eyes, evincing a desire to read their title clear to those fair acres on
+the Chiquito.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A clerk brought in the file. The Commissioner seated himself and wrote upon it in
+red ink. Then he rose to his feet and stood for a while looking straight out of the
+window. The Land Office capped the summit of a bold hill. The eyes of the
+Commissioner passed over the roofs of many houses set in a packing of deep green,
+the whole checkered by strips of blinding white streets. The horizon, where his
+gaze was focussed, swelled to a fair wooded eminence flecked with faint dots of
+shining white. There was the cemetery, where lay many who were forgotten, and a
+few who had not lived in vain. And one lay there, occupying very small space,
+whose childish heart had been large enough to desire, while near its last beats, good
+to others. The Commissioner's lips moved slightly as he whispered to himself: "It
+was her last will and testament, and I have neglected it so long!" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The big brown cigars of Hamlin and Avery were fireless, but they still gripped them
+between their teeth and waited, while they marvelled at the absent expression upon
+the Commissioner's face.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">By and by he spoke suddenly and promptly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Gentlemen, I have just indorsed the Elias Denny survey for patenting. This office
+will not regard your location upon a part of it as legal." He paused a moment, and
+then, extending his hand as those dear old-time ones used to do in debate, he
+enunciated the spirit of that Ruling that subsequently drove the land-sharks to the
+wall, and placed the seal of peace and security over the doors of ten thousand
+homes. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"And, furthermore," he continued, with a clear, soft light upon his face, "it may
+interest you to know that from this time on this office will consider that when a
+survey of land made by virtue of a certificate granted by this state to the men who
+wrested it from the wilderness and the savage&mdash;made in good faith, settled in good
+faith, and left in good faith to their children or innocent purchasers&mdash;when such a
+survey, although overrunning its complement, shall call for any natural object
+visible to the eye of man, to that object it shall hold, and be good and valid. And
+the children of this state shall lie down to sleep at night, and rumours of disturbers
+of title shall not disquiet them. For," concluded the Commissioner, "of such is the
+Kingdom of Heaven."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In the silence that followed, a laugh floated up from the patent-room below. The
+man who carried down the Denny file was exhibiting it among the clerks.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Look here," he said, delightedly, "the old man has forgotten his name. He's written
+'Patent to original grantee,' and signed it 'Georgia Summerfield, Comr."'</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The speech of the Commissioner rebounded lightly from the impregnable Hamlin
+and Avery. They smiled, rose gracefully, spoke of the baseball team, and argued
+feelingly that quite a perceptible breeze had arisen from the east. They lit fresh fat
+brown cigars, and drifted courteously away. But later they made another
+tiger-spring for their quarry in the courts. But the courts, according to reports in the
+papers, "coolly roasted them" (a remarkable performance, suggestive of liquid-air
+didoes), and sustained the Commissioner's Ruling. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">And this Ruling itself grew to be a Precedent, and the Actual Settler framed it, and
+taught his children to spell from it, and there was sound sleep o' nights from the
+pines to the sage-brush, and from the chaparral to the great brown river of the north.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But I think, and I am sure the Commissioner never thought otherwise, that whether
+Kampfer was a snuffy old instrument of destiny, or whether the meanders of the
+Chiquito accidentally platted themselves into that memorable sweet profile or not,
+there was brought about "something good for a whole lot of children," and the result
+ought to be called "Georgia's Ruling."</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="23"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+XXIII<br>
+<br>
+BLIND MAN'S HOLIDAY<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Alas for the man and for the artist with the shifting point of perspective! Life shall
+be a confusion of ways to the one; the landscape shall rise up and confound the
+other. Take the case of Lorison. At one time he appeared to himself to be the
+feeblest of fools; at another he conceived that he followed ideals so fine that the
+world was not yet ready to accept them. During one mood he cursed his folly;
+possessed by the other, he bore himself with a serene grandeur akin to greatness: in
+neither did he attain the perspective. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Generations before, the name had been "Larsen." His race had bequeathed him its
+fine-strung, melancholy temperament, its saving balance of thrift and industry.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">From his point of perspective he saw himself an outcast from society, forever to be
+a shady skulker along the ragged edge of respectability; a denizen <i>des trois-quartz
+de monde</i>, that pathetic spheroid lying between the <i>haut</i> and the <i>demi</i>, whose
+inhabitants envy each of their neighbours, and are scorned by both. He was
+self-condemned to this opinion, as he was self-exiled, through it, to this quaint
+Southern city a thousand miles from his former home. Here he had dwelt for longer
+than a year, knowing but few, keeping in a subjective world of shadows which was
+invaded at times by the perplexing bulks of jarring realities. Then he fell in love
+with a girl whom he met in a cheap restaurant, and his story begins.</span></p>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Rue Chartres, in New Orleans, is a street of ghosts. It lies in the quarter where
+the Frenchman, in his prime, set up his translated pride and glory; where, also, the
+arrogant don had swaggered, and dreamed of gold and grants and ladies' gloves.
+Every flagstone has its grooves worn by footsteps going royally to the wooing and
+the fighting. Every house has a princely heartbreak; each doorway its untold tale of
+gallant promise and slow decay.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">By night the Rue Chartres is now but a murky fissure, from which the groping
+wayfarer sees, flung against the sky, the tangled filigree of Moorish iron balconies.
+The old houses of monsieur stand yet, indomitable against the century, but their
+essence is gone. The street is one of ghosts to whosoever can see them.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A faint heartbeat of the street's ancient glory still survives in a corner occupied by
+the Caf&eacute; Carabine d'Or. Once men gathered there to plot against kings, and to warn
+presidents. They do so yet, but they are not the same kind of men. A brass button
+will scatter these; those would have set their faces against an army. Above the door
+hangs the sign board, upon which has been depicted a vast animal of unfamiliar
+species. In the act of firing upon this monster is represented an unobtrusive human
+levelling an obtrusive gun, once the colour of bright gold. Now the legend above
+the picture is faded beyond conjecture; the gun's relation to the title is a matter of
+faith; the menaced animal, wearied of the long aim of the hunter, has resolved itself
+into a shapeless blot.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The place is known as "Antonio's," as the name, white upon the red-lit
+transparency, and gilt upon the windows, attests. There is a promise in "Antonio";
+a justifiable expectancy of savoury things in oil and pepper and wine, and perhaps
+an angel's whisper of garlic. But the rest of the name is "O'Riley." Antonio
+O'Riley!</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Carabine d'Or is an ignominious ghost of the Rue Chartres. The caf&eacute; where
+Bienville and Conti dined, where a prince has broken bread, is become a "family
+ristaurant."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Its customers are working men and women, almost to a unit. Occasionally you will
+see chorus girls from the cheaper theatres, and men who follow avocations subject
+to quick vicissitudes; but at Antonio's&mdash;name rich in Bohemian promise, but tame in
+fulfillment&mdash;manners debonair and gay are toned down to the "family" standard.
+Should you light a cigarette, mine host will touch you on the "arrum" and remind
+you that the proprieties are menaced. "Antonio" entices and beguiles from fiery
+legend without, but "O'Riley" teaches decorum within.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It was at this restaurant that Lorison first saw the girl. A flashy fellow with a
+predatory eye had followed her in, and had advanced to take the other chair at the
+little table where she stopped, but Lorison slipped into the seat before him. Their
+acquaintance began, and grew, and now for two months they had sat at the same
+table each evening, not meeting by appointment, but as if by a series of fortuitous
+and happy accidents. After dining, they would take a walk together in one of the
+little city parks, or among the panoramic markets where exhibits a continuous
+vaudeville of sights and sounds. Always at eight o'clock their steps led them to a
+certain street corner, where she prettily but firmly bade him good night and left him.
+"I do not live far from here," she frequently said, "and you must let me go the rest of
+the way alone."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But now Lorison had discovered that he wanted to go the rest of the way with her,
+or happiness would depart, leaving, him on a very lonely corner of life. And at the
+same time that he made the discovery, the secret of his banishment from the society
+of the good laid its finger in his face and told him it must not be.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Man is too thoroughly an egoist not to be also an egotist; if he love, the object shall
+know it. During a lifetime he may conceal it through stress of expediency and
+honour, but it shall bubble from his dying lips, though it disrupt a neighbourhood.
+It is known, however, that most men do not wait so long to disclose their passion.
+In the case of Lorison, his particular ethics positively forbade him to declare his
+sentiments, but he must needs dally with the subject, and woo by innuendo at least.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">On this night, after the usual meal at the Carabine d'Or, he strolled with his
+companion down the dim old street toward the river.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The Rue Chartres perishes in the old Place d'Armes. The ancient Cabildo, where
+Spanish justice fell like hail, faces it, and the Cathedral, another provincial ghost,
+overlooks it. Its centre is a little, iron-railed park of flowers and immaculate
+gravelled walks, where citizens take the air of evenings. Pedestalled high above it,
+the general sits his cavorting steed, with his face turned stonily down the river
+toward English Turn, whence come no more Britons to bombard his cotton bales.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Often the two sat in this square, but to-night Lorison guided her past the
+stone-stepped gate, and still riverward. As they walked, he smiled to himself to
+think that all he knew of her&mdash;except that be loved her&mdash;was her name, Norah
+Greenway, and that she lived with her brother. They had talked about everything
+except themselves. Perhaps her reticence had been caused by his.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">They came, at length, upon the levee, and sat upon a great, prostrate beam. The air
+was pungent with the dust of commerce. The great river slipped yellowly past.
+Across it Algiers lay, a longitudinous black bulk against a vibrant electric haze
+sprinkled with exact stars. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The girl was young and of the piquant order. A certain bright melancholy pervaded
+her; she possessed an untarnished, pale prettiness doomed to please. Her voice,
+when she spoke, dwarfed her theme. It was the voice capable of investing little
+subjects with a large interest. She sat at ease, bestowing her skirts with the little
+womanly touch, serene as if the begrimed pier were a summer garden. Lorison
+poked the rotting boards with his cane.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He began by telling her that he was in love with some one to whom he durst not
+speak of it. "And why not?" she asked, accepting swiftly his fatuous presentation
+of a third person of straw. "My place in the world," he answered, "is none to ask a
+woman to share. I am an outcast from honest people; I am wrongly accused of one
+crime, and am, I believe, guilty of another."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Thence he plunged into the story of his abdication from society. The story, pruned
+of his moral philosophy, deserves no more than the slightest touch. It is no new
+tale, that of the gambler's declension. During one night's sitting he lost, and then
+had imperilled a certain amount of his employer's money, which, by accident, he
+carried with him. He continued to lose, to the last wager, and then began to gain,
+leaving the game winner to a somewhat formidable sum. The same night his
+employer's safe was robbed. A search was had; the winnings of Lorison were
+found in his room, their total forming an accusative nearness to the sum purloined.
+He was taken, tried and, through incomplete evidence, released, smutched with the
+sinister <i>devoirs</i> of a disagreeing jury.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It is not in the unjust accusation," he said to the girl, "that my burden lies, but in
+the knowledge that from the moment I staked the first dollar of the firm's money I
+was a criminal&mdash;no matter whether I lost or won. You see why it is impossible for
+me to speak of love to her."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It is a sad thing," said Norah, after a little pause,
+"to think what very good people there are in the world."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Good?" said Lorison.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I was thinking of this superior person whom you say you love. She must be a very
+poor sort of creature."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I do not understand."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Nearly," she continued, "as poor a sort of creature as yourself." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You do not understand," said Lorison, removing his hat and sweeping back his
+fine, light hair. "Suppose she loved me in return, and were willing to marry me.
+Think, if you can, what would follow. Never a day would pass but she would be
+reminded of her sacrifice. I would read a condescension in her smile, a pity even in
+her affection, that would madden me. No. The thing would stand between us
+forever. Only equals should mate. I could never ask her to come down upon my
+lower plane."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">An arc light faintly shone upon Lorison's face. An illumination from within also
+pervaded it. The girl saw the rapt, ascetic look; it was the face either of Sir Galahad
+or Sir Fool.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Quite starlike," she said, "is this unapproachable angel. Really too high to be
+grasped."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"By me, yes."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She faced him suddenly. "My dear friend, would you prefer your star fallen?"
+Lorison made a wide gesture.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You push me to the bald fact," he declared; "you are not in sympathy with my
+argument. But I will answer you so. If I could reach my particular star, to drag it
+down, I would not do it; but if it were fallen, I would pick it up, and thank Heaven
+for the privilege." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">They were silent for some minutes. Norah shivered, and thrust her hands deep into
+the pockets of her jacket. Lorison uttered a remorseful exclamation.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm not cold," she said. "I was just thinking. I ought to tell you something. You
+have selected a strange confidante. But you cannot expect a chance acquaintance,
+picked up in a doubtful restaurant, to be an angel."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Norah!" cried Lorison.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Let me go on. You have told me about yourself. We have been such good friends.
+I must tell you now what I never wanted you to know. I am&mdash;worse than you are. I
+was on the stage . . . I sang in the chorus . . . I was pretty bad, I guess . . . I stole
+diamonds from the prima donna . . . they arrested me . . . I gave most of them up,
+and they let me go . . . I drank wine every night . . . a great deal . . . I was very
+wicked, but&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lorison knelt quickly by her side and took her hands.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Dear Norah!" he said, exultantly. "It is you, it is you I love! You never guessed it,
+did you? 'Tis you I meant all the time. Now I can speak. Let me make you forget
+the past. We have both suffered; let us shut out the world, and live for each other.
+Norah, do you hear me say I love you?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"In spite of&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Rather say because of it. You have come out of your past noble and good. Your
+heart is an angel's. Give it to me."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"A little while ago you feared the future too much to even speak." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"But for you; not for myself. Can you love me?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She cast herself, wildly sobbing, upon his breast.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Better than life&mdash;than truth itself&mdash;than everything."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"And my own past," said Lorison, with a note of solicitude&mdash;"can you forgive and&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I answered you that," she whispered, "when I told you I loved you." She leaned
+away, and looked thoughtfully at him. "If I had not told you about myself, would
+you have&mdash;would you&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"No," he interrupted; "I would never have let you know I loved you. I would never
+have asked you this&mdash;Norah, will you be my wife?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She wept again.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, believe me; I am good now&mdash;I am no longer wicked! I will be the best wife in
+the world. Don't think I am&mdash;bad any more. If you do I shall die, I shall die!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">While he was consoling, her, she brightened up, eager and impetuous. "Will you
+marry me to-night?" she said. "Will you prove it that way. I have a reason for
+wishing it to be to-night. Will you?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Of one of two things was this exceeding frankness the outcome: either of
+importunate brazenness or of utter innocence. The lover's perspective contained
+only the one.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The sooner," said Lorison, "the happier I shall be."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What is there to do?" she asked. "What do you have to get? Come! You should
+know."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Her energy stirred the dreamer to action.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"A city directory first," he cried, gayly, "to find where the man lives who gives
+licenses to happiness. We will go together and rout him out. Cabs, cars,
+policemen, telephones and ministers shall aid us."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Father Rogan shall marry us," said the girl, with ardour. "I will take you to him."</span></p>
+
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">An hour later the two stood at the open doorway of an immense, gloomy brick
+building in a narrow and lonely street. The license was tight in Norah's hand.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Wait here a moment," she said, "till I find Father Rogan." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She plunged into the black hallway, and the lover was left standing, as it were, on
+one leg, outside. His impatience was not greatly taxed. Gazing curiously into what
+seemed the hallway to Erebus, he was presently reassured by a stream of light that
+bisected the darkness, far down the passage. Then he heard her call, and fluttered
+lampward, like the moth. She beckoned him through a doorway into the room
+whence emanated the light. The room was bare of nearly everything except books,
+which had subjugated all its space. Here and there little spots of territory had been
+reconquered. An elderly, bald man, with a superlatively calm, remote eye, stood by
+a table with a book in his hand, his finger still marking a page. His dress was
+sombre and appertained to a religious order. His eye denoted an acquaintance with
+the perspective.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Father Rogan," said Norah, "this is <i>he</i>."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The two of ye," said Father Rogan, "want to get married?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">They did not deny it. He married them. The ceremony was quickly done. One
+who could have witnessed it, and felt its scope, might have trembled at the terrible
+inadequacy of it to rise to the dignity of its endless chain of results.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Afterward the priest spake briefly, as if by rote, of certain other civil and legal
+addenda that either might or should, at a later time, cap the ceremony. Lorison
+tendered a fee, which was declined, and before the door closed after the departing
+couple Father Rogan's book popped open again where his finger marked it.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In the dark hall Norah whirled and clung to her companion, tearful. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Will you never, never be sorry?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At last she was reassured.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At the first light they reached upon the street, she asked the time, just as she had
+each night. Lorison looked at his watch. Half-past eight.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lorison thought it was from habit that she guided their steps toward the corner
+where they always parted. But, arrived there, she hesitated, and then released his
+arm. A drug store stood on the corner; its bright, soft light shone upon them.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Please leave me here as usual to-night," said Norah, sweetly. "I must&mdash;I would
+rather you would. You will not object? At six to-morrow evening I will meet you
+at Antonio's. I want to sit with you there once more. And then&mdash;I will go where you
+say." She gave him a bewildering, bright smile, and walked swiftly away.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Surely it needed all the strength of her charm to carry off this astounding behaviour.
+It was no discredit to Lorison's strength of mind that his head began to whirl.
+Pocketing his hands, he rambled vacuously over to the druggist's windows, and
+began assiduously to spell over the names of the patent medicines therein displayed. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">As soon as be had recovered his wits, he proceeded along the street in an aimless
+fashion. After drifting for two or three squares, he flowed into a somewhat more
+pretentious thoroughfare, a way much frequented by him in his solitary ramblings.
+For here was a row of shops devoted to traffic in goods of the widest range of
+choice&mdash;handiworks of art, skill and fancy, products of nature and labour from
+every zone.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Here, for a time, he loitered among the conspicuous windows, where was set,
+emphasized by congested floods of light, the cunningest spoil of the interiors.
+There were few passers, and of this Lorison was glad. He was not of the world. For
+a long time he had touched his fellow man only at the gear of a levelled
+cog-wheel&mdash;at right angles, and upon a different axis. He had dropped into a
+distinctly new orbit. The stroke of ill fortune had acted upon him, in effect, as a
+blow delivered upon the apex of a certain ingenious toy, the musical top, which,
+when thus buffeted while spinning, gives forth, with scarcely retarded motion, a
+complete change of key and chord.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Strolling along the pacific avenue, he experienced singular, supernatural calm,
+accompanied by an unusual a activity of brain. Reflecting upon recent affairs, he
+assured himself of his happiness in having won for a bride the one he had so greatly
+desired, yet he wondered mildly at his dearth of active emotion. Her strange
+behaviour in abandoning him without valid excuse on his bridal eve aroused in him
+only a vague and curious speculation. Again, he found himself contemplating, with
+complaisant serenity, the incidents of her somewhat lively career. His perspective
+seemed to have been queerly shifted.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">As he stood before a window near a corner, his ears were assailed by a waxing
+clamour and commotion. He stood close to the window to allow passage to the
+cause of the hubbub&mdash;a procession of human beings, which rounded the corner and
+headed in his direction. He perceived a salient hue of blue and a glitter of brass
+about a central figure of dazzling white and silver, and a ragged wake of black,
+bobbing figures.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Two ponderous policemen were conducting between them a woman dressed as if
+for the stage, in a short, white, satiny skirt reaching to the knees, pink stockings,
+and a sort of sleeveless bodice bright with relucent, armour-like scales. Upon her
+curly, light hair was perched, at a rollicking angle, a shining tin helmet. The
+costume was to be instantly recognized as one of those amazing conceptions to
+which competition has harried the inventors of the spectacular ballet. One of the
+officers bore a long cloak upon his arm, which, doubtless, had been intended to veil
+the I candid attractions of their effulgent prisoner, but, for some reason, it had not
+been called into use, to the vociferous delight of the tail of the procession.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Compelled by a sudden and vigorous movement of the woman, the parade halted
+before the window by which Lorison stood. He saw that she was young, and, at the
+first glance, was deceived by a sophistical prettiness of her face, which waned
+before a more judicious scrutiny. Her look was bold and reckless, and upon her
+countenance, where yet the contours of youth survived, were the finger-marks of
+old age's credentialed courier, Late Hours.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The young woman fixed her unshrinking gaze upon Lorison, and called to him in
+the voice of the wronged heroine in straits:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Say! You look like a good fellow; come and put up the bail, won't you? I've done
+nothing to get pinched for. It's all a mistake. See how they're treating me! You
+won't be sorry, if you'll help me out of this. Think of your sister or your girl being
+dragged along the streets this way! I say, come along now, like a good fellow." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It may be that Lorison, in spite of the unconvincing bathos of this appeal, showed a
+sympathetic face, for one of the officers left the woman's side, and went over to
+him.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's all right, Sir," he said, in a husky, confidential tone; "she's the right party. We
+took her after the first act at the Green Light Theatre, on a wire from the chief of
+police of Chicago. It's only a square or two to the station. Her rig's pretty bad, but
+she refused to change clothes&mdash;or, rather," added the officer, with a smile, "to put on
+some. I thought I'd explain matters to you so you wouldn't think she was being
+imposed upon."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What is the charge?" asked Lorison.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Grand larceny. Diamonds. Her husband is a jeweller in Chicago. She cleaned his
+show case of the sparklers, and skipped with a comic-opera troupe."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The policeman, perceiving that the interest of the entire group of spectators was
+centred upon himself and Lorison&mdash;their conference being regarded as a possible
+new complication&mdash;was fain to prolong the situation&mdash;which reflected his own
+importance&mdash;by a little afterpiece of philosophical comment.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"A gentleman like you, Sir," he went on affably, "would never notice it, but it
+comes in my line to observe what an immense amount of trouble is made by that
+combination&mdash;I mean the stage, diamonds and light-headed women who aren't
+satisfied with good homes. I tell you, Sir, a man these days and nights wants to
+know what his women folks are up to."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The policeman smiled a good night, and returned to the side of his charge, who had
+been intently watching Lorison's face during the conversation, no doubt for some
+indication of his intention to render succour. Now, at the failure of the sign, and at
+the movement made to continue the ignominious progress, she abandoned hope, and
+addressed him thus, pointedly:</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You damn chalk-faced quitter! You was thinking of giving me a hand, but you let
+the cop talk you out of it the first word. You're a dandy to tie to. Say, if you ever
+get a girl, she'll have a picnic. Won't she work you to the queen's taste! Oh, my!"
+She concluded with a taunting, shrill laugh that rasped Lorison like a saw. The
+policemen urged her forward; the delighted train of gaping followers closed up the
+rear; and the captive Amazon, accepting her fate, extended the scope of her
+maledictions so that none in hearing might seem to be slighted.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Then there came upon Lorison an overwhelming revulsion of his perspective. It
+may be that he had been ripe for it, that the abnormal condition of mind in which he
+had for so long existed was already about to revert to its balance; however, it is
+certain that the events of the last few minutes had furnished the channel, if not the
+impetus, for the change.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The initial determining influence had been so small a thing as the fact and manner
+of his having been approached by the officer. That agent had, by the style of his
+accost, restored the loiterer to his former place in society. In an instant he had been
+transformed from a somewhat rancid prowler along the fishy side streets of gentility
+into an honest gentleman, with whom even so lordly a guardian of the peace might
+agreeably exchange the compliments.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">This, then, first broke the spell, and set thrilling in him a resurrected longing for the
+fellowship of his kind, and the rewards of the virtuous. To what end, he
+vehemently asked himself, was this fanciful self-accusation, this empty
+renunciation, this moral squeamishness through which he had been led to abandon
+what was his heritage in life, and not beyond his deserts? Technically, he was
+uncondemned; his sole guilty spot was in thought rather than deed, and cognizance
+of it unshared by others. For what good, moral or sentimental, did he slink,
+retreating like the hedgehog from his own shadow, to and fro in this musty
+Bohemia that lacked even the picturesque?</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But the thing that struck home and set him raging was the part played by the
+Amazonian prisoner. To the counterpart of that astounding belligerent&mdash;identical at
+least, in the way of experience&mdash;to one, by her own confession, thus far fallen, had
+he, not three hours since, been united in marriage. How desirable and natural it had
+seemed to him then, and how monstrous it seemed now! How the words of
+diamond thief number two yet burned in his ears: "If you ever get a girl, she'll have
+a picnic." What did that mean but that women instinctively knew him for one they
+could hoodwink? Still again, there reverberated the policeman's sapient
+contribution to his agony: "A man these days and nights wants to know what his
+women folks are up to." Oh, yes, he had been a fool; he had looked at things from
+the wrong standpoint. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But the wildest note in all the clamour was struck by pain's forefinger, jealousy.
+Now, at least, he felt that keenest sting&mdash;a mounting love unworthily bestowed.
+Whatever she might be, he loved her; he bore in his own breast his doom. A
+grating, comic flavour to his predicament struck him suddenly, and he laughed
+creakingly as he swung down the echoing pavement. An impetuous desire to act, to
+battle with his fate, seized him. He stopped upon his heel, and smote his palms
+together triumphantly. His wife was&mdash;where? But there was a tangible link; an
+outlet more or less navigable, through which his derelict ship of matrimony might
+yet be safely towed&mdash;the priest!</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Like all imaginative men with pliable natures, Lorison was, when thoroughly
+stirred, apt to become tempestuous. With a high and stubborn indignation upon
+him, be retraced his steps to the intersecting street by which he had come. Down
+this he hurried to the corner where he had parted with&mdash;an astringent grimace
+tinctured the thought&mdash;his wife. Thence still back he harked, following through an
+unfamiliar district his stimulated recollections of the way they had come from that
+preposterous wedding. Many times he went abroad, and nosed his way back to the
+trail, furious.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At last, when he reached the dark, calamitous building in which his madness had
+culminated, and found the black hallway, he dashed down it, perceiving no light or
+sound. But he raised his voice, hailing loudly; reckless of everything but that he
+should find the old mischief-maker with the eyes that looked too far away to see the
+disaster he had wrought. The door opened, and in the stream of light Father Rogan
+stood, his book in hand, with his finger marking the place.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ah!" cried Lorison. "You are the man I want. I had a wife of you a few hours
+ago. I would not trouble you, but I neglected to note how it was done. Will you
+oblige me with the information whether the business is beyond remedy?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Come inside," said the priest; "there are other lodgers in the house, who might
+prefer sleep to even a gratified curiosity." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lorison entered the room and took the chair offered him. The priest's eyes looked a
+courteous interrogation.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I must apologize again," said the young man, "for so soon intruding upon you with
+my marital infelicities, but, as my wife has neglected to furnish me with her
+address, I am deprived of the legitimate recourse of a family row."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I am quite a plain man," said Father Rogan, pleasantly; "but I do not see how I am
+to ask you questions."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Pardon my indirectness," said Lorison; "I will ask one. In this room to-night you
+pronounced me to be a husband. You afterward spoke of additional rites or
+performances that either should or could be effected. I paid little attention to your
+words then, but I am hungry to hear them repeated now. As matters stand, am I
+married past all help?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You are as legally and as firmly bound," said the priest, "as though it had been
+done in a cathedral, in the presence of thousands. The additional observances I
+referred to are not necessary to the strictest legality of the act, but were advised as a
+precaution for the future&mdash;for convenience of proof in such contingencies as wills,
+inheritances and the like."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lorison laughed harshly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Many thanks," he said. "Then there is no mistake, and I am the happy benedict. I
+suppose I should go stand upon the bridal corner, and when my wife gets through
+walking the streets she will look me up." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Father Rogan regarded him calmly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"My son," he said, "when a man and woman come to me to be married I always
+marry them. I do this for the sake of other people whom they might go away and
+marry if they did not marry each other. As you see, I do not seek your confidence;
+but your case seems to me to be one not altogether devoid of interest. Very few
+marriages that have come to my notice have brought such well-expressed regret
+within so short a time. I will hazard one question: were you not under the
+impression that you loved the lady you married, at the time you did so;" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Loved her!" cried Lorison, wildly. "Never so well as now, though she told me she
+deceived and sinned and stole. Never more than now, when, perhaps, she is
+laughing at the fool she cajoled and left, with scarcely a word, to return to God only
+knows what particular line of her former folly."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Father Rogan answered nothing. During the silence that succeeded, he sat with a
+quiet expectation beaming in his full, lambent eye. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"If you would listen&mdash;" began Lorison. The priest held up his hand. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"As I hoped," he said. "I thought you would trust me. Wait but a moment." He
+brought a long clay pipe, filled and lighted it. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Now, my son," he said.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lorison poured a twelve month's accumulated confidence into Father Rogan's ear.
+He told all; not sparing himself or omitting the facts of his past, the events of the
+night, or his disturbing conjectures and fears.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The main point," said the priest, when he had concluded, "seems to me to be
+this&mdash;are you reasonably sure that you love this woman whom you have married?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Why," exclaimed Lorison, rising impulsively to his feet&mdash;"why should I deny it?
+But look at me&mdash;am fish, flesh or fowl? That is the main point to me, I assure you."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I understand you," said the priest, also rising, and laying down his pipe. "The
+situation is one that has taxed the endurance of much older men than you&mdash;in fact,
+especially much older men than you. I will try to relieve you from it, and this night.
+You shall see for yourself into exactly what predicament you have fallen, and how
+you shall, possibly, be extricated. There is no evidence so credible as that of the
+eyesight."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Father Rogan moved about the room, and donned a soft black hat. Buttoning his
+coat to his throat, he laid his hand on the doorknob. "Let us walk," he said.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The two went out upon the street. The priest turned his face down it, and Lorison
+walked with him through a squalid district, where the houses loomed, awry and
+desolate-looking, high above them. Presently they turned into a less dismal side
+street, where the houses were smaller, and, though hinting of the most meagre
+comfort, lacked the concentrated wretchedness of the more populous byways.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">At a segregated, two-story house Father Rogan halted, and mounted the steps with
+the confidence of a familiar visitor. He ushered Lorison into a narrow hallway,
+faintly lighted by a cobwebbed hanging lamp. Almost immediately a door to the
+right opened and a dingy Irishwoman protruded her head.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Good evening to ye, Mistress Geehan," said the priest, unconsciously, it seemed,
+falling into a delicately flavoured brogue. "And is it yourself can tell me if Norah
+has gone out again, the night, maybe?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, it's yer blissid riverence! Sure and I can tell ye the same. The purty darlin'
+wint out, as usual, but a bit later. And she says: 'Mother Geehan,' says she, 'it's me
+last noight out, praise the saints, this noight is!' And, oh, yer riverence, the swate,
+beautiful drame of a dress she had this toime! White satin and silk and ribbons, and
+lace about the neck and arrums&mdash;'twas a sin, yer reverence, the gold was spint upon
+it."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The priest heard Lorison catch his breath painfully, and a faint smile flickered
+across his own clean-cut mouth.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Well, then, Mistress Geehan," said he, "I'll just step upstairs and see the bit boy for
+a minute, and I'll take this gentleman up with me."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"He's awake, thin," said the woman. 'I've just come down from sitting wid him the
+last hour, tilling him fine shtories of ould County Tyrone. 'Tis a greedy gossoon, it
+is, yer riverence, for me shtories."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Small the doubt," said Father Rogan. "There's no rocking would put him to slape
+the quicker, I'm thinking."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Amid the woman's shrill protest against the retort, the two men ascended the steep
+stairway. The priest pushed open the door of a room near its top.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Is that you already, sister?" drawled a sweet, childish voice from the darkness.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's only ould Father Denny come to see ye, darlin'; and a foine gentleman I've
+brought to make ye a gr-r-and call. And ye resaves us fast aslape in bed! Shame on
+yez manners!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, Father Denny, is that you? I'm glad. And will you light the lamp, please? It's
+on the table by the door. And quit talking like Mother Geehan, Father Denny."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The priest lit the lamp, and Lorison saw a tiny, towsled-haired boy, with a thin,
+delicate face, sitting up in a small bed in a corner. Quickly, also, his rapid glance
+considered the room and its contents. It was furnished with more than comfort, and
+its adornments plainly indicated a woman's discerning taste. An open door beyond
+revealed the blackness of an adjoining room's interior.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The boy clutched both of Father Rogan's hands. "I'm so glad you came," he said;
+"but why did you come in the night? Did sister send you?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Off wid ye! Am I to be sint about, at me age, as was Terence McShane, of
+Ballymahone? I come on me own r-r-responsibility." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lorison had also advanced to the boy's bedside. He was fond of children; and the
+wee fellow, laying himself down to sleep alone in that dark room, stirred-his heart.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Aren't you afraid, little man?" he asked, stooping down beside him. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Sometimes," answered the boy, with a shy smile, "when the rats make too much
+noise. But nearly every night, when sister goes out, Mother Geehan stays a while
+with me, and tells me funny stories. I'm not often afraid, sir."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"This brave little gentleman," said Father Rogan, "is a scholar of mine. Every day
+from half-past six to half-past eight&mdash;when sister comes for him&mdash;he stops in my
+study, and we find out what's in the inside of books. He knows multiplication,
+division and fractions; and he's troubling me to begin wid the chronicles of Ciaran
+of Clonmacnoise, Corurac McCullenan and Cuan O'Lochain, the gr-r-reat Irish
+histhorians." The boy was evidently accustomed to the priest's Celtic pleasantries.
+A little, appreciative grin was all the attention the insinuation of pedantry received.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lorison, to have saved his life, could not have put to the child one of those vital
+questions that were wildly beating about, unanswered, in his own brain. The little
+fellow was very like Norah; he had the same shining hair and candid eyes.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, Father Denny," cried the boy, suddenly, "I forgot to tell you! Sister is not
+going away at night any more! She told me so when she kissed me good night as
+she was leaving. And she said she was so happy, and then she cried. Wasn't that
+queer? But I'm glad; aren't you?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Yes, lad. And now, ye omadhaun, go to sleep, and say good night; we must be
+going."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Which shall I do first, Father Denny?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Faith, he's caught me again! Wait till I get the sassenach into the annals of
+Tageruach, the hagiographer; I'll give him enough of the Irish idiom to make him
+more respectful."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The light was out, and the small, brave voice bidding them good night from the
+dark room. They groped downstairs, and tore away from the garrulity of Mother
+Geehan.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Again the priest steered them through the dim ways, but this time in another
+direction. His conductor was serenely silent, and Lorison followed his example to
+the extent of seldom speaking. Serene he could not be. His heart beat suffocatingly
+in his breast. The following of this blind, menacing trail was pregnant with he
+knew not what humiliating revelation to be delivered at its end.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">They came into a more pretentious street, where trade, it could be surmised,
+flourished by day. And again the priest paused; this time before a lofty building,
+whose great doors and windows in the lowest floor were carefully shuttered and
+barred. Its higher apertures were dark, save in the third story, the windows of
+which were brilliantly lighted. Lorison's ear caught a distant, regular, pleasing
+thrumming, as of music above. They stood at an angle of the building. Up, along
+the side nearest them, mounted an iron stairway. At its top was an upright,
+illuminated parallelogram. Father Rogan had stopped, and stood, musing.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I will say this much," he remarked, thoughtfully: "I believe you to be a better man
+than you think yourself to be, and a better man than I thought some hours ago. But
+do not take this," he added, with a smile, "as much praise. I promised you a
+possible deliverance from an unhappy perplexity. I will have to modify that
+promise. I can only remove the mystery that enhanced that perplexity. Your
+deliverance depends upon yourself. Come."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He led his companion up the stairway. Halfway up, Lorison caught him by the
+sleeve. "Remember," he gasped, "I love that woman." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You desired to know.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I&mdash;Go on."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The priest reached the landing at the top of the stairway. Lorison, behind him, saw
+that the illuminated space was the glass upper half of a door opening into the lighted
+room. The rhythmic music increased as they neared it; the stairs shook with the
+mellow vibrations. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Lorison stopped breathing when he set foot upon the highest step, for the priest
+stood aside, and motioned him to look through the glass of the door.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">His eye, accustomed to the darkness, met first a blinding glare, and then he made
+out the faces and forms of many people, amid an extravagant display of splendid
+robings&mdash;billowy laces, brilliant-hued finery, ribbons, silks and misty drapery. And
+then he caught the meaning of that jarring hum, and he saw the tired, pale, happy
+face of his wife, bending, as were a score of others, over her sewing
+machine&mdash;toiling, toiling. Here was the folly she pursued, and the end of his quest.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But not his deliverance, though even then remorse struck him. His shamed soul
+fluttered once more before it retired to make room for the other and better one. For,
+to temper his thrill of joy, the shine of the satin and the glimmer of ornaments
+recalled the disturbing figure of the bespangled Amazon, and the base duplicate
+histories lit by the glare of footlights and stolen diamonds. It is past the wisdom of
+him who only sets the scenes, either to praise or blame the man. But this time his
+love overcame his scruples. He took a quick step, and reached out his hand for the
+doorknob. Father Rogan was quicker to arrest it and draw him back.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You use my trust in you queerly," said the priest sternly. "What are you about to
+do?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I am going to my wife," said Lorison. "Let me pass."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Listen," said the priest, holding him firmly by the arm. "I am about to put you in
+possession of a piece of knowledge of which, thus far, you have scarcely proved
+deserving. I do not think you ever will; but I will not dwell upon that. You see in
+that room the woman you married, working for a frugal living for herself, and a
+generous comfort for an idolized brother. This building belongs to the chief
+costumer of the city. For months the advance orders for the coming Mardi Gras
+festivals have kept the work going day and night. I myself secured employment
+here for Norah. She toils here each night from nine o'clock until daylight, and,
+besides, carries home with her some of the finer costumes, requiring more delicate
+needlework, and works there part of the day. Somehow, you two have remained
+strangely ignorant of each other's lives. Are you convinced now that your wife is
+not walking the streets?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Let me go to her," cried Lorison, again struggling, "and beg her forgiveness!'</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Sir," said the priest, "do you owe me nothing? Be quiet. It seems so often that
+Heaven lets fall its choicest gifts into hands that must be taught to hold them.
+Listen again. You forgot that repentant sin must not compromise, but look up, for
+redemption, to the purest and best. You went to her with the fine-spun sophistry
+that peace could be found in a mutual guilt; and she, fearful of losing what her heart
+so craved, thought it worth the price to buy it with a desperate, pure, beautiful lie. I
+have known her since the day she was born; she is as innocent and unsullied in life
+and deed as a holy saint. In that lowly street where she dwells she first saw the
+light, and she has lived there ever since, spending her days in generous self-sacrifice
+for others. Och, ye spalpeen!" continued Father Rogan, raising his finger in kindly
+anger at Lorison. "What for, I wonder, could she be after making a fool of hersilf,
+and shamin' her swate soul with lies, for the like of you!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Sir," said Lorison, trembling, "say what you please of me. Doubt it as you must, I
+will yet prove my gratitude to you, and my devotion to her. But let me speak to her
+once now, let me kneel for just one moment at her feet, and&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Tut, tut!" said the priest. "How many acts of a love drama do you think an old
+bookworm like me capable of witnessing? Besides, what kind of figures do we cut,
+spying upon the mysteries of midnight millinery! Go to meet your wife to-morrow,
+as she ordered you, and obey her thereafter, and maybe some time I shall get
+forgiveness for the part I have played in this night's work. Off wid yez down the
+shtairs, now! 'Tis late, and an ould man like me should be takin' his rest."</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="24"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><b>
+XXIV<br>
+<br>
+MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES<br>
+</b></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Aunt Ellen," said Octavia, cheerfully, as she threw her black kid gloves carefully at
+the dignified Persian cat on the window-seat, "I'm a pauper."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You are so extreme in your statements, Octavia, dear," said Aunt Ellen, mildly,
+looking up from her paper. "If you find yourself temporarily in need of some small
+change for bonbons, you will find my purse in the drawer of the writing desk." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Octavia Beaupree removed her hat and seated herself on a footstool near her aunt's
+chair, clasping her hands about her knees. Her slim and flexible figure, clad in a
+modish mourning costume, accommodated itself easily and gracefully to the trying
+position. Her bright and youthful face, with its pair of sparkling, life-enamoured
+eyes, tried to compose itself to the seriousness that the occasion seemed to demand.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You good auntie, it isn't a case of bonbons; it is abject, staring, unpicturesque
+poverty, with ready-made clothes, gasolined gloves, and probably one o'clock
+dinners all waiting with the traditional wolf at the door. I've just come from my
+lawyer, auntie, and, 'Please, ma'am, I ain't got nothink 't all. Flowers, lady?
+Buttonhole, gentleman? Pencils, sir, three for five, to help a poor widow?' Do I do it
+nicely, auntie, or, as a bread-winner accomplishment, were my lessons in elocution
+entirely wasted?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Do be serious, my dear," said Aunt Ellen, letting her paper fall to the floor, "long
+enough to tell me what you mean. Colonel Beaupree's estate&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Colonel Beaupree's estate," interrupted Octavia, emphasizing her words with
+appropriate dramatic gestures, "is of Spanish castellar architecture. Colonel
+Beaupree's resources are&mdash;wind. Colonel Beaupree's stocks are&mdash;water. Colonel
+Beaupree's income is&mdash;all in. The statement lacks the legal technicalities to which I
+have been listening for an hour, but that is what it means when translated." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Octavia!" Aunt Ellen was now visibly possessed by consternation. "I can hardly
+believe it. And it was the impression that he was worth a million. And the De
+Peysters themselves introduced him!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Octavia rippled out a laugh, and then became properly grave. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"<i>De mortuis nil</i>, auntie&mdash;not even the rest of it. The dear old colonel&mdash;what a gold
+brick he was, after all! I paid for my bargain fairly&mdash;I'm all here, am I not?&mdash;items:
+eyes, fingers, toes, youth, old family, unquestionable position in society as called for
+in the contract&mdash;no wild-cat stock here." Octavia picked up the morning paper from
+the floor. "But I'm not going to 'squeal'&mdash;isn't that what they call it when you rail at
+Fortune because you've, lost the game?" She turned the pages of the paper calmly.
+"'Stock market'&mdash;no use for that. 'Society's doings'&mdash;that's done. Here is my page&mdash;
+the wish column. A Van Dresser could not be said to 'want' for anything, of course.
+'Chamber-maids, cooks, canvassers, stenographers&mdash;'"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Dear," said Aunt Ellen, with a little tremor in her voice, "please do not talk in that
+way. Even if your affairs are in so unfortunate a condition, there is my three
+thousand&mdash;"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Octavia sprang up lithely, and deposited a smart kiss on the delicate cheek of the
+prim little elderly maid.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Blessed auntie, your three thousand is just sufficient to insure your Hyson to be
+free from willow leaves and keep the Persian in sterilized cream. I know I'd be
+welcome, but I prefer to strike bottom like Beelzebub rather than hang around like
+the Peri listening to the music from the side entrance. I'm going to earn my own
+living. There's nothing else to do. I'm a&mdash;Oh, oh, oh!&mdash;I had forgotten. There's one
+thing saved from the wreck. It's a corral&mdash;no, a ranch in&mdash;let me see&mdash;Texas: an asset,
+dear old Mr. Bannister called it. How pleased he was to show me something he
+could describe as unencumbered! I've a description of it among those stupid papers
+he made me bring away with me from his office. I'll try to find it."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Octavia found her shopping-bag, and drew from it a long envelope filled with
+typewritten documents.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"A ranch in Texas," sighed Aunt Ellen. "It sounds to me more like a liability than an
+asset. Those are the places where the centipedes are found, and cowboys, and
+fandangos."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"'The Rancho de las Sombras,'" read Octavia from a sheet of violently purple
+typewriting, "'is situated one hundred and ten miles southeast of San Antonio, and
+thirty-eight miles from its nearest railroad station, Nopal, on the I. and G. N. Ranch,
+consists of 7,680 acres of well-watered land, with title conferred by State patents,
+and twenty-two sections, or 14,080 acres, partly under yearly running lease and
+partly bought under State's twenty-year-purchase act. Eight thousand graded merino
+sheep, with the necessary equipment of horses, vehicles and general ranch
+paraphernalia. Ranch-house built of brick, with six rooms comfortably furnished
+according to the requirements of the climate. All within a strong barbed-wire fence.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"'The present ranch manager seems to be competent and reliable, and is rapidly
+placing upon a paying basis a business that, in other hands, had been allowed to
+suffer from neglect and misconduct.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"'This property was secured by Colonel Beaupree in a deal with a Western irrigation
+syndicate, and the title to it seems to be perfect. With careful management and the
+natural increase of land values, it ought to be made the foundation for a comfortable
+fortune for its owner.'"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When Octavia ceased reading, Aunt Ellen uttered something as near a sniff as her
+breeding permitted.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The prospectus," she said, with uncompromising metropolitan suspicion, "doesn't
+mention the centipedes, or the Indians. And you never did like mutton, Octavia. I
+don't see what advantage you can derive from this&mdash;desert."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">But Octavia was in a trance. Her eyes were steadily regarding something quite
+beyond their focus. Her lips were parted, and her face was lighted by the kindling
+furor of the explorer, the ardent, stirring disquiet of the adventurer. Suddenly she
+clasped her hands together exultantly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The problem solves itself, auntie," she cried. "I'm going to that ranch. I'm going to
+live on it. I'm going to learn to like mutton, and even concede the good qualities of
+centipedes&mdash;at a respectful distance. It's just what I need. It's a new life that comes
+when my old one is just ending. It's a release, auntie; it isn't a narrowing. Think of
+the gallops over those leagues of prairies, with the wind tugging at the roots of your
+hair, the coming close to the earth and learning over again the stories of the growing
+grass and the little wild flowers without names! Glorious is what it will be. Shall I
+be a shepherdess with a Watteau hat, and a crook to keep the bad wolves from the
+lambs, or a typical Western ranch girl, with short hair, like the pictures of her in the
+Sunday papers? I think the latter. And they'll have my picture, too, with the
+wild-cats I've slain, single-handed, hanging from my saddle horn. 'From the Four
+Hundred to the Flocks' is the way they'll headline it, and they'll print photographs of
+the old Van Dresser mansion and the church where I was married. They won't have
+my picture, but they'll get an artist to draw it. I'll be wild and woolly, and I'll grow
+my own wool." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Octavia!" Aunt Ellen condensed into the one word all the protests she was unable
+to utter.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Don't say a word, auntie. I'm going. I'll see the sky at night fit down on the world
+like a big butter-dish cover, and I'll make friends again with the stars that I haven't
+had a chat with since I was a wee child. I wish to go. I'm tired of all this. I'm glad I
+haven't any money. I could bless Colonel Beaupree for that ranch, and forgive him
+for all his bubbles. What if the life will be rough and lonely! I&mdash;I deserve it. I shut
+my heart to everything except that miserable ambition. I&mdash;oh, I wish to go away, and
+forget&mdash;forget!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Octavia swerved suddenly to her knees, laid her flushed face in her aunt's lap, and
+shook with turbulent sobs.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Aunt Ellen bent over her, and smoothed the coppery-brown hair. </span></p>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I didn't know," she said, gently; "I didn't know&mdash;that. Who was it, dear?"</span></p>
+
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When Mrs. Octavia Beaupree, n&eacute;e Van Dresser, stepped from the train at Nopal,
+her manner lost, for the moment, some of that easy certitude which had always
+marked her movements. The town was of recent establishment, and seemed to have
+been hastily constructed of undressed lumber and flapping canvas. The element that
+had congregated about the station, though not offensively demonstrative, was
+clearly composed of citizens accustomed to and prepared for rude alarms.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Octavia stood on the platform, against the telegraph office, and attempted to choose
+by intuition from the swaggering, straggling string of loungers, the manager of the
+Rancho de las Sombras, who had been instructed by Mr. Bannister to meet her
+there. That tall, serious, looking, elderly man in the blue flannel shirt and white tie
+she thought must be he. But, no; he passed by, removing his gaze from the lady as
+hers rested on him, according to the Southern custom. The manager, she thought,
+with some impatience at being kept waiting, should have no difficulty in selecting
+her. Young women wearing the most recent thing in ash-coloured travelling suits
+were not so plentiful in Nopal!</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Thus keeping a speculative watch on all persons of possible managerial aspect,
+Octavia, with a catching breath and a start of surprise, suddenly became aware of
+Teddy Westlake hurrying along the platform in the direction of the train&mdash;of Teddy
+Westlake or his sun-browned ghost in cheviot, boots and leather-girdled
+hat&mdash;Theodore Westlake, Jr., amateur polo (almost) champion, all-round butterfly
+and cumberer of the soil; but a broader, surer, more emphasized and determined
+Teddy than the one she had known a year ago when last she saw him. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">He perceived Octavia at almost the same time, deflected his course, and steered for
+her in his old, straightforward way. Something like awe came upon her as the
+strangeness of his metamorphosis was brought into closer range; the rich,
+red-brown of his complexion brought out so vividly his straw-coloured mustache
+and steel-gray eyes. He seemed more grown-up, and, somehow, farther away. But,
+when he spoke, the old, boyish Teddy came back again. They had been friends from
+childhood.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Why, 'Tave!" he exclaimed, unable to reduce his perplexity to coherence.
+"How&mdash;what&mdash;when&mdash;where?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Train," said Octavia; "necessity; ten minutes ago; home. Your complexion's gone,
+Teddy. Now, how&mdash;what&mdash;when&mdash;where?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm working down here," said Teddy. He cast side glances about the station as one
+does who tries to combine politeness with duty. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You didn't notice on the train," he asked, "an old lady with gray curls and a poodle,
+who occupied two seats with her bundles and quarrelled with the conductor, did
+you?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I think not," answered Octavia, reflecting. "And you haven't, by any chance,
+noticed a big, gray-mustached man in a blue shirt and six-shooters, with little flakes
+of merino wool sticking in his hair, have you?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Lots of 'em," said Teddy, with symptoms of mental delirium under the strain. Do
+you happen to know any such individual?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"No; the description is imaginary. Is your interest in the old lady whom you
+describe a personal one?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Never saw her in my life. She's painted entirely from fancy. She owns the little
+piece of property where I earn my bread and butter&mdash;the Rancho de las Sombras. I
+drove up to meet her according to arrangement with her lawyer."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Octavia leaned against the wall of the telegraph office. Was this possible? And
+didn't he know?</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Are you the manager of that ranch?" she asked weakly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I am," said Teddy, with pride.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I am Mrs. Beaupree," said Octavia faintly; "but my hair never would curl, and I
+was polite to the conductor."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">For a moment that strange, grown-up look came back, and removed Teddy miles
+away from her.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I hope you'll excuse me," he said, rather awkwardly. "You see, I've been down
+here in the chaparral a year. I hadn't heard. Give me your checks, please, and I'll
+have your traps loaded into the wagon. Jos&eacute; will follow with them. We travel ahead
+in the buckboard."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Seated by Teddy in a feather-weight buckboard, behind a pair of wild,
+cream-coloured Spanish ponies, Octavia abandoned all thought for the exhilaration
+of the present. They swept out of the little town and down the level road toward the
+south. Soon the road dwindled and disappeared, and they struck across a world
+carpeted with an endless reach of curly mesquite grass. The wheels made no sound.
+The tireless ponies bounded ahead at an unbroken gallop. The temperate wind,
+made fragrant by thousands of acres of blue and yellow wild flowers, roared
+gloriously in their ears. The motion was a&euml;rial, ecstatic, with a thrilling sense of
+perpetuity in its effect. Octavia sat silent, possessed by a feeling of elemental,
+sensual bliss. Teddy seemed to be wrestling with some internal problem.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm going to call you madama," he announced as the result of his labours. "That is
+what the Mexicans will call you&mdash;they're nearly all Mexicans on the ranch, you
+know. That seems to me about the proper thing."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Very well, Mr. Westlake," said Octavia, primly.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, now," said Teddy, in some consternation, "that's carrying the thing too far,
+isn't it?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Don't worry me with your beastly etiquette. I'm just beginning to live. Don't
+remind me of anything artificial. If only this air could be bottled! This much alone
+is worth coming for. Oh, look I there goes a deer!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Jack-rabbit," said Teddy, without turning his head.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Could I&mdash;might I drive?" suggested Octavia, panting, with rose-tinted cheeks and
+the eye of an eager child.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"On one condition. Could I&mdash;might I smoke?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Forever!" cried Octavia, taking the lines with solemn joy. "How shall I know
+which way to drive?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Keep her sou' by sou'east, and all sail set. You see that black speck on the horizon
+under that lowermost Gulf cloud? That's a group of live-oaks and a landmark. Steer
+halfway between that and the little hill to the left. I'll recite you the whole code of
+driving rules for the Texas prairies: keep the reins from under the horses' feet, and
+swear at 'em frequent."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I'm too happy to swear, Ted. Oh, why do people buy yachts or travel in
+palace-cars, when a buckboard and a pair of plugs and a spring morning like this
+can satisfy all desire?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Now, I'll ask you," protested Teddy, who was futilely striking match after match
+on the dashboard, "not to call those denizens of the air plugs. They can kick out a
+hundred miles between daylight and dark." At last he succeeded in snatching a light
+for his cigar from the flame held in the hollow of his hands.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Room!" said Octavia, intensely. "That's what produces the effect. I know now
+what I've wanted&mdash;scope&mdash;range&mdash;room!"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Smoking-room," said Teddy, unsentimentally. "I love to smoke in a buckboard.
+The wind blows the smoke into you and out again. It saves exertion."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The two fell so naturally into their old-time goodfellowship that it was only by
+degrees that a sense of the strangeness of the new relations between them came to
+be felt.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Madama," said Teddy, wonderingly, "however did you get it into your bead to cut
+the crowd and come down here? Is it a fad now among the upper classes to trot off
+to sheep ranches instead of to Newport?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I was broke, Teddy," said Octavia, sweetly, with her interest centred upon steering
+safely between a Spanish dagger plant and a clump of chaparral; "I haven't a thing
+in the world but this ranch&mdash;not even any other home to go to."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Come, now," said Teddy, anxiously but incredulously, "you don't mean it?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"When my husband," said Octavia, with a shy slurring of the word, "died three
+months ago I thought I had a reasonable amount of the world's goods. His lawyer
+exploded that theory in a sixty-minute fully illustrated lecture. I took to the sheep as
+a last resort. Do you happen to know of any fashionable caprice among the gilded
+youth of Manhattan that induces them to abandon polo and club windows to
+become managers of sheep ranches?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's easily explained in my case," responded Teddy, promptly. "I had to go to work.
+I couldn't have earned my board in New York, so I chummed a while with old
+Sandford, one of the syndicate that owned the ranch before Colonel Beaupree
+bought it, and got a place down here. I wasn't manager at first. I jogged around on
+ponies and studied the business in detail, until I got all the points in my head. I saw
+where it was losing and what the remedies were, and then Sandford put me in
+charge. I get a hundred dollars a month, and I earn it." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Poor Teddy!" said Octavia, with a smile.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You needn't. I like it. I save half my wages, and I'm as hard as a water plug. It
+beats polo."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Will it furnish bread and tea and jam for another outcast from civilization?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The spring shearing," said the manager, "just cleaned up a deficit in last year's
+business. Wastefulness and inattention have been the rule heretofore. The autumn
+clip will leave a small profit over all expenses. Next year there will be jam."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">When, about four o'clock in the afternoon, the ponies rounded a gentle,
+brush-covered hill, and then swooped, like a double cream-coloured cyclone, upon
+the Rancho de las Sombras, Octavia gave a little cry of delight. A lordly grove of
+magnificent live-oaks cast an area of grateful, cool shade, whence the ranch had
+drawn its name, "de las Sombras"&mdash;of the shadows. The house, of red brick, one
+story, ran low and long beneath the trees. Through its middle, dividing its six rooms
+in half, extended a broad, arched passageway, picturesque with flowering cactus
+and hanging red earthern jars. A "gallery," low and broad, encircled the building.
+Vines climbed about it, and the adjacent ground was, for a space, covered with
+transplanted grass and shrubs. A little lake, long and narrow, glimmered in the sun
+at the rear. Further away stood the shacks of the Mexican workers, the corrals, wool
+sheds and shearing pens. To the right lay the low hills, splattered with dark patches
+of chaparral; to the left the unbounded green prairie blending against the blue
+heavens.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's a home, Teddy," said Octavia, breathlessly; that's what it is&mdash;it's a home."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Not so bad for a sheep ranch," admitted Teddy, with excusable pride. "I've been
+tinkering on it at odd times."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A Mexican youth sprang from somewhere in the grass, and took charge of the
+creams. The mistress and the manager entered the house. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Here's Mrs. MacIntyre," said Teddy, as a placid, neat, elderly lady came out upon
+the gallery to meet them. "Mrs. Mac, here's the boss. Very likely she will be
+wanting a hunk of ham and a dish of beans after her drive."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Mrs. MacIntyre, the housekeeper, as much a fixture on the place as the lake or the
+live-oaks, received the imputation of the ranch's resources of refreshment with mild
+indignation, and was about to give it utterance when Octavia spoke.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Oh, Mrs. MacIntyre, don't apologize for Teddy. Yes, I call him Teddy. So does
+every one whom he hasn't duped into taking him seriously. You see, we used to cut
+paper dolls and play jackstraws together ages ago. No one minds what he says."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"No," said Teddy, "no one minds what he says, just so he doesn't do it again."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Octavia cast one of those subtle, sidelong glances toward him from beneath her
+lowered eyelids&mdash;a glance that Teddy used to describe as an upper-cut. But there
+was nothing in his ingenuous, weather-tanned face to warrant a suspicion that he
+was making an allusion&mdash;nothing. Beyond a doubt, thought Octavia, he had
+forgotten.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Mr. Westlake likes his fun," said Mrs. Maclntyre, as she conducted Octavia to her
+rooms. "But," she added, loyally, "people around here usually pay attention to what
+he says when he talks in earnest. I don't know what would have become of this
+place without him." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Two rooms at the east end of the house had been arranged for the occupancy of the
+ranch's mistress. When she entered them a slight dismay seized her at their bare
+appearance and the scantiness of their furniture; but she quickly reflected that the
+climate was a semi-tropical one, and was moved to appreciation of the
+well-conceived efforts to conform to it. The sashes had already been removed from
+the big windows, and white curtains waved in the Gulf breeze that streamed
+through the wide jalousies. The bare floor was amply strewn with cool rugs; the
+chairs were inviting, deep, dreamy willows; the walls were papered with a light,
+cheerful olive. One whole side of her sitting room was covered with books on
+smooth, unpainted pine shelves. She flew to these at once. Before her was a
+well-selected library. She caught glimpses of titles of volumes of fiction and travel
+not yet seasoned from the dampness of the press.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Presently, recollecting that she was now in a wilderness given over to mutton,
+centipedes and privations, the incongruity of these luxuries struck her, and, with
+intuitive feminine suspicion, she began turning to the fly-leaves of volume after
+volume. Upon each one was inscribed in fluent characters the name of Theodore
+Westlake, Jr.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Octavia, fatigued by her long journey, retired early that night. Lying upon her white,
+cool bed, she rested deliciously, but sleep coquetted long with her. She listened to
+faint noises whose strangeness kept her faculties on the alert&mdash;the fractious yelping
+of the coyotes, the ceaseless, low symphony of the wind, the distant booming of the
+frogs about the lake, the lamentation of a concertina in the Mexicans' quarters.
+There were many conflicting feelings in her heart&mdash;thankfulness and rebellion,
+peace and disquietude, loneliness and a sense of protecting care, happiness and an
+old, haunting pain. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She did what any other woman would have done&mdash;sought relief in a wholesome tide
+of unreasonable tears, and her last words, murmured to herself before slumber,
+capitulating, came softly to woo her, were "He has forgotten."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The manager of the Rancho de las Sombras was no dilettante. He was a "hustler."
+He was generally up, mounted, and away of mornings before the rest of the
+household were awake, making the rounds of the flocks and camps. This was the
+duty of the major-domo, a stately old Mexican with a princely air and manner, but
+Teddy seemed to have a great deal of confidence in his own eyesight. Except in the
+busy seasons, he nearly always returned to the ranch to breakfast at eight o'clock,
+with Octavia and Mrs. Maclntyre, at the little table set in the central hallway,
+bringing with him a tonic and breezy cheerfulness full of the health and flavour of
+the prairies.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A few days after Octavia's arrival he made her get out one of her riding skirts, and
+curtail it to a shortness demanded by the chaparral brakes.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">With some misgivings she donned this and the pair of buckskin leggings he
+prescribed in addition, and, mounted upon a dancing pony, rode with him to view
+her possessions. He showed her everything&mdash;the flocks of ewes, muttons and
+grazing lambs, the dipping vats, the shearing pens, the uncouth merino rams in their
+little pasture, the water-tanks prepared against the summer drought&mdash;giving account
+of his stewardship with a boyish enthusiasm that never flagged.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Where was the old Teddy that she knew so well? This side of him was the same,
+and it was a side that pleased her; but this was all she ever saw of him now. Where
+was his sentimentality&mdash;those old, varying moods of impetuous love-making, of
+fanciful, quixotic devotion, of heart-breaking gloom, of alternating, absurd
+tenderness and haughty dignity? His nature had been a sensitive one, his
+temperament bordering closely on the artistic. She knew that, besides being a
+follower of fashion and its fads and sports, he had cultivated tastes of a finer nature.
+He had written things, he had tampered with colours, he was something of a student
+in certain branches of art, and once she had been admitted to all his aspirations and
+thoughts. But now&mdash;and she could not avoid the conclusion&mdash;Teddy had</span></p>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">barricaded against her every side of himself except one&mdash;the side that showed the
+manager of the Rancho de las Sombras and a jolly chum who had forgiven and
+forgotten. Queerly enough the words of Mr. Bannister's description of her property
+came into her mind&mdash;"all inclosed within a strong barbed-wire fence."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Teddy's fenced, too," said Octavia to herself.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It was not difficult for her to reason out the cause of his fortifications. It had
+originated one night at the Hammersmiths' ball. It occurred at a time soon after she
+had decided to accept Colonel Beaupree and his million, which was no more than
+her looks and the entr&eacute;e she held to the inner circles were worth. Teddy had
+proposed with all his impetuosity and fire, and she looked him straight in the eyes,
+an said, coldly and finally: "Never let me hear any such silly nonsense from you
+again." "You won't," said Teddy, with an expression around his mouth, and&mdash;now
+Teddy was inclosed within a strong barbed-wire fence.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It was on this first ride of inspection that Teddy was seized by the inspiration that
+suggested the name of Mother Goose's heroine, and he at once bestowed it upon
+Octavia. The idea, supported by both a similarity of names and identity of
+occupations, seemed to strike him as a peculiarly happy one, and he never tired of
+using it. The Mexicans on the ranch also took up the name, adding another syllable
+to accommodate their lingual incapacity for the final "p," gravely referring to her as
+"La Madama Bo-Peepy." Eventually it spread, and "Madame Bo-Peep's ranch" was
+as often mentioned as the "Rancho de las Sombras."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Came the long, hot season from May to September, when work is scarce on the
+ranches. Octavia passed the days in a kind of lotus-eater's dream. Books,
+hammocks, correspondence with a few intimate friends, a renewed interest in her
+old water-colour box and easel&mdash;these disposed of the sultry hours of daylight. The
+evenings were always sure to bring enjoyment. Best of all were the rapturous
+horseback rides with Teddy, when the moon gave light over the wind-swept
+leagues, chaperoned by the wheeling night-hawk and the startled owl. Often the
+Mexicans would come up from their shacks with their guitars and sing the weirdest
+of heart-breaking songs. There were long, cosy chats on the breezy gallery, and an
+interminable warfare of wits between Teddy and Mrs. MacIntyre, whose abundant
+Scotch shrewdness often more than overmatched the lighter humour in which she
+was lacking.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">And the nights came, one after another, and were filed away by weeks and
+months&mdash;nights soft and languorous and fragrant, that should have driven Strephon
+to Chloe over wires however barbed, that might have drawn Cupid himself to hunt,
+lasso in hand, among those amorous pastures&mdash;but Teddy kept his fences up.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">One July night Madame Bo-Peep and her ranch manager were sitting on the east
+gallery. Teddy had been exhausting the science of prognostication as to the
+probabilities of a price of twenty-four cents for the autumn clip, and had then
+subsided into an anesthetic cloud of Havana smoke. Only as incompetent a judge as
+a woman would have failed to note long ago that at least a third of his salary must
+have gone up in the fumes of those imported Regalias.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Teddy," said Octavia, suddenly, and rather sharply, "what are you working down
+here on a ranch for?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"One hundred per," said Teddy, glibly, "and found."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I've a good mind to discharge you."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Can't do it," said Teddy, with a grin.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Why not?" demanded Octavia, with argumentative heat.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Under contract. Terms of sale respect all unexpired contracts. Mine runs until 12
+P. M., December thirty-first. You might get up at midnight on that date and fire me.
+If you try it sooner I'll be in a position to bring legal proceedings."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Octavia seemed to be considering the prospects of litigation. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"But," continued Teddy cheerfully, "I've been thinking of resigning anyway."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Octavia's rocking-chair ceased its motion. There were centipedes in this country,
+she felt sure; and Indians, and vast, lonely, desolate, empty wastes; all within strong
+barbed-wire fence. There was a Van Dresser pride, but there was also a Van
+Dresser heart. She must know for certain whether or not he had forgotten.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ah, well, Teddy," she said, with a fine assumption of polite interest, "it's lonely
+down here; you're longing to get back to the old life&mdash;to polo and lobsters and
+theatres and balls."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Never cared much for balls," said Teddy virtuously.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You're getting old, Teddy. Your memory is failing. Nobody ever knew you to miss
+a dance, unless it occurred on the same night with another one which you attended.
+And you showed such shocking bad taste, too, in dancing too often with the same
+partner. Let me see, what was that Forbes girl's name&mdash;the one with wall
+eyes&mdash;Mabel, wasn't it?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"No; Ad&eacute;le. Mabel was the one with the bony elbows. That wasn't wall in Ad&eacute;le's
+eyes. It was soul. We used to talk sonnets together, and Verlaine. Just then I was
+trying to run a pipe from the Pierian spring."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"You were on the floor with her," said Octavia, undeflected, "five times at the
+Hammersmiths'."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Hammersmiths' what?" questioned Teddy, vacuously.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Ball&mdash;ball," said Octavia, viciously. "What were we talking of?" </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Eyes, I thought," said Teddy, after some reflection; "and elbows." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Those Hammersmiths," went on Octavia, in her sweetest society prattle, after
+subduing an intense desire to yank a handful of sunburnt, sandy hair from the head
+lying back contentedly against the canvas of the steamer chair, "had too much
+money. Mines, wasn't it? It was something that paid something to the ton. You
+couldn't get a glass of plain water in their house. Everything at that ball was
+dreadfully overdone."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It was," said Teddy.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Such a crowd there was!" Octavia continued, conscious that she was talking the
+rapid drivel of a school-girl describing her first dance. "The balconies were as warm
+as the rooms. I&mdash;lost&mdash;something at that ball." The last sentence was uttered in a tone
+calculated to remove the barbs from miles of wire.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"So did I," confessed Teddy, in a lower voice.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"A glove," said Octavia, falling back as the enemy approached her ditches.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Caste," said Teddy, halting his firing line without loss. "I hobnobbed, half the
+evening with one of Hammersmith's miners, a fellow who kept his hands in his
+pockets, and talked like an archangel about reduction plants and drifts and levels
+and sluice-boxes."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"A pearl-gray glove, nearly new," sighed Octavia, mournfully. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"A bang-up chap, that McArdle," maintained Teddy approvingly. "A man who
+hated olives and elevators; a man who handled mountains as croquettes, and built
+tunnels in the air; a man who never uttered a word of silly nonsense in his life. Did
+you sign those lease-renewal applications yet, madama? They've got to be on file in
+the land office by the thirty-first."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Teddy turned his head lazily. Octavia's chair was vacant.</span></p>
+
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A certain centipede, crawling along the lines marked out by fate, expounded the
+situation. It was early one morning while Octavia and Mrs. Maclntyre were
+trimming the honeysuckle on the west gallery. Teddy had risen and departed hastily
+before daylight in response to word that a flock of ewes had been scattered from
+their bedding ground during the night by a thunder-storm.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The centipede, driven by destiny, showed himself on the floor of the gallery, and
+then, the screeches of the two women giving him his cue, he scuttled with all his
+yellow legs through the open door into the furthermost west room, which was
+Teddy's. Arming themselves with domestic utensils selected with regard to their
+length, Octavia and Mrs. Maclntyre, with much clutching of skirts and skirmishing
+for the position of rear guard in the attacking force, followed.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Once outside, the centipede seemed to have disappeared, and his prospective
+murderers began a thorough but cautious search for their victim.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Even in the midst of such a dangerous and absorbing adventure Octavia was
+conscious of an awed curiosity on finding herself in Teddy's sanctum. In that room
+he sat alone, silently communing with those secret thoughts that he now shared with
+no one, dreamed there whatever dreams he now called on no one to interpret.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It was the room of a Spartan or a soldier. In one corner stood a wide,
+canvas-covered cot; in another, a small bookcase; in another, a grim stand of
+Winchesters and shotguns. An immense table, strewn with letters, papers and
+documents and surmounted by a set of pigeon-holes, occupied one side.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The centipede showed genius in concealing himself in such bare quarters. Mrs.
+Maclntyre was poking a broom-handle behind the bookcase. Octavia approached
+Teddy's cot. The room was just as the manager had left it in his hurry. The Mexican
+maid had not yet given it her attention. There was his big pillow with the imprint of
+his head still in the centre. She thought the horrid beast might have climbed the cot
+and hidden itself to bite Teddy. Centipedes were thus cruel and vindictive toward
+managers.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">She cautiously overturned the pillow, and then parted her lips to give the signal for
+reinforcements at sight of a long, slender, dark object lying there. But, repressing it
+in time, she caught up a glove, a pearl-gray glove, flattened&mdash;it might be
+conceived&mdash;by many, many months of nightly pressure beneath the pillow of the
+man who had forgotten the Hammersmiths' ball. Teddy must have left so hurriedly
+that morning that he had, for once, forgotten to transfer it to its resting-place by day.
+Even managers, who are notoriously wily and cunning, are sometimes caught up
+with.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Octavia slid the gray glove into the bosom of her summery morning gown. It was
+hers. Men who put themselves within a strong barbed-wire fence, and remember
+Hammersmith balls only by the talk of miners about sluice-boxes, should not be
+allowed to possess such articles. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">After all, what a paradise this prairie country was! How it blossomed like the rose
+when you found things that were thought to be lost! How delicious was that
+morning breeze coming in the windows, fresh and sweet with the breath of the
+yellow ratama blooms! Might one not stand, for a minute, with shining, far-gazing
+eyes, and dream that mistakes might be corrected?</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Why was Mrs. Maclntyre poking about so absurdly with a broom? </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"I've found it," said Mrs. MacIntyre, banging the door. "Here it is." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Did you lose something? asked Octavia, with sweetly polite non-interest.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"The little devil!" said Mrs. Maclntyre, driven to violence. "Ye've no forgotten him
+alretty?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Between them they slew the centipede. Thus was he rewarded for his agency
+toward the recovery of things lost at the Hammersmiths' ball. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">It seems that Teddy, in due course, remembered the glove, and when he returned to
+the house at sunset made a secret but exhaustive search for it. Not until evening,
+upon the moonlit eastern gallery, did he find it. It was upon the hand that he had
+thought lost to him forever, and so he was moved to repeat certain nonsense that he
+had been commanded never, never to utter again. Teddy's fences were down. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">This time there was no ambition to stand in the way, and the wooing was as natural
+and successful as should be between ardent shepherd and gentle shepherdess.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">The prairies changed to a garden. The Rancho de las Sombras became the Ranch of
+Light.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">A few days later Octavia received a letter from Mr. Bannister, in reply to one she
+had written to him asking some questions about her business. A portion of the letter
+ran as follows:</span></p>
+<br>
+<blockquote>
+<span style="font-size: 12pt">
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"I am at a loss to account for your references to the sheep ranch. Two months after your
+departure to take up your residence upon it, it was discovered that Colonel Beaupree's
+title was worthless. A deed came to light showing that he disposed of the property before
+his death. The matter was reported to your manager, Mr. Westlake, who at once
+repurchased the property. It is entirely beyond my powers of conjecture to imagine how
+you have remained in ignorance of this fact. I beg that you that will at once confer with
+that gentleman, who will, at least, corroborate my statement."<br>
+</span>
+</blockquote>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Octavia sought Teddy, with battle in her eye.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"What are you working on this ranch for?" she asked once more. </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"One hundred&mdash;" he began to repeat, but saw in her face that she knew. She held
+Mr. Bannister's letter in her hand. He knew that the game was up.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's my ranch," said Teddy, like a schoolboy detected in evil. "It's a mighty poor
+manager that isn't able to absorb the boss's business if you give him time."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Why were you working down here?" pursued Octavia still struggling after the key
+to the riddle of Teddy.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"To tell the truth, 'Tave," said Teddy, with quiet candour, "it wasn't for the salary.
+That about kept me in cigars and sunburn lotions. I was sent south by my doctor.
+'Twas that right lung that was going to the bad on account of over-exercise and
+strain at polo and gymnastics. I needed climate and ozone and rest and things of that
+sort." </span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">In an instant Octavia was close against the vicinity of the affected organ. Mr.
+Bannister's letter fluttered to the floor.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"It's&mdash;it's well now, isn't it, Teddy?"</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"Sound as a mesquite chunk. I deceived you in one thing. I paid fifty thousand for
+your ranch as soon as I found you had no title. I had just about that much income
+accumulated at my banker's while I've been herding sheep down here, so it was
+almost like picking the thing up on a bargain-counter for a penny. There's another
+little surplus of unearned increment piling up there, 'Tave. I've been thinking of a
+wedding trip in a yacht with white ribbons tied to the mast, through the
+Mediterranean, and then up among the Hebrides and down Norway to the Zuyder
+Zee."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">"And I was thinking," said Octavia, softly, "of a wedding gallop with my manager
+among the flocks of sheep and back to a wedding breakfast with Mrs. MacIntyre on
+the gallery, with, maybe, a sprig of orange blossom fastened to the red jar above the
+table."</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Teddy laughed, and began to chant:</span></p>
+<br>
+<blockquote>
+"Little Bo-Peep has lost her sheep,<br>
+&nbsp;And doesn't know where to find 'em.<br>
+&nbsp;Let 'em alone, and they'll come home,<br>
+&nbsp;And&mdash;"<br>
+</blockquote>
+<br>
+<p><span style="font-size: 14pt">Octavia drew his head down, and whispered in his ear, But that is one of the tales
+they brought behind them.</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<hr size="5" noshade>
+<pre>
+
+
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+</pre>
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