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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Golden Stories, by Various
+
+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: Golden Stories
+ A Selection of the Best Fiction by the Foremost Writers
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: September 22, 2006 [EBook #19356]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GOLDEN STORIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Lybarger, Brian Janes, Melissa Er-Raqabi
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
+
+Following each author's name was a notice: "All rights reserved." This
+book is currently in the public domain, and the notices have been
+removed, but are mentioned here in the interest of completeness.
+
+Many inconsistencies in spelling, punctuation, and hyphenation have been
+normalized. Others remain as in the original. Any deviation from the
+author's intent is solely the responsibility of the transcriber.
+
+This book seems to have been bound in two sections, each with stories
+numbered I-XII.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Golden Stories
+
+
+A SELECTION OF THE BEST FICTION
+BY THE FOREMOST WRITERS
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+NEW YORK
+THE SHORT STORIES COMPANY
+1909
+
+
+
+
+ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN
+LANGUAGES, INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1908-1909, BY THE SHORT STORIES COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+THE NIGHT EXPRESS
+
+The Story of a Bank Robbery
+
+By FRED M. WHITE
+
+
+A PELTING rain volleyed against the great glass dome of the terminus, a
+roaring wind boomed in the roof. Passengers, hurrying along the
+platform, glistened in big coats and tweed caps pulled close over their
+ears. By the platform the night express was drawn up--a glittering mass
+of green and gold, shimmering with electric lights, warm, inviting, and
+cozy.
+
+Most of the corridor carriages and sleeping berths were full, for it was
+early in October still, and the Scotch exodus was not just yet. A few
+late comers were looking anxiously out for the guard. He came presently,
+an alert figure in blue and silver. Really, he was very sorry. But the
+train was unusually crowded, and he was doing the best he could. He was
+perfectly aware of the fact that his questioners represented a Cabinet
+Minister on his way to Balmoral and a prominent Lothian baronet, but
+there are limits even to the power of an express guard, on the Grand
+Coast Railway.
+
+"Well, what's the matter with this?" the Minister demanded. "Here is an
+ordinary first-class coach that will do very well for us. Now, Catesby,
+unlock one of these doors and turn the lights on."
+
+"Very sorry, my lord," the guard explained, "but it can't be done. Two
+of the carriages in the coach are quite full, as you see, and the other
+two are reserved. As a matter of fact, my lord, we are taking a body
+down to Lydmouth. Gentleman who is going to be buried there. And the
+other carriage is for the Imperial Bank of Scotland. Cashier going up
+north with specie, you understand."
+
+It was all plain enough, and disgustingly logical. To intrude upon the
+presence of a body was perfectly impossible; to try and force the hand
+of the bank cashier equally out of the question. As head of a great
+financial house, the Minister knew that. A platform inspector bustled
+along presently, with his hand to his gold-laced cap.
+
+"Saloon carriage being coupled up behind, my lord," he said.
+
+The problem was solved. The guard glanced at his watch. It seemed to him
+that both the bank messenger and the undertaker were cutting it fine.
+The coffin came presently on a hand-truck--a black velvet pall lay over
+it, and on the sombre cloth a wreath or two of white lilies. The door of
+the carriage was closed presently, and the blinds drawn discreetly
+close. Following behind this came a barrow in charge of a couple of
+platform police. On the barrow were two square deal boxes, heavy out of
+all proportion to their size. These were deposited presently to the
+satisfaction of a little nervous-looking man in gold-rimmed glasses. Mr.
+George Skidmore, of the Imperial Bank, had his share of ordinary
+courage, but he had an imagination, too, and he particularly disliked
+these periodical trips to branch banks, in convoy, so to speak. He took
+no risks.
+
+"Awful night, sir," the guard observed. "Rather lucky to get a carriage
+to yourself, sir. Don't suppose you would have done so only we're taking
+a corpse as far as Lydmouth, which is our first stop."
+
+"Really?" Skidmore said carelessly. "Ill wind that blows nobody good,
+Catesby. I may be overcautious, but I much prefer a carriage to myself.
+And my people prefer it, too. That's why we always give the railway
+authorities a few days' notice. One can't be too careful, Catesby."
+
+The guard supposed not. He was slightly, yet discreetly, amused to see
+Mr. Skidmore glance under the seats of the first-class carriage.
+Certainly there was nobody either there or on the racks. The carriage
+at the far side was locked, and so, now, was the door next the platform.
+The great glass dome was brilliantly lighted so that anything suspicious
+would have been detected instantly. The guard's whistle rang out shrill
+and clear, and Catesby had a glimpse of Mr. Skidmore making himself
+comfortable as he swung himself into his van. The great green and gold
+serpent with the brilliant electric eyes fought its way sinuously into
+the throat of the wet and riotous night on its first stage of over two
+hundred miles. Lydmouth would be the first stop.
+
+So far Mr. Skidmore had nothing to worry him, nothing, that is, except
+the outside chance of a bad accident. He did not anticipate, however,
+that some miscreant might deliberately wreck the train on the off chance
+of looting those plain deal boxes. The class of thief that banks have to
+fear is not guilty of such clumsiness. Unquestionably nothing could
+happen on this side of Lydmouth. The train was roaring along now through
+the fierce gale at sixty odd miles an hour, Skidmore had the carriage to
+himself, and was not the snug, brilliantly lighted compartment made of
+steel? On one side was the carriage with the coffin; on the other side
+another compartment filled with a party of sportsmen going North.
+Skidmore had noticed the four of them playing bridge just before he
+slipped into his own carriage. Really, he had nothing to fear. He lay
+back comfortably wondering how Poe or Gaboriau would have handled such a
+situation with a successful robbery behind it. There are limits, of
+course, both to a novelist's imagination and a clever thief's process of
+invention. So, therefore....
+
+Three hours and twenty minutes later the express pulled up at Lydmouth.
+The station clock indicated the hour to be 11.23. Catesby swung himself
+out of his van on to the shining wet platform. Only one passenger was
+waiting there, but nobody alighted. Catesby was sure of this, because he
+was on the flags before a door could be opened. He came forward to give
+a hand with the coffin in the compartment next to Skidmore's. Then he
+noticed, to his surprise, that the glass in the carriage window was
+smashed; he could see that the little cashier was huddled up strangely
+in one corner. And Catesby could see also that the two boxes of bullion
+were gone!
+
+Catesby's heart was thumping against his ribs as he fumbled with his
+key. He laid his hand upon Skidmore's shoulder, but the latter did not
+move. The fair hair hung in a mass on the side of his forehead, and here
+it was fair no longer. There was a hole with something horribly red and
+slimy oozing from it. The carpet on the floor was piled up in a heap;
+there were red smears on the cushions. It was quite evident that a
+struggle had taken place here. The shattered glass in the window
+testified to that. And the boxes were gone, and Skidmore had been
+murdered by some assailant who had shot him through the brain. And this
+mysterious antagonist had got off with the bullion, too.
+
+A thing incredible, amazing, impossible; but there it was. By some
+extraordinary method or another the audacious criminal had boarded an
+express train traveling at sixty miles an hour in the teeth of a gale.
+He had contrived to enter the cashier's carriage and remove specie to
+the amount of eight thousand pounds! It was impossible that only one man
+could have carried it. But all the same it was gone.
+
+Catesby pulled himself together. He was perfectly certain that nobody at
+present on the train had been guilty of this thing. He was perfectly
+certain that nobody had left the train. Nobody could have done so after
+entering the station without the guard's knowledge, and to have
+attempted such a thing on the far side of the river bridge would have
+been certain death to anybody. There was a long viaduct here--posts and
+pillars and chains, with tragedy lurking anywhere for the madman who
+attempted such a thing. And until the viaduct was reached the express
+had not slackened speed. Besides, the thief who had the courage and
+intelligence and daring to carry out a robbery like this was not the man
+to leave an express train traveling at a speed of upwards of sixty miles
+an hour.
+
+The train had to proceed, there was no help for it. There was a hurried
+conference between Catesby and the stationmaster; after that the
+electric lamps in the dead man's carriage were unshipped, and the blinds
+pulled down. The matter would be fully investigated when Edinburgh was
+reached, meanwhile the stationmaster at Lydmouth would telephone the
+Scotch capital and let them know there what they had to expect. Catesby
+crept into his van again, very queer and dizzy, and with a sensation in
+his legs suggestive of creeping paralysis.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Naturally, the mystery of the night express caused a great sensation.
+Nothing like it had been known since the great crime on the South Coast,
+which is connected with the name of Lefroy. But that was not so much a
+mystery as a man hunt. There the criminal had been identified. But here
+there was no trace and no clue whatever. It was in vain that the
+Scotland Yard authorities tried to shake the evidence of the guard,
+Catesby. He refused to make any admissions that would permit the police
+even to build up a theory. He was absolutely certain that Mr. Skidmore
+had been alone in the carriage at the moment that the express left
+London; he was absolutely certain that he had locked the door of the
+compartment, and the engine driver could testify that the train had
+never traveled at a less speed than sixty miles an hour until the bridge
+over the river leading into Lydmouth station was reached; even then
+nobody could have dropped off the train without the risk of certain
+death. Inspector Merrick was bound to admit this himself when he went
+over the spot. And the problem of the missing bullion boxes was quite as
+puzzling in its way as the mysterious way in which Mr. Skidmore had met
+his death.
+
+There was no clue to this either. Certainly there had been a struggle,
+or there would not have been blood marks all over the place, and the
+window would have remained intact. Skidmore had probably been forced
+back into his seat, or he had collapsed there after the fatal shot was
+fired. The unfortunate man had been shot through the brain with an
+ordinary revolver of common pattern, so that for the purpose of proof
+the bullet was useless. There were no finger marks on the carriage door,
+a proof that the murderer had either worn gloves or that he had
+carefully removed all traces with a cloth of some kind. It was obvious,
+too, that a criminal of this class would take no risks, especially as
+there was no chance of his being hurried, seeing that he had had three
+clear hours for his work. The more the police went into the matter, the
+more puzzled they were. It was not a difficult matter to establish the
+bona fides of the passengers who traveled in the next coach with
+Skidmore, and as to the rest it did not matter. Nobody could possibly
+have left any of the corridor coaches without attracting notice; indeed,
+the very suggestion was absurd. And there the matter rested for three
+days.
+
+It must not be supposed that the authorities had been altogether idle.
+Inspector Merrick spent most of his time traveling up and down the line
+by slow local trains on the off-chance of hearing some significant
+incident that might lead to a clue. There was one thing obvious--the
+bullion boxes must have been thrown off the train at some spot arranged
+between the active thief and his confederates. For this was too big a
+thing to be entirely the work of one man. Some of the gang must have
+been waiting along the line in readiness to receive the boxes and carry
+them to a place of safety. By this time, no doubt, the boxes themselves
+had been destroyed; but eight thousand pounds in gold takes some moving,
+and probably a conveyance, a motor for choice, had been employed for
+this purpose. But nobody appeared to have seen or heard anything
+suspicious on the night of the murder; no prowling gamekeeper or watcher
+had noticed anything out of the common. Along the Essex and Norfolk
+marshes, where the Grand Coast Railway wound along like a steel snake,
+they had taken their desolate and dreary way. True, the dead body of a
+man had been found in the fowling nets up in the mouth of the Little
+Ouse, and nobody seemed to know who he was; but there could be no
+connection between this unhappy individual and the express criminal.
+Merrick shook his head as he listened to this from a laborer in a
+roadside public house where he was making a frugal lunch on bread and
+cheese.
+
+"What do you call fowling nets?" Merrick asked.
+
+"Why, what they catches the birds in," the rustic explained. "Thousands
+and thousands of duck and teel and widgeon they catches at this time of
+year. There's miles of nets along the road--great big nets like fowl
+runs. Ye didn't happen to see any on 'em as ye came along in the train?"
+
+"Now I come to think of it, yes," Merrick said thoughtfully. "I was
+rather struck by all that netting. So they catch sea birds that way?"
+
+"Catches 'em by the thousand, they does. Birds fly against the netting
+in the dark and get entangled. Ducks they get by 'ticing 'em into a sort
+of cage with decoys. There's some of 'em stan's the best part of half a
+mile long. Covered in over the top like great cages. Ain't bad sport,
+either."
+
+Merrick nodded. He recollected it all clearly now. He recalled the wide,
+desolate mud flats running right up to the railway embankment for some
+miles. At high tide the mud flats were under water, and out of these the
+great mass of network rose both horizontally and perpendicular. And in
+this tangle the dead body of a man had been found after the storm.
+
+There was nothing really significant in the fact that the body had been
+discovered soon after the murder of Mr. George Skidmore. Still, there
+might be a connection between the two incidents. Merrick was going to
+make inquiries; he was after what looked like a million to one chance.
+But then Merrick was a detective with an imagination, which was one of
+the reasons why he had been appointed to the job. It was essentially a
+case for the theoretical man. It baffled all the established rules of
+the game.
+
+Late the same afternoon Merrick arrived at Little Warlingham by means of
+a baker's cart. It was here that the body of the drowned man lay
+awaiting the slim chances of identity. If nothing transpired during the
+next eight and forty hours, the corpse would be buried by the parish
+authorities. The village policeman acted as Merrick's guide. It was an
+event in his life that he was not likely to forget.
+
+"A stranger to these parts, I should say, sir," the local officer said.
+"He's in a shed at the back of the 'Blue Anchor,' where the inquest was
+held. If you come this way, I'll show him to you."
+
+"Anything found on the body?"
+
+"Absolutely nothing, sir. No mark on the clothing or linen, either.
+Probably washed off some ship in the storm. Pockets were quite empty,
+too. And no signs of foul play. _There_ you are, sir!"
+
+Casually enough Merrick bent over the still, white form lying there. The
+dead face was turned up to the light, Rembrandtesque, coming through the
+door. The detective straightened himself suddenly, and wiped his
+forehead.
+
+"Stranger to you, sir, of course?" the local man said grimly.
+
+"Well, no," Merrick retorted. "I happen to know the fellow quite well.
+I'm glad I came here."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Until it was quite too dark to see any longer Merrick was out on the mud
+flats asking questions. He appeared to be greatly interested in the
+wildfowlers and the many methods of catching their prey. He learned,
+incidentally, that on the night of the express murder most of the nets
+and lures had been washed away. He took minute particulars as to the
+state of the tide on the night in question; he wanted to know if the
+nets were capable of holding up against any great force. For instance,
+if a school of porpoises came along? Or if a fish eagle or an osprey
+found itself entangled in the meshes?
+
+The fowlers smiled. They invited Merrick to try it for himself. On that
+stormy east coast it was foolish to take any risks. And Merrick was
+satisfied. As a matter of fact, he was more than satisfied.
+
+He was really beginning to see his way at last. By the time he got back
+to his headquarters again he had practically reconstructed the crime. As
+he stood on the railway permanent way, gazing down into the network of
+the fowlers below, he smiled to himself. He could have tossed a biscuit
+on to the top of the long lengths of tarred and knotted rigging. Later
+on he telephoned to the London terminus of the Grand Coast Railway for
+the people there to place the services of Catesby at his disposal for a
+day or two. Could Catesby meet him at Lydmouth to-morrow?
+
+The guard could and did. He frankly admitted that he was grateful for
+the little holiday. He looked as if he wanted it. The corners of his
+mouth twitched, his hands were shaky.
+
+"It's nerves, Mr. Merrick," he explained. "We all suffer from them at
+times. Only we don't like the company to know it, ye understand? To tell
+the truth, I've never got over that affair at the Junction here eight
+years ago. I expect you remember that."
+
+Merrick nodded. Catesby was alluding to a great railway tragedy which
+had taken place outside Lydmouth station some few years back. It had
+been a most disastrous affair for a local express, and Catesby had been
+acting as guard to the train. He spoke of it under his breath.
+
+"I dream of it occasionally even now," he said. "The engine left the
+line and dragged the train over the embankment into the river. If you
+ask me how I managed to escape, I can't tell you. I never come into
+Lydmouth with the night express now without my head out of the window of
+the van right away from the viaduct till she pulls up at the station.
+And what's more, I never shall. It isn't fear, mind you, because I've as
+much pluck as any man. It's just nerves."
+
+"We get 'em in our profession, too," Merrick smiled. "Did you happen to
+be looking out of the window on the night of the murder?"
+
+"Yes, and every other night, too. Haven't I just told you so? Directly
+we strike the viaduct I come to my feet by instinct."
+
+"Always look out the same side, I suppose?"
+
+"Yes, on the left. That's the platform side, you understand."
+
+"Then if anybody had left the train there----"
+
+"Anybody left the train! Why we were traveling at fifty miles an hour
+when we reached the viaduct. Oh, yes, if anybody _had_ left the train I
+should have been bound to see them, of course."
+
+"But you can't see out of both windows at once."
+
+"Nobody could leave the train by the other side. The stone parapet of
+the viaduct almost touches the footboard, and there's a drop of ninety
+feet below that. Of course I see what you are driving at, Mr. Merrick.
+Now look here. I locked Mr. Skidmore in the carriage myself, and I can
+_prove_ that nobody got in before we left London. That would have been
+too dangerous a game so long as the train was passing any number of
+brilliantly lighted stations, and by the time we got into the open we
+were going at sixty miles an hour. That speed never slackened till we
+were just outside Lydmouth, and I was watching at the moment that our
+pace dropped. I had my head out of the window of my van till we pulled
+up by the platform. I am prepared to swear to all this if you like. Lord
+knows how the thing was done, and I don't suppose anybody else ever
+will."
+
+"You are mistaken there," said Merrick drily. "Now, what puzzles you,
+of course, is the manner in which the murderer left the train."
+
+"Well, isn't that the whole mystery?"
+
+"Not to me. That's the part I really do know. Not that I can take any
+great credit to myself, because luck helped me. It was, perhaps, the
+most amazing piece of luck I have ever had. It was my duty, of course,
+to take no chances, and I didn't. But we'll come to that presently. Let
+it suffice for the moment that I know how the murderer left the train.
+What puzzles me is to know how he got on it. We can dismiss every other
+passenger in the train, and we need not look for an accomplice. There
+_were_ accomplices, of course, but they were not on the express. Why
+didn't Mr. Skidmore travel in one of the corridor coaches?"
+
+"He was too nervous. He always had a first-class carriage to himself. We
+knew he was coming, and that was why we attached an ordinary first-class
+coach to the train. We shouldn't do it for anybody, but Lord Rendelmore,
+the chairman of Mr. Skidmore's bank, is also one of our directors. The
+coach came in handy the other night because we had an order from a
+London undertaker to bring a corpse as far as here--to Lydmouth."
+
+"Really! You would have to have a separate carriage for that."
+
+"Naturally, Mr. Merrick. It was sort of killing two birds with one
+stone."
+
+"I see. When did you hear about the undertaking job?"
+
+"The same morning we heard from the bank that Mr. Skidmore was going to
+Lydmouth. We reserved a coach at once, and had it attached to the
+Express. The other carriages were filled with ordinary passengers."
+
+"Why didn't I hear of this before?" Merrick asked.
+
+"_I_ don't know. It doesn't seem to me to be of much importance. You
+might just as well ask me questions as to the passengers' baggage."
+
+"Everything is of importance," Merrick said sententiously. "In our
+profession, there are no such things as trifles. I suppose there will
+be no difficulty in getting at the facts of this corpse business. I'll
+make inquiries here presently."
+
+So far Merrick professed himself to be satisfied. But there were still
+difficulties in the way. The station people had a clear recollection of
+the receipt of a coffin on the night of the tragedy, and, late as it
+was, the gruesome thing had been fetched away by the people whom it was
+consigned to. A plain hearse, drawn by one horse, had been driven into
+the station yard, the consignment note had been receipted in the usual
+way, and there was an end of the matter. Lydmouth was a big place, with
+nearly a quarter of a million of inhabitants, and would necessarily
+contain a good many people in the undertaking line. Clearly it was no
+business of the railway company to take this thing any further.
+
+Merrick admitted that freely enough. It was nearly dark when he came
+back to the station, profoundly dissatisfied with a wasted afternoon.
+
+"No good," he told Catesby. "At the same time there are consolations.
+And, after all, I am merely confirming my suspicions. I suppose your
+people here are on the telephone. If so, I should like to send a message
+to your head office. I want the name of the firm in London who consigned
+the coffin here. I suppose the stationmaster could manage this for me."
+
+An hour or so later the information came. Merrick, at the telephone,
+wanted a little further assistance. Would the Grand Coast Railway call
+up the undertaker's firm whilst he held the line and ask the full
+particulars as to the body sent from London to Lydmouth. For half an
+hour Merrick stood patiently there till the reply came.
+
+"Are you there? Is that Inspector Merrick? Oh, yes. Well, we have called
+up Lincoln & Co., the undertakers. We got on to the manager himself. He
+declares that the whole thing is a mistake. They have not sent a corpse
+over our trunk system for two months. I read the manager the letter
+asking for special facilities, a letter on the firm's own paper. The
+manager does not hesitate to say the whole thing is a forgery. I think
+he is right, Inspector. If we can do anything else for you----"
+
+Merrick hung up the receiver and smiled as if pleased with himself. He
+turned to his companion, Catesby.
+
+"It's all right," he said. "Is there any way we can get back to London
+to-night? The whole thing is perfectly plain, now."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Though Merrick returned to London thoroughly satisfied, he knew that the
+sequel was not just yet. There was much conjuring work to be done before
+it would be possible to place all the cards on the table. The Christmas
+holidays had arrived before Merrick obtained a couple of warrants, and,
+armed with these, he went down to Brighton on Boxing Day, and put up at
+the Hotel Regina, registering himself as Colonel Beaumont, sometime of
+the United States Field Forces. Merrick could pose as an authority on
+Cuba, for on one occasion he had been there for six months on the
+lookout for a defaulting bank manager. He had made certain changes in
+his appearance, and just now he bore little resemblance to Inspector
+Merrick of New Scotland Yard.
+
+The big hotel on the front was full. There was a smart dance that same
+night, preceded by a children's party and Christmas tree. The house
+swarmed with young folks, and a good many nationalities were
+represented. On occasions like these somebody generally takes the lead,
+and by common consent the part of the chief of the events had been
+allotted to the Marquis de Branza.
+
+To begin with, he was immensely rich. He had vast estates in Italy. He
+had been staying at the Regina for the past month, and it was whispered
+that his bill had reached three figures. He entertained lavishly; he was
+the soul of hospitality; he was going to buy a palace in Kings' Gardens,
+and more or less settle down in Brighton.
+
+In addition to all this the Marquis was a handsome man, very
+fascinating, and a prime favorite with all the boys and girls at the
+Regina. He had his little peculiarities, of course--for instance, he
+paid for everything in gold. All his hotel bills were met with current
+coin.
+
+Merrick had gleaned all this before he had been a day at the Regina.
+They were quite a happy family, and the Colonel speedily found himself
+at home. The Marquis welcomed him as if he owned the hotel, and as if
+everybody was his guest. The dance was a great success, as also were the
+presents in connection with the cotillon promoted by the Marquis.
+
+At two o'clock the following morning the Marquis was entertaining a
+select party in the smoking-room. The ladies had all vanished by this
+time. The Marquis was speaking of his adventures. He really had quite a
+talent in that direction. Naturally, a man of his wealth was certain to
+be the mark for swindlers. Merrick listened with an approving smile. He
+knew that most of these stories were true, for they had all been
+recorded from time to time at Scotland Yard.
+
+"You would have made an excellent detective, Marquis," he said. "You
+have made it quite clear where the police blundered over that Glasgow
+tragedy. I suppose you read all about the Grand Coast Railway murder."
+
+The Marquis started ever so slightly. There was a questioning look in
+his eyes.
+
+"Did you?" he said. "Naturally one would, Colonel. But a matter the most
+inexplicable. I gave him up. From the very first I gave him up. If the
+guard Catesby was not the guilty person, then I admit I have no theory."
+
+One by one, the smoking-room company faded away. Presently only Merrick
+and the Marquis remained, save one guest who had fallen asleep in his
+chair. A sleepy waiter looked in and vanished again. The hotel was
+absolutely quiet now. Merrick, however, was wide awake enough; so,
+apparently, was the Marquis. All the same, he yawned ostentatiously.
+
+"Let us to bed," he said. "To-morrow, perhaps----"
+
+"No," Merrick said somewhat curtly. "I prefer to-night. Sit down."
+
+The last two words came crisply and with a ring of command in them. The
+Marquis bowed as he dropped into a chair and lighted a fresh cigarette.
+A little red spot glowed on either of his brown cheeks, his eyes
+glittered.
+
+"You want to speak to me, Colonel?" he said.
+
+"Very much indeed. Now, you are an exceedingly clever man, Marquis, and
+you may be able to help me. It happens that I am deeply interested in
+the Grand Coast Express murder; in fact, I have devoted the last two
+months to its solution."
+
+"With no success whatever, my dear Colonel?" the Marquis murmured.
+
+"On the contrary, my dear Marquis, with absolute satisfaction. I am
+quite sure that you will be interested in my story."
+
+The Marquis raised his cigarette graciously.
+
+"You are very good to give me your confidence," he said. "Pray proceed."
+
+"Thank you. I will not bore you with any preliminary details, for they
+are too recent to have faded from your memory. Sufficient that we have a
+murder committed in an express train; we have the disappearance of eight
+thousand pounds in gold, without any trace of the criminal. That he was
+on the train at the start is obvious. That he was not in any of the
+carriages conveying ordinary passengers is equally obvious. It is also
+certain that he left the train after the commission of the crime.
+Doubtless you read the evidence of the guard to prove that nobody left
+the train after the viaduct leading to Lydmouth station was reached.
+Therefore, the murderer contrived to make his escape when the express
+was traveling at sixty miles per hour."
+
+"Is not all this superfluous?" the Marquis asked.
+
+"Well, not quite. I am going to tell you how the murderer joined the
+train and how he left it after the murder and the robbery."
+
+"You are going to tell me that! Is it possible?"
+
+"I think so," Merrick said modestly. "Now, Mr. Skidmore had a
+compartment to himself. He was locked in the very last thing, and nobody
+joined the train afterward. Naturally a--well--an amateur detective like
+myself wanted to know who was in the adjoining compartments. Three of
+these could be dismissed at once. But in the fourth there was a
+corpse----"
+
+"A corpse! But there was no mention of that at the inquest."
+
+"No, but the fact remains. A corpse in a coffin. In a dark compartment
+with the blinds down. And, strangely enough, the firm of undertakers who
+consigned, or were supposed to consign, the body to Lydmouth denied the
+whole business. Therefore, it is only fair to suppose that the whole
+thing was a put-up job to get a compartment in the coach that Mr.
+Skidmore traveled by. I am going to assume that in that coffin the
+murderer lay concealed. But let me give you a light--your cigarette is
+out."
+
+"I smoke no more," the Marquis said. "My throat, he is dry. And
+then----"
+
+"Well, then, the first part is easy. The man gets out of the coffin and
+proceeds to fill it with some heavy substance which has been smuggled
+into the carriage under the pall. He screws the lid down and presently
+makes his way along the footboard to the next compartment. An athlete in
+good condition could do that; in fact, a sailor has done it in a drunken
+freak more than once. Mind you, I don't say that murder was intended in
+the first instance; but will presume that there was a struggle. The
+thief probably lost his temper, and perhaps Mr. Skidmore irritated him.
+Now, the rest was easy. It was easy to pack up the gold in leather bags,
+each containing a thousand sovereigns, and to drop them along the line
+at some spot previously agreed upon. I have no doubt that the murderer
+and his accomplices traveled many times up and down the line before the
+details were finally settled. Any way, there was no risk here. The
+broken packing cases were pitched out also, probably in some thick wood.
+Or they might have been weighted and cast into a stream. Are you
+interested?"
+
+The Marquis gurgled. He had some difficulty in speaking.
+
+"A little dangerous," he said. "Our ingenious friend could not possibly
+screw himself down in the coffin after returning to his compartment. And
+have you perceived the danger of discovery at Lydmouth?"
+
+"Precisely," Merrick said drily. "It is refreshing to meet with so
+luminous a mind as yours. There were many dangers, many risks to take.
+The train might have been stopped, lots of things might have happened.
+It would be far better for the man to leave the express. And he did so!"
+
+"The express at top speed! Impossible!"
+
+"To the ordinary individual, yes. But then, you see, this was not an
+ordinary individual. He was--let us suppose--an acrobat, a man of great
+nerve and courage, accustomed to trapeze work and the use of the diving
+net."
+
+"But Colonel, pardon me, where does the net come in?"
+
+"The net came in at a place near Little Warlingham, on the Norfolk
+coast. There are miles of net up there, trap and flight nets close by
+the side of the line. These nets are wide and strong; they run many
+furlongs without supports, so that an acrobat could easily turn a
+somersault on to one of these at a given spot without the slightest
+risk. He could study out the precise spot carefully beforehand--there
+are lightships on the sands to act as guides. I have been down to the
+spot and studied it all out for myself. The thing is quite easy for the
+class of man I mean. I am not taking any great credit to myself, because
+I happened to see the body of the man who essayed that experiment. I
+recognized him for----"
+
+"You recognized him! You knew who he was?"
+
+"Certainly. He was Luigi Bianca, who used to perform in London years
+ago, with his brother Joseph, on the high trapeze. Then one of them got
+into trouble and subsequently embarked, as the papers say, on a career
+of crime. And when I saw the body of Luigi I knew at once that he had
+had a hand in the murder of Mr. Skidmore. When the right spot was
+reached the fellow took a header in the dark boldly enough, but he did
+not know that the storm had come with a very high October tide, and
+washed the nets away. He fell on the sands and dislocated his neck. But
+I had something to go on with. When I found out about the bogus corpse I
+began to see my way. I have been making careful inquiries ever since for
+the other criminal----"
+
+"The other criminal! You mean to insinuate----"
+
+"I insinuate nothing," Merrick said coldly; "naturally enough I wanted
+to find Joseph Bianca. He was the man who picked up the gold; he was the
+man who hired a car in London from Moss & Co., in Regent Street, for a
+week. This was to recover the gold and incidentally also to take up the
+thief who stole it. I wanted to find Joseph Bianca, and _I've done it!_"
+
+The Marquis leaped to his feet. As he did so the man in the distant
+chair woke up and moved across the room.
+
+"Don't make a fuss!" Merrick said quietly. "You will be able to explain
+presently--perhaps what you are doing here posing as a Marquis, and
+where you got all that ready money from. Meanwhile, let me inform you
+that I am Inspector Merrick, of Scotland Yard, and that this is Sergeant
+Matthews. Joseph Bianca, you are my prisoner, and I have a warrant for
+your arrest as an accessory before and after the fact for the murder of
+Mr. George Skidmore. Ask them to call us a cab, Matthews!"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+OVER THE GARDEN WALL
+
+The Story of a Vacation
+
+By LOUISE HAMILTON MABIE
+
+
+THE impression, which floated vaguely as a perfume in the wake of the
+departing Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Prentiss, adapted itself pleasingly to any
+point of view. Generally, it was thought that Katrina Prentiss was to
+remain at home under the eye of Grandfather McBride. Particularly, was
+this Grandfather McBride's reading of the unspoken word. But Miss
+Prentiss, herself, thought so otherwise that the situation completely
+reversed itself. To Miss Prentiss, Grandfather McBride was left
+absolutely under her eye.
+
+Meanwhile the Jasper Prentisses, characteristically explaining nothing,
+commanding nothing, leaving events to work themselves out somehow, as
+events have been known to do, were off for their month's fishing without
+undue worry.
+
+"Grandfather will smoke his pipe all over the house," remarked Mrs.
+Prentiss easily, as they drove away.
+
+"Oh, Katrina will manage somehow," returned Mr. Prentiss, as easily.
+"They'll come to terms. By the way, Kitty, we mustn't forget that
+marmalade." And, absorbed in their list of supplies, the Jasper
+Prentisses disappeared from view.
+
+Grandfather McBride, eighty-one, dependent, save in moments of
+excitement, upon his knotted stick, hard-featured, with a rusty beard
+and a shabby black hat, departed slowly for his own quarters. Miss
+Prentiss, twenty-one, hazel-eyed and graceful, with a wonderful creamy
+skin, under a crown of auburn braids, sank dreamily upon the broad
+porch step and gazed across the green lawn into the future.
+
+"A whole month," thought Miss Prentiss, "of doing as I
+please--consulting nobody, ordering things, going to places, and coming
+home to--freedom." Miss Prentiss spread out her hands with a sigh of
+content. "Not that I'm interfered with--ever," she added, reproaching
+herself, "but now--well, I'm it."
+
+She rose swiftly and turned up the steps. In the wide doorway stood
+Grandfather McBride, stick in hand, hat jammed down, and in his mouth,
+at a defiant angle, a battered black pipe. A red flag, backed up by a
+declaration of the rights of man, could not have spoken more plainly.
+Miss Prentiss drew back; Mr. McBride stepped forward. Their eyes met.
+Then the old gentleman flung down his challenge. He removed the pipe and
+held it poised in his hand.
+
+"What you goin' to do to-day, Triny?" he asked, briskly. "When you goin'
+over to see the Deerings' parrot? There ain't another such bird in
+America. You go over there this morning and see that parrot. Don't loll
+about the house. Don't be lazy!" Whereupon, with less profanity, but as
+much of autocracy as was ever displayed by an Irish boss whipping into
+shape the lowliest of his Italian gang, Mr. McBride replaced his pipe
+elaborately, and walked off with the honors. Katrina, utterly
+astonished, stared after him, then shrugged, then smiled.
+
+"Poor Grandfather," she reached at length, "in minor matters I'll let
+him have his way."
+
+The next day, Grandfather McBride smoked his pipe on the porch. On the
+third morning he smoked it in the drawing-room--out of sheer defiance,
+for he never entered the room save under compulsion. Katrina, reminding
+herself that peace was to be desired above victory, shrugged once more,
+smiled, and went for a ride. When she swept in, an hour or so later,
+Grandfather McBride was in the back garden with John, and the smoke of a
+huge bonfire obscured the sunlight. This was revolution, simple and
+straightforward, and Katrina went at once to the back garden.
+
+"John," she said, "what is the meaning of this? Don't you know that Mr.
+Prentiss never allows bonfires? The rubbish is to be carted away, _not_
+set on fire."
+
+John, apologetic, perturbed, nodded toward the old gentleman. "Yes,
+miss, I know. I told Mr. McBride, miss----"
+
+Grandfather McBride turned coldly upon Katrina. "I ordered this
+bonfire," he said.
+
+"But, Grandfather, you know the old orders. Father never allows them."
+
+"I allow them," said Mr. McBride. "Your father's away fishing, and I'm
+in charge. This is my bonfire. I order bonfires when I please. I like
+'em. I like the smell of 'em, I like the smoke----" Here an unexpected
+cough gave Katrina a word.
+
+"But, Grandfather," she began again, only to be cut short.
+
+"When the folks are home, I sit still and mind my own business. Now
+they're away, I'm goin' to do things. I'm on a vacation myself," said
+Mr. McBride, "and I'll have a bonfire on the front lawn if I say so. You
+go back to the house, Katriny, and read Gibson."
+
+"Ibsen," flashed Katrina.
+
+"I don't care what his Dutch name is--read him. Or else"--a grim light
+of humor in his hard gray eye--"go over and see that parrot."
+
+Katrina almost stamped her foot. "I loathe parrots," she cried, "and I
+came out to talk about this bonfire."
+
+"I know you did," said Mr. McBride, "but this parrot ain't like other
+parrots. It's a clown. It would make a rag baby laugh."
+
+Katrina, flushed, angry, at a loss what to say, decided to say nothing.
+The sight of John, discreetly gazing at the roof of the chicken house,
+the grimness of Grandfather's face, the discomfort of the choking
+smoke, urged a dignified retreat. She turned abruptly and left them,
+overwhelmed at the exhibition furnished by Mr. McBride, confounded at
+his sudden leap into activity after years of serene floating and
+absolutely in the dark as to any method of controlling him in the
+future.
+
+For a week, his pipe and his daily bonfire contented Mr. McBride.
+Between himself and Katrina, relations were polite but not cordial.
+Katrina preserved a dignity which deceived neither of them. Both knew
+that she was awaiting something sensational, and the fact worried the
+old gentleman, for already he had exhausted his possibilities. He longed
+for new ideas in this matter of revolution, but none came. He began to
+be bored by bonfires, and the lack of opposition to them. Even the
+parrot failed to amuse, and he was sinking into dull monotony, when a
+walk down the long lane behind the back garden one sunny afternoon
+changed the horizon of his world.
+
+He was gone for two hours; but Katrina was away from the house herself,
+and did not notice. The next afternoon he disappeared for three, finally
+dragging in weary in body, but high in spirit. Twice at dinner he
+chuckled audibly, and three times he recommended the parrot across the
+street to Katrina. The next day he vanished after luncheon, and was late
+for dinner. At this, Katrina decided to take a hand.
+
+"Grandfather," she said abruptly at dessert, after a long interval of
+silence on both sides, "it's all very well to take a vacation, but there
+is such a thing as overdoing it. I'm sure you would do nothing that
+would alarm mother, and I know that if she were at home she would worry
+over you. For days you have had no nap. Please rest to-morrow. Don't go
+walking. Let me drive you to the club for luncheon."
+
+The old gentleman glanced up at Katrina quickly. "I declare if I hadn't
+forgot all about that fellow till this minute," he said. "Speaking of
+the club, how's Sparks, Katriny?"
+
+Katrina sat suddenly erect and her color deepened. "Do you by any chance
+mean Mr. Willoughby Park, Grandfather? If so, I know nothing whatever
+about him. I haven't seen him for a week." This with a jerk.
+
+"Don't you marry that chap, Katriny," went on Mr. McBride, unimpressed,
+"and don't you let him come around here. He's no good. A fellow that
+hangs around a country club when he ain't hangin' around a girl, is
+always no good. You marry a chap with brains, Katriny, even if he ain't
+so long on the cash. Why, I know a young fellow----" Mr. McBride pulled
+himself up short. "You dash in for brains, Triny, and I'll take out my
+pocket book." Here he nodded, as if concluding a bargain, but Katrina
+was already upon her feet.
+
+"Grandfather McBride, you are growing insufferable," she cried. "Simply
+because I mention the club, you assume that I am--angling--for a man
+that--that has been decently polite to me. I have never been invited to
+marry Mr. Park. And you give me low advice about laying traps for some
+other sort of a man. And you mention pocket books! And you go off alone
+for hours and come home worn out. And you smoke your horrible old pipe
+and build your sickening bonfires, just to spite me! I think you are a
+wretch, and I've worried over you every day since mother left." Here she
+stopped suddenly, with a catch in her throat.
+
+The old gentleman looked at her silently. Then he got up and came around
+the table. Awkwardly, he patted her shoulder. Katrina sat down.
+
+"I'm glad you don't like Sparks, my dear," said Mr. McBride, leaning on
+his stick. "And don't worry your heart over Grandfather, Triny.
+Grandfather's no fool. He ain't had so much fun in years." Mr. McBride
+winked just here, and put on an air of profound mystery.
+
+"I wonder where you do disappear to," said Katrina. "I think I'll go
+along."
+
+"Don't you do that," spoke up Mr. McBride alertly. "Don't you do that!
+A man can't stand a woman tagging at his heels. He's got to have room,
+and air to breathe."
+
+"Smoke, you mean," put in Katrina, with returning spirit, "and I warn
+you, Grandfather, that if you make fires off our place, you'll be
+arrested."
+
+"Pooh! Fires!" said Mr. McBride contemptuously. "Amusement for children.
+I ain't a-makin' fires these days, Katriny. I've got other things to
+do." And, with a final pat upon her shoulder, and a last most telling
+wink, Grandfather McBride dragged himself wearily, but triumphantly, to
+bed.
+
+When Katrina, on the lookout next afternoon, saw Mr. McBride join John
+in the back garden, hold with him a whispered consultation broken by
+many stealthy glances toward the house, and finally disappear with him
+down the lane, behind a wheelbarrow laden with boards, she gave orders
+that she was not at home, waited half an hour, and followed.
+
+The lane wound coolly green and deserted from the Prentiss place into
+the heart of the country. Katrina, walking steadily, passed her own,
+passed the Graham and the Haskell boundaries, and stopped in surprise.
+At a branching path hung a new and conspicuous sign. "Private Road! No
+Trespassing, Under Penalty of the Law."
+
+It was a churlish sign. The people of the neighborhood--a summer
+settlement of friends and pleasant informalities--were used to no such
+signs. And Katrina, knowing Grandfather McBride, turned at once into the
+branching path. At some distance in, she passed a similar sign, with
+every mark of disdain. Finally, she was brought up short by a wire
+fence, with a gate, high, wooden, and new, that stretched across the
+path. She tried the gate, but it did not budge. From the wood beyond
+came the sound of voices and the strokes of a hammer. With a quick
+glance behind her, and a determined set to her chin, she began to climb
+the gate.
+
+She was descending upon the other side in safety, when Grandfather
+McBride came upon her. His hat was pushed back upon his head, his stick
+was forgotten. He descended upon her as might a hungry lion upon its
+prey. He roared--in fact, he bellowed.
+
+"Katrina Prentiss, get back over that fence. Climb back over that gate;
+you're trespassing. Didn't you see the signs? Are you blind? Can't you
+read? What do you mean by coming in here where you don't belong? Climb
+back there and go home at once!"
+
+Katrina, unprepared for battle and aware of being at a disadvantage,
+swallowed hard and obeyed. She climbed back over the gate. Once upon
+solid earth, however, and she glared as fiercely at Grandfather McBride
+as he stared ferociously at her.
+
+"I'm not a child," she said furiously, when he stopped to breathe, "to
+be ordered about and sent home and insulted. I have never been so
+treated in my life and I give you fair warning, Grandfather, that I'll
+stand it no longer. After this I'll do as I please." Whereupon Katrina,
+having woman-like, in the act of obedience, said her say, retreated with
+dignity and dispatch. Behind her, Mr. McBride waved his recovered stick
+over the gate and shouted, but she did not turn nor attempt an answer.
+
+He came home within an hour, slowly, leaning heavily upon his stick.
+John followed with the empty wheelbarrow. They parted at the barn and
+Mr. McBride went at once to his room and shut the door. Katrina, sitting
+at her own window, looked thoughtfully into space and swung a key upon
+her forefinger. After a time she stood up, smoothed her hair and pinned
+on her wide, rose-laden hat. Then she went down the hall quietly,
+stopped before Mr. McBride's door, and listened a moment. A gentle snore
+proclaimed Mr. McBride's occupation. Katrina fitted the key into the
+lock and turned it, took it out again and slipped it beneath a corner of
+the rug, listened a further moment and then walked down the stairs, out
+through the back garden, and, with a final glance behind her, turned
+once more into the green and deserted lane.
+
+It must be confessed that Katrina started upon her quest in a spirit far
+removed from that of your single-minded explorer. She was urged by a
+variety of causes. Among them was a determination to disobey Grandfather
+McBride, to serve him with his own medicine, to pay him in his own coin,
+and to do it as quickly and as frankly as possible. Her rapidly
+increasing curiosity concerning the region he guarded with so much
+mystery counted as well, but the paramount force--for Katrina was young
+enough to take her responsibility seriously--was anxiety over the old
+gentleman himself. In fact, Katrina departed, as did Lot's wife, with
+her face and her thought turned backward, a policy not conducive to
+brilliant success in exploration.
+
+This time, however, she was stopped by no one. She passed the gate
+safely, penetrated the wood and came at length upon a part of Mr.
+McBride's secret. It was a rough little flight of steps, made with the
+help of John, the wheelbarrow, and the boards, which led to the top of a
+high brick wall. The wall astounded Katrina even more than did the
+steps, which is saying a good deal. The whole elaborate contrivance for
+keeping people away, puzzled Katrina. It was some time before she
+mounted the steps and looked over the wall, but when she finally did so,
+she ceased to be merely puzzled. She became lost in a maze of wonder.
+
+Stretching before her, was a wide expanse of green. Just opposite stood
+a long, low building of workmanlike appearance. At the left was a very
+presentable rose garden. At the right, a rustic summer-house.
+Surrounding all was the high brick wall. But it was none of these things
+that amazed Katrina.
+
+Moving toward her, from the door of the long building, came a little
+procession--men and women, walking slowly, sedately dressed in old-time
+silks and finery, decked with plumes, jewels, laces, bouquets of
+flowers. Arrived at a broad space near the summer-house, the company,
+after a series of low and preliminary bows, launched forth into a
+stately dance. Katrina, conscious of music, descried an individual in
+very modern blue overalls, who manipulated a phonograph. A voice from
+beyond the summer-house, called forth instructions at intervals, with a
+huskiness vaguely suggestive of old Coney.
+
+"More side-play there, Miss Beals. Just imagine he's a young hobo you're
+in love with and yer father won't let him up the steps. You're doing the
+Merry Widow act while the old man's not looking. Don't bow so low you
+hide your face, Mr. Peters. Your face is worth money to us all. And
+everybody get a move on! You're too slow! Hit it up a bit, Jim."
+
+The overalls, thus adjured, accelerated the time of his machine, and a
+new spirit animated the group. Katrina leaned far over the wall in order
+to miss nothing. At length, the dance, moving toward a finale, reached
+it with a succession of stirring chords, and a flourish of curtseys, and
+the group dissolved.
+
+"That'll do for to-day. You can knock off now," began the husky voice,
+when Jim, glancing up from his phonograph, beheld Katrina in her
+rose-laden hat, leaning far over the wall. If he had stopped to reflect,
+he might have ignored the vision, for he was but man, and the vision a
+guilelessly pretty one, but he did not stop to reflect. With Jim, to see
+a thing was to proclaim it abroad. Immediately, he yelled:
+
+"Hey! Get on to the lady on the wall! Hey! Mr. Connor, come around here.
+There's somebody on the wall. Hey!"
+
+At once Katrina, to her utmost discomfort, became the centre of the
+stage. Everybody turned, saw her, and began to stare. The silken ladies,
+the velvet gentlemen, delayed their return to modern apparel, and took
+her in. Jim stared clamorously. Mr. Connor, rounding the summer-house,
+glared angrily. To Katrina, even the long building blinked its windows
+at her, and she thought, with sudden longing, of Grandfather McBride.
+She wished she had not come. Most of all, she wished to go, but she did
+not quite dare.
+
+At once, Mr. Connor took charge of the situation. "Say, young lady," he
+demanded, in a truculent manner, "what do you mean by gettin' into these
+grounds and rubberin' at us over our wall? Don't you know you can be run
+in for passin' those signs? Didn't you see that gate?"
+
+"Oh, yes," faltered Katrina; "yes--I saw the gate."
+
+"Well, how'd you get past that gate and them signs," Mr. Connor wanted
+to know.
+
+"I--I climbed the gate," hesitated Katrina.
+
+Clearly this was not what Mr. Connor expected. Such simplicity must
+cover guile. A suppressed smile glimmered through the group and Mr.
+Connor became more suspicious of Katrina.
+
+"I don't want no kiddin' now, do you hear?" he burst forth. "You're in a
+tight place, young woman, and you may as well wake up to the fact at
+once. The Knickerbocker is doin' things on a plane of high art, and our
+methods are our own. Now, I want to know who you represent? And
+freshness don't go, d'you see?"
+
+Katrina hardly heard Mr. Connor. Her mind was occupied with the freedom
+that lay clear behind her, and the possible patrol-wagons and police
+stations before her. Perhaps she might conciliate this red-faced man by
+allowing him to talk, by being mild and meek and polite. Perhaps a
+chance might come for a desperate attempt at escape. But Mr. Connor,
+conversing fluently, read her very soul.
+
+"Bring that there light ladder, Jim," he interrupted himself to order,
+"and if you try to get away, young woman, it'll be the worse for you.
+Now, I want to know what yellow sheet you represent?"
+
+"Yellow--why do you take me for a newspaper woman?" cried Katrina. "I'm
+not. I'm nothing of the sort. I've never been inside a newspaper office
+in my life."
+
+"Of course not," observed Mr. Connor, ironically. "They never have.
+Always society ladies that can't write their own names. You stand just
+where you are, miss, till that ladder arrives. Then I'm coming up to
+confiscate any little sketches and things you may have handy.
+
+"You are a brute," said Katrina, lips trembling but head held high. "I
+am Miss Prentiss. I live near here, and you will not dare to detain me."
+
+"Oh, won't I?" returned Mr. Connor. "I have a picture of myself letting
+you go. And where the deuce is Jim?" He turned impatiently toward the
+building across the lawn, then somewhat relaxed his frown. "Oh, well, I
+can take an orchestra chair," observed Mr. Connor. "Here comes the
+boss."
+
+Katrina, with deepening concern, glanced from Mr. Connor toward the long
+building. A young man was sprinting across the stretch of green--a
+clean-cut young man in gray flannels. At the first sight of him, Katrina
+caught her breath sharply and blushed. It was Katrina's despair that she
+blushed so easily. As the young man neared them the spectators achieved
+the effect of obliterating themselves from the landscape. They melted
+into space. There remained the young man, Mr. Connor, and a divinely
+flushed Katrina.
+
+The young man looked up at her without smiling. He bowed to her gravely.
+Then he turned to Mr. Connor. With a few low-spoken words, he wilted Mr.
+Connor. Katrina, gazing at the rose-garden, heard something in spite of
+herself. She heard her name, and caught Mr. Connor's articulate
+amazement. She heard mentioned some "old gentleman." She heard a
+recommendation to Mr. Connor to go more slowly in the future and to mend
+his manners at all times. After a hint to Mr. Connor to look up Jim and
+the ladder, she heard that gentleman withdraw much more quietly than he
+had come, and her eyes finally left the rose-garden and looked straight
+down into those of warm gray, belonging to the young man below her.
+
+"Will you mind--waiting--just a moment longer?" he asked. "This is more
+luck than I've had lately."
+
+Katrina smiled tremulously. "It's in my power to go, then," she said.
+
+"No," said the young man, firmly, "it isn't. On second thoughts, you are
+to stay just where you are till that blockhead brings the ladder. I've
+a good deal to say. I'm going to walk home with you."
+
+"Oh," said Katrina. "And what will become of your fancy-dress party?"
+
+"My fancy-dress party," returned the young man, "will catch the next
+trolley for New York. Oh! Here labors the trusty henchman across the
+green. Right you are, Jim! No, the lady is not to come down. I'm to go
+up." And go up he did, in the twinkling of an eye, and in less than
+another the rose-wreathed hat and the young man's gray cap had
+disappeared from view together.
+
+"Well, what do you know about that?" observed Jim, under his breath,
+staring at the top of the wall. He whistled softly. Then he grinned.
+"Hypnotized, by thunder," concluded Jim, returning with the ladder.
+
+Meanwhile, the two lingered homeward through the deepening twilight. The
+gate opened easily to a key from the young man's pocket; the signs
+glimmered dimly. They talked lightly, but what they said proved to both
+simply an airy veil for what they did not say. Katrina spoke of the club
+and the tennis tournament.
+
+"Of course, we lost," she said. "Our best man," with a sidelong look,
+"did not enter. The committee said that he was away--on business. I see
+now that they were misinformed."
+
+"But they weren't," said the young man, eagerly, "if you mean me. I am
+'away on business.' Why, do you know it's seven days since I've seen
+you?"
+
+Katrina regarded her neat brown shoes.
+
+"The fact is," continued the young man, diffidently, "I've been trying a
+new method with you. I've been endeavoring to be missed. And I'm afraid
+to hear that I haven't been."
+
+"A little wholesome fear is good for anyone," observed Katrina,
+judicially, "but I can truthfully say that I rejoiced at the sight of
+you this afternoon. That red-faced man was about to drag me off the wall
+by the hair."
+
+"Oh, Connor," said the young man. "Connor's not polished, but in his
+line, he's a jewel. He used to be a stage manager, and considered in
+that light, he's really mild."
+
+"Is he?" said Katrina, drily. "Does he stage manage for you?"
+
+"Practically that. Don't scoff--please. You see, there's a big future in
+this business. My father growled at first, but he's come clean around.
+The land was mine, and we are using it this way. The American public are
+going in for this thing. They want amusement and they want it quick. And
+the thing is to provide them with what they want, when they want it."
+
+"Oh," said Katrina. "And you are providing the American public with what
+they want--back there?" with a tilt of her head behind her.
+
+"Exactly," he answered. "That's our plant. We are the Knickerbocker Film
+Manufacturing Company."
+
+"Oh," said Katrina, again. "And the fancy-dress people?"
+
+"We are getting up 'Romeo and Juliet,'" said the young man. "Please
+don't laugh. It's been proven that the moving picture audiences like
+Shakespeare canned."
+
+"Moving picture audiences," repeated Katrina in surprise, and then as
+the light broke, she stopped short and looked at the young man.
+
+"Why, didn't you guess?" he queried. "The summer-house--why, of course,
+the summer-house must have hidden the camera." He looked at her
+dejectedly. "I've wanted you so much to know all about it," he said,
+"and now that you do, it sounds--oh, drivelling."
+
+"But it doesn't," cried Katrina, eyes shining. "It sounds splendid. It
+sounds thrilling. I'm sure it will be a success. You're bound to make it
+one. I congratulate you. You've left out a good deal. You've told your
+story very badly, but I'm good at filling in. The fact is, I'm proud to
+know you, and you may shake hands with me if you wish to."
+
+"Oh, Katrina," murmured the young man, and they clasped hands. It was
+just here that Grandfather McBride turned into the lane from the back
+garden and came upon them. When they became aware of him, leaning
+heavily upon his stick and frowning at them through the dusk, Katrina
+braced herself to meet whatever might come. But, suddenly, to her
+intense surprise, Mr. McBride beamed upon them radiantly.
+
+"Well, well, Katriny," he said, in high good humor, "so you've been over
+that gate again, eh? Been lookin' over that wall, eh? I knew you would,
+my dear, I knew you would. There's some of the McBride spirit in you
+after all, thank God. I meant to take you myself, but you got ahead of
+me." Here he shook hands with the young man. "Glad to see you again, my
+boy," said Grandfather McBride. "Brought my little girl home, eh?"
+
+"Well, we were on the way," admitted the young man with enthusiasm. "I
+see you got the steps up, sir."
+
+"Yes," said Mr. McBride, "oh, yes. I'm much obliged to you for the
+permission. It's as good as any vaudeville, and it's a sight nearer
+home. You're bound to make money. I tell my granddaughter," with a
+triumphant nod to the lady in question, "to bank on brains and energy
+and American push. I tell her," with a profound wink to Katrina, "to let
+this old family nonsense and society racket go hang. I'm glad she met
+you."
+
+"But we mustn't stand here in the lane, Grandfather," put in Katrina,
+hurriedly. "It's getting damp."
+
+"That's so," agreed Mr. McBride, "and it's getting late." He hooked his
+cane about the young man's arm. "Come in and have dinner with us," he
+said.
+
+Katrina stared in amazement at Mr. McBride. The young man looked eagerly
+at Katrina. "If Miss Prentiss will allow me----" he began.
+
+"Huh! Miss Prentiss," spoke up Mr. McBride. "What's she got to say about
+it? I allow you." And as Katrina, behind Mr. McBride's back, smiled and
+nodded, the young man accepted promptly.
+
+Together the three went through the back garden and up to the house.
+Arrived there, Katrina disappeared. Grandfather McBride, after settling
+his guest, came straight upstairs and stopped at her door.
+
+"Little cuss," beamed Mr. McBride, "goin' off, locking up her old
+grandfather and meetin' young chaps. Say, Katriny," he remarked
+casually, "he's a fine fellow, ain't he?"
+
+Katrina, busy with her hair, nodded.
+
+"Now, if I was a girl," continued Mr. McBride, diplomatically, "and a
+fellow like that took a shine to me I'd show a glimmer of sense. I'd up
+and return it."
+
+"Would you?" remarked Katrina. "I'm glad you like him. You see,
+Grandfather, you are too smart for me. I didn't know until just now that
+you had even met Mr. Park."
+
+Mr. McBride's smile stiffened, then froze, finally disappeared. He
+opened his mouth, and shut it. He swallowed hard. At last, he got it
+out. "Katriny--Katriny, is _that_ Sparks--that fellow downstairs? Is
+that _Sparks_?"
+
+"Hush," said Katrina. "Of course, that is Willoughby Park. Why,
+Grandfather, didn't you ask his name?"
+
+"No," said Mr. McBride, "I didn't. I just saw he was a fine, likely----"
+He stopped abruptly. "Well, I'll be damned," said Mr. McBride.
+
+Katrina came over to him and put her hand on his shoulder. Mr. McBride
+looked into space. Standing so, he spoke once more. "Do you--do you
+really like him, Triny?" he asked, and although he looked into space,
+Mr. McBride saw Katrina's blush. He patted her hand once, and left her.
+
+On his way downstairs, the grimness of Mr. McBride's face relaxed. In
+the lower hall, he went so far as to chuckle. When he joined Mr. Park on
+the porch, he grinned at him amiably.
+
+"I'm a good sport," remarked Mr. McBride, irrelevantly, "but I know when
+to retire to my corner and stay there. Say," continued Mr. McBride,
+unconscious of discrepancies between thought and action, "after dinner
+I'm goin' to take you children across the street to see that parrot."
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+RURAL INSURANCE
+
+The Story of a Wayside Halt
+
+By CLOTILDE GRAVES
+
+
+EXHAUSTED by the effort involved in keeping the thermometer of the
+closing day of August at an altitude intolerable to the human kind and
+irksome to the brute, a large, red-hot sun was languidly sinking beyond
+an extensive belt of dusky-brown elms fringing the western boundary of a
+seventy acre expanse of stubbles diagonally traversed by a parish
+right-of-way leading from the village of Bensley to the village of
+Dorton Ware. A knee-deep crop of grasses, flattened by the passage of
+the harvest wains, clothed this strip of everyman's land, and a narrow
+footpath divided the grass down the middle, as a parting divides hair.
+
+A snorting sound, which, accompanied by a terrific clatter of old iron
+and the crunching of road-mendings, had been steadily growing from
+distant to near, and from loud to deafening, now reached a pitch of
+utter indescribability; and as a large splay-wheeled, tall-funneled,
+plowing engine rolled off the Bensley highroad and lumbered in upon the
+right-of-way, the powerful bouquet of hot lubricating oil nullified all
+other smells, and the atmosphere became opaque to the point of solidity.
+As the dust began to settle it was possible to observe that attached to
+the locomotive was a square, solid, wooden van, the movable residence of
+the stoker, the engineer, and an apprentice; that a Powler cultivator, a
+fearsome piece of mechanism, apparently composed of second-hand anchors,
+chain-cables, and motor driving-wheels, was coupled to the back of the
+van, and that a bright green water-cart brought up the rear. Upon the
+rotund barrel of this water-cart rode a boy.
+
+The plowing-engine came to a standstill, the boy got down from the
+water-cart and uncoupled the locomotive from the living-van. During the
+operations, though the boy received many verbal buffets from both his
+superiors, it was curiously noticeable that the engineer and stoker,
+while plainly egging one another on to wreak physical retribution upon
+the body of the neophyte, studiously refrained from personally
+administering it.
+
+"Hook off, can't ye, hook off!" commanded the engineer. "A 'ead like a
+dumpling, that boy 'as!" he commented to the stoker, as Billy wrought
+like a grimy goblin at the appointed task.
+
+"A clout on the side of it 'ud do 'im good!" pronounced the stoker, who
+was as thin and saturnine as the engineer was stout and good-humored.
+"Boys need correction."
+
+"I'll allow you're right," said the engineer. "But it ain't my business
+to 'it Billy for 's own good. Bein' own brother to 'is sister's
+'usband--it's plainly your place to give 'im wot for if 'e 'appens to
+need it."
+
+The stoker grunted and the clock belonging to the Anglo-Norman church
+tower of the village struck six. Both the engineer and his subordinate
+wiped their dewy foreheads with their blackened hands, and
+simultaneously thought of beer.
+
+"Us bein' goin' up to Bensley for a bit, me an' George," said the
+engineer, "an' supposin' Farmer Shrubb should come worritin' along this
+way and ask where us are, what be you a-going to tell 'im, Billy boy?"
+
+"The truth, I 'ope," said the stoker, with a vicious look in an eye
+which was naturally small and artificially bilious.
+
+"Ah, but wot is the truth to be, this time?" queried the engineer.
+"Let's git it settled before we go. As far as I'm consarned, the answer
+Billy's to give in regards to my question o' my whereabouts is:
+'Anywhere but in the tap o' the Red Cow.'"
+
+"And everythink but decently drunk," retorted the stoker.
+
+"That's about it," assented the unsuspecting engineer.
+
+The stoker laughed truculently, and Billy ventured upon a faint echo of
+the jeering cachinnation. The grin died from the boy's face, however, as
+the engineer promptly relieved a dawning sense of injury by cuffing him
+upon one side of the head, while the stoker wrung the ear upon the
+other.
+
+"Ow, hoo," wailed Billy, stanching his flowing tears in the ample sleeve
+of his coat, "Ow, hoo, hoo!"
+
+"Stop that blubberin', you," commanded the stoker, who possessed a
+delicate ear, "and make th' fire an' git th' tea ready against Alfred
+and me gits back. You hear me?"
+
+"Yes, plaize," whimpered Billy.
+
+"An' mind you warms up the cold bacon pie," added the stoker.
+
+"And don't you forget to knock in the top of that tin o' salmon," added
+the engineer, "an' set it on to stew a bit. An' don't you git pickin'
+the loaf wi' they mucky black fingers o' yours, Billy, my lad, or you'll
+suffer for it when I comes home."
+
+"Yes, plaize," gasped Billy, bravely swallowing the recurrent hiccough
+of grief. "An' plaize where be I to build fire?"
+
+"The fire," mused the engineer. He looked at the crimson ball of the
+sun, now drowning in a lake of ruddy vapors behind the belt of elms; he
+nodded appreciatively at the palely glimmering evening star and pointed
+to a spot some yards ahead. "Build it there, Billy," he commanded
+briefly.
+
+The stoker hitched his thumbs in his blackened leather waist-strap and
+spat toward the rear of the van. "You build the fire nigh th' hedge
+there," he ordered, "so as us can sit wi' our faces to'rds yon bit o'
+quick an' hev th' van to back of us, an' git a bit o' comfort outside
+four walls fur once. D' ye hear, boy?"
+
+"Yes, George," quavered Billy.
+
+The sleepy eye of the engineer had a red spark in it that might have
+jumped out of his own engine-furnace as he turned upon the acquiescent
+Billy. "Didn't you catch wot I said to you just now, my lad?" he
+inquired with ill-boding politeness.
+
+"Yes, Alfred," gasped the alarmed Billy.
+
+"If the boy doesn't mind me," came from the stoker, who was thoroughly
+roused, "and if I don't find a blazin' good fire, an' victuals welding
+hot, ready just in the place I've pointed out to 'im, when I've 'ad my
+pipe and my glass at the 'Red Cow,' I'll----" A palpably artificial fit
+of coughing prevented further utterance.
+
+"You'll strap 'im within an inch of 'is life, I dursay," hinted the
+engineer. "You pipe what George says, Billy?" he continued, as Billy
+applied his right and left coat cuffs to his eyes in rapid succession.
+"He's give you his promise, and now I give you mine. If I don't find a
+roarin' good fire and the rest to match, just where I've said they're to
+be when I come back from where I've said I'm a-goin'----"
+
+"You'll wallop 'im a fair treat, I lays you will," said the stoker,
+revealing a discolored set of teeth in a gratified smile. "We'll bide by
+wot the boy does then," he added. "Knowin' that wot 'e gits from either
+of us, he'll earn. An' your road is my road, Alfred, leastways as far as
+the 'Red Cow.'"
+
+The engineer and the stoker walked off amicably side by side. The sun
+sank to a mere blot of red fire behind the elms, and crowds of
+shrilly-cheering gnats rose out of the dry edges and swooped upon the
+passive victim, Billy, who sat on the steps of the living van with his
+knuckles in his eyes.
+
+"Neither of 'em can't kill me, 'cos the one what did it 'ud 'ave to be
+'ung," he reflected, and this thought gave consolation. He unhooked a
+rusty red brazier from the back of the living van, and dumping it well
+into the hedge at the spot indicated by the stoker, filled it with dry
+grass, rotten sticks, coals out of the engine bunker, and lumps of oily
+cotton waste. Then he struck and applied a match, saw the flame leap
+and roar amongst the combustibles, filled the stoker's squat tea-kettle
+with water from the green barrel, put in a generous handful of Tarawakee
+tea, and, innocent of refinements in tea-making, set it on to boil.
+
+"George is more spitefuller nor wot Alfred is," Billy Beesley murmured,
+as the kettle sent forth its first faint shrill note. Then he added with
+a poignant afterthought, "But Alfred is a bigger man than wot George
+be."
+
+The stimulus of this reflection aided cerebration. Possessed by an
+original idea, Billy rubbed the receptacle containing it, and his mouth
+widened in an astonished grin. A supplementary brazier, temporarily
+invalided by reason of a hole in the bottom, hung at the back of the
+living-van. The engineer possessed a kettle of his own. Active as a
+monkey, the small figure in the flapping coat and the baggy trousers
+sped hither and thither. Two hearths were established, two fires blazed,
+two tea-kettles chirped. Close beside the stoker's brazier a bacon pie
+in a brown earthen dish nestled to catch the warmth, a tin of Canadian
+salmon, which Billy had neglected to open, leaned affectionately against
+the other. Suddenly the engineer's kettle boiled over, and as Billy
+hurried to snatch it from the coals, the salmon-tin exploded with an
+awe-inspiring bang, and oily fragments of fish rained from the bounteous
+skies.
+
+"He'll say I did it a purpose, Alfred will!" the aggrieved boy wailed,
+as he collected and restored to the battered tin as much of its late
+contents as might be recovered. While on all fours searching for bits
+which might have escaped him, and diluting the gravy which yet remained
+in the tin with salt drops of foreboding, a scorching sensation in the
+region of the back brought his head round. Then he yelled in earnest,
+for the roaring flame from the other brazier had set the quickset hedge,
+inflammable with drought, burning as fiercely as the naphtha torch of a
+fair-booth, while a black patch, widening every moment, was spreading
+through the dry, white grasses under the clumsy wheels of the
+living-van, whose brown painted sides were beginning to blister and
+char, as Billy, rendered intrepid by desperation, grabbed the broken
+furnace-rake handle, usually employed as a poker, and beat frantically
+at the encroaching fire. As he beat he yelled, and stamped fiercely upon
+those creeping yellow tongues. There was fire from side to side of the
+field pathway now, the straggling hedge on both sides was crackling
+gaily. And realizing the unconquerable nature of the disaster, Billy
+dropped the broken furnace-rake, uttered the short, sharp squeal of the
+ferret-pressed rabbit, and took to his heels, leaving a very creditable
+imitation of a prairie conflagration behind him.
+
+It was quite dark by the time the engineer and his subordinate returned
+from the "Red Cow," and their wavering progress along the field pathway
+was rendered more difficult, after the first hundred yards or so, by the
+unaccountable absence of the hedge. It was a singularly oppressive
+night, a brooding pall of hot blackness hung above their heads, clouds
+of particularly acrid and smothering dust arose at every shuffle of
+their heavy boots, even the earth they trod seemed glowing with heat,
+and they remarked on the phenomenon to one another.
+
+"It's thunder weather, that's wot it be," said the engineer, mopping his
+face. "I'm like my old mother, I feel it coming long before it's 'ere.
+Phew!"
+
+"Uncommon strong smell o' roast apples there is about 'ere," commented
+the stoker, sniffing.
+
+"That beer we 'ad must 'ave bin uncommon strong," said the engineer in a
+low, uneasy voice. "I seem to see three fires ahead of us, that's what I
+do."
+
+"One whopping big one to the left, one little one farther on, right
+plumb ahead, and another small one lower down on my right 'and. I see
+'em as well as you," confirmed the stoker in troubled accents. "And
+that's how that young nipper thinks to get off a licking from one of
+us----"
+
+"By obeying both," said the engineer, quickening his pace indignantly.
+"This is Board School, this is. Well, you'll learn 'im to be clever, you
+will."
+
+"You won't leave a whole bone in his dirty little carcase once you're
+started," said the stoker confidently.
+
+By this time they were well upon the scene of the disaster. Before their
+dazed and horrified eyes rose the incandescent shell of what had been,
+for eight months past, their movable home, and a crawling crisping
+rustle came from the pile of ashes that represented the joint property
+of two men and one boy.
+
+"Pinch me, Alfred," said the stoker, after an interval of appalled
+silence.
+
+"Don't ask me," said the engineer, in a weak voice, "I 'aven't the power
+to kill a flea."
+
+"There ain't one left living to kill," retorted the stoker, as he
+contemplated the smoking wreck. "There was 'undreds in that van, too,"
+he added as an afterthought.
+
+"Burned up the old cabin!" moaned the engineer, "an' my Sunday rig-out
+in my locker, an' my Post Office Savings Bank book sewed up in the
+pillar o' my bunk, along o' my last week's wages what I 'adn't paid in."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder if Government 'ung on to they savings o' yourn,"
+said the stoker, shaking his head. "It's a pity, but you'd invested
+yours as I 'ave mine," he added.
+
+"In public 'ouses?" retorted the engineer.
+
+"Some of it 'as went that way," the stoker admitted, "but for three
+weeks past I've denied myself to put a bit into a concern as I think is
+going to prove a paying thing."
+
+"Owch!" exclaimed the engineer, who had been restlessly pacing in the
+velvety darkness round the still glowing wreck of the living-van.
+
+"Don't you believe wot I've told you?" demanded the stoker haughtily.
+
+"You don't always lie, George," said the engineer, gently. "Wot made me
+shout out like that just now," he explained, "was treading on something
+queer, down by the near side wheels. Somethink brittle that cracked like
+rotten sticks under my 'eel, an' then I slid on something round an'
+squashy. An' the smell like roast apples, what I noticed before, is
+stronger than ever."
+
+"'Ave you a match about you?" asked the stoker eagerly.
+
+"One," said the engineer, delicately withdrawing a solitary "kindler"
+from the bottom of his waistcoat pocket.
+
+The stoker received the match, and struck it on his trousers. A blue
+glimmer resulted, a faint s-s-s! followed, and the match went out.
+
+"On'y a glim," said the stoker in a satisfied tone, "but it showed me as
+I've made my money. An' made it easy, too."
+
+"'Ow much 'ave you pulled orf, then?" asked the engineer.
+
+"Double the value," replied the stoker, smiling broadly through the
+darkness, "of the property what I've lost in this here conflagration."
+
+"That 'ud bring you in about eighteenpence," retorted the engineer
+bitterly.
+
+The stoker laughed pleasantly.
+
+"Wot do you say to three pun' seventeen?" he demanded.
+
+"Better than a poke in the eye with a burnt stick," said the engineer.
+"Wot did you say was the concern you invested in?"
+
+The stoker felt in the darkness for his superior's arm, grasped it, and
+putting his mouth close to where he thought his ear ought to be, said
+loudly:
+
+"A boy."
+
+"Look 'ere, mate," began the engineer, hotly, "if you're trying a joke
+on me----"
+
+"It ain't no joke," responded the stoker cheerfully. "Leastways not for
+the boy, it ain't. But Lord! when I think 'ow near I come to lettin' the
+policy fall through." He chuckled. "It's three weeks gone since I took
+it out," he said contentedly, "an' paid three weeks' money in advance,
+an' at threepence a week, that makes ninepence, an' the thought o' them
+nine half-pints I might 'ave 'ad out o' money 'as drove me 'arf wild
+with thirst, over an' over. I should 'ave 'ad to pay again come Monday,
+if only 'e 'ad 'ave lived."
+
+"If only 'e 'ad lived--" repeated the engineer in a strange far-away
+tone, "Oo's 'e?" he asked eagerly.
+
+"You know old Abey Turner as keeps the little sweet-an'-tobaccer shop
+over to Dorton Ware?" pursued the stoker. "Old Abey is a agint for the
+Popular Thrifty Life Insurance Company----"
+
+"I know 'e is," confirmed the engineer.
+
+"Abey 'as bin at me over an' over again to insure my life," explained
+the stoker, "but I told 'im as I didn't 'old with laying out good money
+wot wouldn't never come 'ome to roost-like, until I was dead. Then Abey
+leans over the counter an' ketches me by the neck 'andkerchief an' says,
+'Think of the worst life you know, an' 'ave a bit on that.' Naturally,
+talkin' o' bad lives, you're the first chap whose name comes into my
+'ead."
+
+"Me!" ejaculated the engineer, starting.
+
+"But it wasn't wickedness old Abey meaned," continued the stoker, "only
+un'ealthiness in general. Somebody wot wasn't likely to live long,
+that's the sort o' man or woman 'e wanted me to insure. 'A child'll do,'
+says 'e, smiling, an' tells me 'ow a large family may be made a source
+of blessing to parents 'oo are wise enough to insure in the Popular
+Thrifty. Then it comes into my mind all of a sudden as 'ow Billy 'ud do
+a treat, an' I names 'im to Old Abey. 'That young shaver!' calls out old
+Abey, disgusted like. 'Why, 'e's as 'ard as nails. Wot's likely to
+'appen to 'im?' 'If you was to see the 'andling 'e gets when my mate is
+in 'is tantrums,' I says to old Abey, 'you'd put your bit o' money on
+'im cheerful an' willin'.' 'Is Alfred Evans such a savage in 'is drink?'
+says old Abey, quite surprised----"
+
+"I'll surprise 'im!" muttered the engineer, "when I meets 'im!"
+
+The stoker continued: "So the long an' the short is, I insured Billy,
+an' Billy's dead!"
+
+"You don't really think so?" cried the engineer, in shocked accents.
+
+"I don't think," said the stoker, in a hard, high tone, "I knows 'e is."
+
+"Not--burned with the van!" gasped the engineer.
+
+"Burned to cinders," said the stoker comfortably. "'Ow about that smell
+o' roasting you kep' a sniffing as we came along, an' wot were it if not
+cooked boy? Wot was it your foot crashed into when you called out awhile
+back? 'Is ribs, 'im being overdone to a crisp. Wot was it you slipped
+on----?"
+
+"Stop!" shuddered the engineer. "'Old 'ard! I can't bear it."
+
+"I can," said the stoker, following his comrade as he gingerly withdrew
+from the immediate scene of the tragedy. "I could if it was twice as
+much."
+
+"It will be that to me!" sighed the engineer, seating himself upon the
+parish boundary stone, over which he had stumbled in his retreat, and
+sentimentally gazing at the star-jewelled skies. "Twice three pound is
+six, an' twice seventeen bob is one-fourteen. Seven pounds fourteen is
+wot that pore boy's crool end 'as dropped into my pocket, and I'd 'ad
+those best clothes ever since I got married; an' there was only eight
+an' fourpence in the piller o' the bunk, an----"
+
+The engineer stopped short, not for lack of words, but because the
+stoker was clutching him tightly by the windpipe.
+
+"You don't durst dare to tell me," the frenzied mechanic shouted, "as
+wot you went an' insured Billy too?"
+
+"That's just wot I 'ave done," replied the half-strangled engineer. Then
+as the dismayed stoker's arms dropped helplessly by his side, he added,
+"you ought to be grateful, George, you 'ad no 'and in it. I couldn't
+'ave enjoyed the money properly, not if you'd 'ad to be 'ung for the
+boy's murder. That's wot I said to old Abey two weeks back, when I told
+'im as 'ow Billy's life went more in danger than anyone else's what I
+could think of, through your being such a brutal, violent-tempered,
+dangerous man."
+
+"An' wot did that old snake in the grass say to that bloomin' lie?"
+demanded the stoker savagely.
+
+"'E said life was a uncertain thing for all," sniggered the engineer,
+gently. "An' I'd better 'ave a bit on the event an' turn sorrow into
+joy, as the saying is. So I give Abey a shillin', bein' two weeks in
+advance, an' the Company sent me the policy, an' 'ere I am in for the
+money."
+
+"Like wot I am, an' with clean 'ands for both of us," said the stoker in
+a tone of cheerful self-congratulation. "I 'aven't laid a finger on that
+boy, not since I insured 'im."
+
+"Nor I ave'n't," said the engineer. "It's wonderful how I've bin able to
+keep my temper since I 'ad the policy to take care of at the same time."
+
+"Same with me," said the stoker happily. "Why, wot's wrong?" he added,
+for a tragic cry had broken from the engineer.
+
+"Mate," he stammered tremulously, "where did you keep your policy?"
+
+"Meanin' the bit o' blue-printed paper I 'ad from the Popular Thrifty?
+Wot do you want to know for?" snapped the stoker suspiciously.
+
+"It just come into my 'ead to arsk," said the engineer, in faltering
+accents.
+
+"In my little locker in the van, since you're so curious," said the
+stoker grudgingly.
+
+"I 'ad mine stitched up in the piller o' my bunk with my Post Office
+Savin's book," said the engineer in the deep, hollow voice of a funeral
+bell. "An' it's burned to hashes, an' so is yours!"
+
+"Then it's nineteen to one the company won't pay up," said the stoker
+after an appalled silence.
+
+"Ten 'underd to one," groaned the engineer.
+
+Another blank silence was broken by the stoker's saying, with a savage
+oath:
+
+"I wish that boy was alive, I do."
+
+"I know your feeling," agreed the engineer sympathetically. "It 'ud be
+a comfort to you to kick 'im--or any-think else weak and small wot
+didn't durst to kick back."
+
+"If I was to give you a bounce on the jor," inquired the stoker,
+breathing heavily, "should you 'ave the courage to land me another?"
+
+The engineer promptly hit out in the darkness, and arrived safe home on
+the stoker's chin. With a tiger-like roar of fury, the stoker charged,
+and on the engineer's dodging conjecturally aside, fell heavily over the
+parish boundary-stone. He rose, foaming, and a pitched battle ensued, in
+which the combatants saw nothing but the brilliant showers of stars
+evoked by an occasional head-blow, and the general advisability of
+homicide. Toward dawn fatigue overcame them. The stoker lay down and
+declined to get up again and the engineer even while traveling on all
+fours in search of him, lost consciousness in slumber.
+
+A yellow glare in the east heralded the rising of the orb of day, as the
+figures of an aged man and a ragged boy moved from the shelter of the
+belt of elms that screened the village of Dorton Ware, and proceeded
+along the right-of-way.
+
+"It's burned, right enough, Billy, my boy," said the old man, shading
+his bleared eyes with his horny hand as he gazed at the blackened
+skeleton of the living-van. "An' all considered, you can't be called to
+blame."
+
+Billy whistled.
+
+"If you'd bin asleep inside the van when that theer blaze got started,"
+said old Abey, rebukingly, as he hobbled along by the boy's side, "you
+wouldn't be whistlin' 'My Own Bluebell' now; your pore widowed mother,
+what lives in that theer little cottage o' mine at Porberry End--and 'om
+I persuaded to insure you in the Popular Thrifty--would 'ave 'ad a bit
+o' money comin' in 'andy for 'er Michaelmas rent, an' one or two other
+people would be a penny o' th' right side, likewise." He paused, and
+shading his bleared eyes under his gnarled hand, looked steadfastly at
+two huddled, motionless, grimy figures, lying in the charred grass
+beside the pathway. "Dang my old eyes!" he cried. "'Tis George an'
+Alfred--Alfred an' George--snatched away i' their drink an' neither of
+'em insured. I'll lay a farden. Here's a judgment on their lives, what
+wouldn't listen to Old Abey an' put into the Popular Thrifty. Here's a
+waste of opportunity--here's----"
+
+Old Abey's voice quavered and broke off suddenly as the corpse of the
+engineer, opening a pair of hideously blood-shot eyes, inquired
+ferociously what in thunder he meant by making such a blamed row, while
+the body of the stoker rolled over, yawned, revealing a split lip, and
+sat up staring.
+
+"We--we thought you was dead, mates," faltered Old Abey. "Didn't us,
+Billy?"
+
+"At first I did," Billy admitted, "an' then I----"
+
+"Then you wot?" repeated the engineer, bending his brows sternly above a
+nose swollen to twice its usual size.
+
+"Out with it!" snarled the stoker, whose lip was painful.
+
+"I was afraid as it couldn't be true," stuttered Billy.
+
+The stoker exchanged a look with the engineer.
+
+"The van's burnt, an' we've both lost our property, to say nothin' of
+our prospects, mate," he said with a sardonic sneer, "but one comfort's
+left us, Billy's alive!"
+
+A little later the plowing engine with its consort was at work under the
+hot September sky. As the Powler cultivator traveled to and fro, ripping
+up the stubbles, the boy who sat on the iron seat and manipulated the
+guiding-wheel, snivelled gently, realizing that the brief but welcome
+interval of icy aloofness on the part of his superiors had passed, never
+to return; and that the injunction of the Prophet would thenceforth be
+scrupulously obeyed.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+HIS HONOR, THE DISTRICT JUDGE
+
+A Tale of India
+
+By JOHN LE BRETON
+
+
+HIS Honor, Syed Mehta, the District Judge of Golampore, had dined with
+the Malcolms, and he was the first of the Collector's guests to leave
+the bungalow. He sauntered down the drive, lifting his contemplative
+gaze to the magnificence of the starry heavens. Behind him, the lamp-lit
+rooms sent long thrusts of light, sword-wise, into the hot darkness.
+Joan Malcolm had taken up her violin, and the sweet, wailing notes of it
+came sighing out on to the heavy air. Ruddy, broad-faced young Capper,
+of the Police, lounged by the open window, eating her up with adoring
+eyes.
+
+His Honor smoked his cigar tranquilly, but at heart, he smouldered.
+Harrow and Lincoln's Inn backed his past, the High Courts awaited him in
+the future. For the present he was a Civil Servant of excellent position
+and recognized ability, a Mohammedan gentleman who had distinguished
+himself in England as well as in the land of his birth. Also, he was of
+less account in the eyes of Joan Malcolm than Capper, a blundering
+English Acting-Superintendent of Police, with a pittance of six hundred
+rupees per mensem.
+
+Possibly Capper had not intended to be offensive, but it is not given to
+the young and the British to entirely conceal all consciousness of
+superiority when speaking with a native. His courtesy was that of a man
+who considered it to be beneath his dignity to use less ceremony. His
+civility was due to his respect for himself, not for the person whom he
+honored with his unintellectual conversation.
+
+The Judge flipped the ash off his cigar, and his slender hand was cool
+and leisurely. His dark, straight-featured face was impassive as carven
+stone. Mentally, he was cursing Capper with curses of inexhaustible fire
+and venom.
+
+Malcolm, the Collector, had a right to speak loudly, and to say this or
+that without cause, for he was Collector; but Capper, a mere
+Superintendent of the Police, a cub of twenty-three, was on a very
+different footing. Yet, not even as an equal had he borne himself toward
+a District Judge.
+
+His Honor's bungalow was on the outskirts of the town, and as he paced
+along the dusty road, he came to a footpath that ran down the hill,
+through dense jungle, to the native village in the valley. There was a
+swarm of dark-skinned fellow-men down there, to whom his name stood for
+all that is highest in authority. They would have loaded him with gifts
+had he permitted them to approach him. To them, it seemed that he was
+placed far above as a god, holding their lives and their fate 'twixt
+finger and thumb, in mid-air. In the unfathomed depths of the Judge's
+educated, well-ordered mind stirred a craving for solace. Galled by the
+brutish indifference of the Englishmen, there was yet left to him the
+reverence of his own people. He looked sharply up and down the road
+before he dived into the moist heat beneath the trees. He knew all that
+he was risking for a mere escapade. He had never trodden that path
+before, excepting when he had gone on a shooting expedition with the
+Collector. There were strange noises in the darkness, stealthy
+rustlings, small, unfamiliar cries. He heard nothing but Capper's
+comment on his carefully reasoned prediction that the day must come when
+India would govern herself.
+
+"Oh! you think so?"
+
+Stupid, unmeaning, absurd, but--successful.
+
+Then, immediately Capper was talking to Miss Malcolm about tennis, and
+she was listening, smiling and intent. The Judge was a crack tennis
+player. He loathed the game, but he had made himself proficient in it,
+because it is one of the things that people expect of a man. He was
+impelled to challenge Capper, and the answer was a drawled excuse.
+
+The Judge was well down the hill now, descending the last precipitous
+slope, and the countless odors of the Indian village rose to his
+nostrils. There was a dull murmurous commotion afar off, such as bees
+make when they are hiving. He listened, without curiosity, as he pressed
+forward. Suddenly he halted. The murmur boomed out into a long,
+thunderous roar. Then silence, and out of the silence a single voice,
+deep and ringing.
+
+"An infernal protest meeting," the Judge's British training informed
+him.
+
+He went forward again, moving noiselessly, and reached the outskirts of
+the crowd, sheltering himself between the bushes that fringed the
+jungle. Torches flared, and smoked, and shed a ruddy, uncertain light on
+hundreds of rapt, upturned faces. The orator stood tall and straight
+above them, fully revealed by purposely clustered lights. He volleyed
+reproach and insult upon his listeners, he gave them taunts instead of
+persuasion. They stood enthralled by the passionate voice, and bitter
+words found their mark, and rankled poisonously.
+
+"These _soors_ of Feringhi, whom you call your masters, beat you, and
+they use your brothers to be their sticks. But for your brothers, who
+wear the uniform of the Feringhi, and carry their guns, these worthless
+masters would be trodden into the dust beneath your feet. The men who
+hedge them in with steel must turn that steel against them."
+
+The roar of voices thundered among the trees, and died away suddenly, so
+that no word from the speaker might be lost.
+
+"They are cunning, these Feringhi, my brothers. They steal the wisest
+from among us while yet they are children, and bear them away to their
+own land, and give them over to their own teachers. Thus come back your
+own, with power and authority to scourge you. Your sons, your brothers
+come back to you, learned, praised greatly, having striven against the
+Feringhi in their own schools, and won what they desired.
+Collector-sahib, Judge-sahib, yea, even padre-sahib, come they back to
+you--not to lift you to honor and happiness beside them, but to side
+with those that oppress you, to grind taxes from you who starve, to
+imprison you who would be free. Sons of unspeakable shame! They drink
+your blood, they fatten on your misery, and they have their reward. _We_
+curse, them, brothers! The Feringhis smile upon them, they eat bread and
+salt in their company, but they spit when they have passed by!"
+
+Something in the scornful voice rang familiarly on the Judge's ears, and
+incautiously he changed his position and tried to get a clearer view of
+the treasonmonger. Instantly the man's bare brown arm shot out, and
+pointed him to public notice.
+
+"Here is one," pealed out the trumpet-voice, "has he come as our
+brother? Or comes he as the slave of our masters, to spy upon our
+meetings, and to deal out punishment to those who dare to be free? O
+brother, do you walk to Calcutta, where the High Courts be, over our
+bodies, and the bodies of our children? Will you go to the
+Collector-sahib with tales of a native rising, and call up our brothers
+of the police to kill and maim us? Or come you to offer us a great
+heart?"
+
+The Judge stood there, a motionless figure, flaring against the dark
+jungle in his spotless, white linen evening dress. There was a broad
+silk cummerband about his lean waist, and a gold signet-ring gleamed on
+his left hand. Half a dozen Englishmen, thread for thread in similar
+garb, still lounged in the Collector's drawing-room. He appeared the
+very symbol of Anglicized India. The brown, half-naked mob surged and
+struggled to look at him. The brown, half-naked orator still pointed at
+him, and waited for reply. Meanwhile, he had been recognized.
+
+"Iswar Chandra--by Jove," muttered the Judge.
+
+The last time they had met was in a London drawing-room. Iswar Chandra,
+the brilliant young barrister-at-law had discoursed to a philanthropic
+peeress upon the social future of his native land, whilst an admiring
+circle of auditors hung upon his words. The fate of India's women, he
+had said, lay at the feet of such fair and noble ladies as her Grace.
+The Judge remembered that people were saying that evening of Iswar
+Chandra that he was a fascinating and earnest man, and that he would be
+the pioneer of great things in the country of his birth.
+
+The eyes of the half-naked savage challenged the Judge over the sea of
+moving heads, and drove away the supercilious smile from his lips.
+
+"Brother, we claim you! You are of our blood, and we need such as you to
+lead us. The Feringhi have sharpened a sword to cut us down, but it
+shall turn to destroy them. Brother, we suffer the torments of
+hell--will you deliver us? Brother, we starve--will you give us food?
+Will you deal out to us life or death, you whose fathers were as our
+fathers? Choose now between great honor and the infamy that dies not!
+You are the paid creature of the British Raj, or you are a leader of
+free men. Brother, speak!"
+
+As in a dream the Judge approached the waiting crowd. His mouth was
+parched, his heart beat fitfully. He wanted that piercing voice to wake
+the echoes again, to take up the story of the old blood-feud, to goad
+him into doing that which he had not the courage to do. Vanished was his
+pride of intellect, and of fine achievement. He was a native, and he
+tugged and crawled at the stretch of the British chain.
+
+"The Feringhi are few, and we are many. Shall the few rule the many?
+Shall we be servants and poor while yet in the arms of our own golden
+mother? In their own country do the Feringhi not say that the word of
+the majority shall be law? So be it! We accept their word. The majority
+shall rule! O brother, skilled in the Feringhi craft, high-placed to
+administer justice to all who are brought before thee, do I not speak
+the truth?"
+
+The Judge threw away the dead end of his cigar, and shouldered his way
+into the inmost circle.
+
+"Peace, thou," he said, thickly; "this is folly. Ye must wait awhile for
+vengeance."
+
+Chandra threw up his arms, writhing in a very ecstasy of fury.
+
+"We have waited--have we not waited?--beside our open graves. Death to
+the Feringhi! Let them no longer desecrate our land. Let us forget that
+they ever were. They be few, and we be many. Brothers! To-night,
+to-night!"
+
+The Judge was tearing off his clothes, he was trampling them beneath his
+feet, he was crying out in a strange, raucous voice; and all the swaying
+crowds were taking up his words, maddening themselves and their fellows
+with the intoxicating sounds.
+
+"Death to the Feringhi! To-night, to-night! Our land for ourselves!"
+
+All but a few torches were extinguished. Secret places were torn up, and
+out came old guns, old swords sharpened to razor-like edges, great
+pistols, clubs, skinning-knives, daggers. Then, up and up through the
+dark jungle they thronged, hordes of them in the grip of a red and
+silent frenzy. Chandra was in the forefront, but the leader was his
+Honor the District Judge, a glassy-eyed, tight-lipped Mussulman in a
+loincloth and a greasy turban.
+
+The lights of the Collector's bungalow came in view, and the leader
+thought of young Capper, and rushed on, frothing like a madman, waving
+his sword above his head. Then he paused, and ran back to meet the
+laggards of a yard or two.
+
+"Only the men!" he shouted.
+
+Chandra mocked at him as the press bore him onward again, with scarcely
+an instant's halt.
+
+"Only the men, my brother!" he echoed.
+
+A few of the native police stood guard at the Collector's gates, but
+they turned and fled before the overwhelming numbers of the attacking
+force. Up the long drive the dark wave poured, and into the wide, bright
+rooms. The bungalow was deserted. Some fleet-footed servant had brought
+warning in time, and the British were well out of the town by the other
+road, with young Capper and a score of his men guarding their rear.
+
+The mob howled with disappointment. The next instant it was screaming
+with triumph as it settled down to sack and burn and destroy.
+
+The Judge went into the dining-room, and looked at the long table still
+decked with silver, and glass, and flowers. He looked at the chair on
+which he had sat, with Joan Malcolm at his side, and he picked it up and
+dashed it with all his might into a great ivory-framed mirror, and
+laughed aloud at the crash, and the ruin, and the rain of jagged
+splinters.
+
+"India must pass into the hands of the Indians!"
+
+"Oh! _you_ think so--you think so--you think so...."
+
+He overthrew a couple of standard lamps, and watched the liquid fire run
+and eat up their silken shades, and run again and leap upon the snowy
+curtains, and so, like lightning, spring to the ceiling, and lick the
+dry rafters with a thousand darting tongues. Then, he was out in the
+night again, the night of his life, the wonderful night that was calling
+for blood, and would not be denied.
+
+There was no lack of light now to make clear the path to vengeance. The
+Collector's bungalow roared red to the very heavens, and flames shot up
+in a dozen different parts of the town. The bazaar was looted, and
+English-made goods were piled upon bonfires in the street. A greater mob
+than had entered the town poured out of it, swift on the road to
+Chinsurah where thousands of their brothers lay, lacking only courage
+and leaders.
+
+At the midway turn of the road where the giant trees rear themselves at
+the side of the well, came a sudden check, and the mob fell back upon
+itself, and grew dead silent. Those in the rear could only wait and
+guess what had happened. The forefront saw that the road was barred. The
+moon had risen, and well out in the white light, was Capper Sahib. Some
+of his men were behind him. There were soldiers there, too, how many
+could not be seen, for they were grouped in the velvety black shadows
+which the trees flung across the road. There might have been only
+fifty--or five hundred.
+
+Young Capper came forward with his hands in his pockets, and stared at
+them. They saw that he was not afraid. He spoke to them in Maharattee,
+bluntly and earnestly, so that some of them wavered, and looked back. He
+said they were fools, led by a few rotten schemers who had only personal
+gain in view.
+
+"Take good advice," he said, "go to your homes while ye may. Ignorant,
+and greatly daring that ye are, the _bandar-log_, or such thievish scum
+among ye, drive ye with idle words and chatterings even to the brink of
+death. So far have ye come, but no farther----"
+
+The Judge had snatched a villager's gun, and fired. Capper Sahib fell,
+unspoken words upon his lips. His fair head draggled in the dust, and a
+red stain showed suddenly upon the white linen over his breast.
+
+A triumphant roar swept the mob from end to end. British rifles cracked
+out the answer, and the bullets went home surely, into the rioting mass.
+Amid shrill screams of pain and fury the leaders rallied their men, and
+charged forward. A second volley stopped them, before young Capper's
+prostrate body could be reached. Few had joined the attack, but now they
+were fewer, and neither of the leaders stood among them.
+
+That was the end. Bearing their dead and wounded, the rebels returned,
+wailing as they went. Before daylight the townsmen were in their houses,
+and the villagers had passed through the jungle, and regained their
+homes. Arms were concealed with all haste. The dead were buried, the
+wounded, for the most part, were hidden. Prisoners had been taken, but
+only an inconsiderable number. Before daylight also, the headman of the
+village, and a native surgeon came stealthily from the Judge's bungalow,
+and went their ways. They had their order, and they went to spread it
+abroad. The order was--_Silence!_ The headman had bowed himself to the
+earth when it was given, for he understood all that it meant. Prisoners
+would be brought before a brother, not only to-day, but to-morrow, and
+for many morrows. So much had the night given them.
+
+At noon His Honor came stiffly into the court-room, leaning upon the arm
+of his native servant. The Collector, who was awaiting him there, feared
+that he had been injured by the rioters on the previous night; but he
+was quickly reassured. The Judge, it seemed, had sprained his knee
+shortly after leaving the Malcolm's hospitable roof. It was nothing. A
+mere trifle, though indisputably painful.
+
+The Collector seated himself near the bench, and talked in a low voice.
+The ladies were all safe. No Europeans had been killed, and few injured.
+Capper had been shot by some cowardly dog while parleying with the
+rioters, but there were good hopes of him.
+
+The Judge was most truly concerned to hear of the calamity which had
+befallen Mr. Capper--immensely thankful to know that things were no
+worse with him.
+
+His Honor had heard little or nothing of what had happened during the
+riot, being laid by the leg, as it were, in his own room.
+
+The first batch of prisoners was brought in. At first the Judge did not
+look at them. Afterward his eyes sought their gaze, and held it, and
+they knew him for their brother. They heard his soft voice speaking of
+them compassionately, as wayward children whom mercy would win over,
+though harshness might confirm them in their foolish resistance to
+authority. The Collector seemed to protest, but with gentle courtesy
+his objections were put aside. He leaned back in his chair, flushed and
+angry, as one after another, the sullen-looking rebels were fined, and
+having paid what was demanded, were set at liberty.
+
+When the Judge looked up again, a single prisoner stood before him, a
+wounded, hawk-faced native, whose eyes blazed hate and contempt. The
+Collector drew his chair closer to the bench, and began to speak in
+gruff undertones.
+
+"A ring-leader. Man of some education, I understand--qualified as a
+barrister, and has taken to journalism. Must make an example of
+him--eh?"
+
+The Judge, straining in agony of mind and body, was aware of sudden
+relief from the pain of his wound. The bandage had slipped, and blood
+was cooling the torturing fire. A deathly faintness was upon him, and
+through it he spoke distinctly--again of mercy.
+
+"They were all blind. The leaders were blind. The blind leading the
+blind. Blind--blind----"
+
+The Collector sprang up with a startled exclamation. A thin stream of
+blood trickled from behind His Honor's desk, and went a twisting way
+down to the well of the court. He caught the Judge in his arms as he
+fell forward, and lowered him gently to the ground. Then it was seen
+that the unconscious man's clothes were saturated with blood.
+
+Instantly the court was cleared. A military surgeon cut away the
+blood-stained clothing from the Judge's thigh, and laid bare the clean
+wound made by a British bullet. A look passed between him and the
+Collector, but never a word. Syed Mehta's life had ebbed with his blood,
+and so he passed, unawakened, from swoon to death.
+
+The English, as their way is, betrayed nothing. It was His Honor, the
+District Judge of Golampore, who had died, and they gave him burial the
+next day with due regard to the high position which he had held in the
+service of H.M. the King and Emperor.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+A FOG-HORN CONCLUSION
+
+The Story of a Gramophone
+
+By FOX RUSSELL
+
+
+THE _Saucy Sally_ was a vessel of renown. No blustering liner, no fussy
+tug, no squattering steamer, she; but a bluff-bowed, smartly painted,
+trim-built sailing barge, plying chiefly from the lower reaches of the
+Thames to ports west of Dover. She had no equal of her class, at any
+point of sailing, and certainly her Master, Mr. Joseph Pigg, was not the
+man to let her fair fame suffer for want of seamanship.
+
+"Cap'n Pigg," as he insisted upon being called, was a great, hairy-faced
+man, with brawny muscles and a blood-shot eye. And in these respects,
+his mate, Bob Topper, greatly favored him--in fact, their physical
+resemblance was rather marked; but their tastes were in no way similar;
+'the Cap'n' was fond of his glass, whilst the mate was a blue-ribbon
+man; Joseph Pigg couldn't bear music, in any form, whilst the total
+abstainer had a weakness for the flute and would not infrequently burst
+into song; the Skipper hated women, whereas the mate was, what he
+himself called "a bit of a gay Lathero." But notwithstanding these
+dissimilarities of tastes and disposition, they got along fairly well
+together, and both met on the common ground of getting as much work out
+of the two "hands" as was ordinarily possible. The Skipper didn't drink
+alcoholic liquors before the mate, and the mate returned the compliment
+by refraining from any musical outrage in the hearing of his superior
+officer.
+
+One hot summer afternoon, when the _Saucy Sally_ was taking in cargo and
+the Skipper was ashore, Mr. Topper, seated on the coamings of the
+hatchway, abandoned himself to the melancholy pleasures of Haydn's
+"Surprise," the tune being wrung out of a tarnished German-silver flute.
+"Kittiwake Jack," one of the crew, was seated as far as possible
+for'ard, vainly trying to absorb his tea and stop his ears, at one and
+the same time, whilst his fellow-sufferer, Bill Brown, having hastily
+dived below, lay in his bunk, striving to deaden the weird, wailing
+sounds that filled the ship. And just as Haydn's "Surprise" was half way
+through, for the seventh time, the Skipper walked on board.
+
+The flutist stopped short, and stared up at him.
+
+"Didn't expect you back so soon, Cap'n," he said in confused tones.
+
+"No. What's that 'owlin' row you're making?"
+
+"I dunno about no 'owlin' row, but----"
+
+"Well, I do. I s'pose, accordin' to you, I ain't got no musical h'ear,"
+sneered Cap'n Pigg.
+
+"This--this here tune----"
+
+"Yes. This disgustin' noise--what is it?"
+
+The mate looked sulky.
+
+"This is Haydn's 'Surprise,'" he growled.
+
+"So I should think. I dunno who the bloke was, but it must have given
+Haydn quite a turn! Don't let's 'ave no more of it."
+
+"Well, I don't see as there's no 'arm in music. And I didn't loose it
+off when you was about. I know you don't like it, so I studied your
+pecooliarities. Fact is, I studies yer too much," and the mate looked
+mutinous.
+
+Cap'n Pigg scowled.
+
+"You shet yer 'ead," he grunted as he stamped off below. He went to a
+small cupboard in the corner of the cabin, and mixed himself a stiff
+"go" of gin and water, which he tossed off at one gulp, saying:
+
+"Haydn's 'S'prise,' eh? Haydn's S'prise be d--dished! 'E don't come no
+s'prises 'ere while I'm master of the _Saucy Sally_!"
+
+After this slight breeze, things quickly settled down again on the old
+lines between master and mate, and the voyage to Chichester Harbor was
+entirely uneventful, the barge bringing up at a snug anchorage near
+Emsworth.
+
+The next day Mr. Topper had undressed and gone overboard for a swim.
+After this, climbing up the bobstay, he regained the deck, and proceeded
+to dry his hairy frame on an ancient flannel shirt. In the midst of this
+occupation, temporarily forgetful of his superior officer's prejudices,
+he broke into song.
+
+Thirty seconds after he had let go the first howl, the Skipper's head
+was thrust up the companion-way.
+
+"Wodjer want to make all that row about? Anything disagreed with yer? If
+so, why don't yer take something for it?"
+
+"It's a funny thing yer carn't let a man alone, when all 'e's a doin' is
+making a bit of 'armony on board," replied the mate, pausing in the act
+of drying his shock head.
+
+"'Armony be d--driven overboard!" cried Mr. Pigg, wrathfully. "Now, look
+'ere, Bob Topper, I ain't a onreasonable man in my likes and dislikes,
+but it ain't fair to sing at a feller creature with the voice nature
+fitted you out with! I never done you no 'arm."
+
+Next day the _Saucy Sally_ shipped some shingle ballast, got under weigh
+on the first of the ebb tide, and safely threading her way past the
+shallows and through the narrow channels of the harbor, emerged into the
+open sea, and turned her bluff-bowed stem eastwards.
+
+The following afternoon, as Bob Topper took his trick at the wheel, he
+ruminated on the mutability of human affairs in general, and the
+"contraryness" of skippers in particular.
+
+"Won't 'ave no music, won't he? Well, I reckon it's like religion when
+the missionaries is a shovin' of it into the African niggers--they just
+jolly well got to 'ave it! An' so it'll be with the ole man. I'll jest
+fix up a scheme as'll do 'im a treat."
+
+He smiled broadly; and when Bob Topper smiled, the corners of his mouth
+seemed to almost meet at the back of his head.
+
+And as soon as the _Saucy Sally_ had pitched and tossed her way up
+channel--for she was light as a cork in ballast--and dropped anchor a
+little way off Gravesend, Bob Topper sculled himself ashore. Twenty
+minutes after stepping out of the boat, he was seated in the back-parlor
+of a friend, a musical-instrument maker.
+
+When Mr. Topper went aboard again, he carried under his arm a large
+brown paper package, which he smuggled below, without encountering the
+Skipper, who was in his cabin at the time, communing with a bill of
+lading and a glass of Hollands neat. And, soon after the mate had come
+aboard, "the Cap'n" went ashore.
+
+And then Mr. Topper laid himself out for some tranquil enjoyment, on
+quite an unusual scale. He unfastened the package, produced a
+gramophone, brought it on to the deck, and started "The Washington
+Post."
+
+"Kittiwake Jack" and Bill Brown immediately fled below.
+
+The mate sat on the edge of the hatch and gazed lovingly at the new
+instrument of torture, as he beat time to the inspiring strains, with a
+belaying pin. When the "Washington Post," was finished, he laid on
+"Jacksonville," with a chorus of human laughter, which sounded quite
+eerie. And so intent was he on this occupation, that he never even
+noticed the approach of Cap'n Pigg's boat until it was almost alongside.
+
+The Skipper clambered aboard, looking black as thunder. This new outrage
+was not to be borne. Just as his foot touched the deck the instrument
+gave forth its unholy cachinnation of "Ha! Ha! Ha!" in the high nasal
+tones peculiar to its kind.
+
+Cap'n Pigg was not easily disconcerted, but this ghostly "Ha! Ha! Ha!"
+was a distinct trial to his nerves; he thrust his hands deep into his
+coat pockets, glared at the mate, and then growled:
+
+"Wodjer got there? More 'armony?"
+
+"Grammarphone," was the mate's brief reply. He was getting sulky.
+
+"Grammar be blowed! Worst grammar I ever 'eard," returned Pigg. "Turn
+the bloomin' thing off--and turn it off at the main. Enough to give any
+respectable, law-abidin' sailor-man the 'ump!"
+
+He proceeded two steps down the companion; then hurled this parting shot
+at the offending mate:
+
+"You oughter be 'ead of a laundry where the 'andle of the mangle turns a
+pianer-horgan as well--work and play!" he concluded scornfully, as he
+disappeared from the musician's sight below.
+
+The mate whistled softly; then he stopped the offending instrument and
+conveyed it below.
+
+"P'raps the old man'll be glad of it, one o' these days," he muttered
+mysteriously.
+
+The next trip of the _Saucy Sally_ was a more eventful one. She left
+Tilbury in a light haze, which first thickened into a pale-colored fog,
+and then, aided by the smoke from the tall chimneys, to a regular
+"pea-souper." The mate, taking advantage of the Captain's spell below,
+brought up a long yard of tin, which looked remarkably like the _Saucy
+Sally's_ fog-horn, and quietly slipped it overboard.
+
+As they got lower and lower down the river, the fog increased, and both
+Cap'n Pigg and Topper experienced a certain amount of anxiety as, first
+another barge, then a tramp steamer, and finally, a huge liner, all
+sounding their fog-horns loudly, passed them considerably too close for
+comfort. The Skipper himself was at the wheel and, coughing the raw,
+damp fog out of his throat, he shouted hoarsely to Topper:
+
+"Better get our fog-horn goin', mate."
+
+"Aye, aye, Skipper. It's in your cabin, ain't it?"
+
+"Yes, in the first locker."
+
+The mate descended the companion-steps, with a mysterious smile on his
+face, and his dexter optic closed. The casual observer might have
+thought that Mr. Topper was actually indulging in a wink.
+
+After a time, he reappeared on deck, walked aft, and said:
+
+"Fog-horn don't seem nowheres about, Skipper. Thought you always kept
+her in your charge."
+
+Cap'n Pigg whisked the wheel round just in time to escape a tug, fussing
+up-stream, and feeling her way through the fog at half-speed, and then
+he grunted sourly:
+
+"So I do. What the d--delay in findin' it is, I can't understand. 'Ere,
+ketch 'old o' the spokes, and I'll go; always got to do everything
+myself on this old tank, seems to me."
+
+And thus grumbling, Cap'n Pigg went below--not altogether unwillingly,
+as, being a man who understood the importance of economizing time, he
+combined his search for the fog-horn with the quenching of a highly
+useful thirst. But when he came on deck again, wiping his mouth with the
+back of his hand, he was unaccompanied by the fog-horn.
+
+"Where the blamed thing's got to, I dunno, more'n the dead. I see it
+there, myself, not two days ago, but it ain't nowheres to be found now."
+
+"Rather orkard, Skipper, ain't it, in all this maze o' shippin'?"
+returned Mr. Topper with a half turn at the wheel.
+
+"Yes, I don't more'n 'arf like it," returned the Cap'n uneasily. "My
+nerves arn't quite what they was. An' a fog's a thing as I never could
+abide."
+
+On glided the _Saucy Sally_, almost the only one on the great water way
+which spoke not, in the midst of a babel of confusing sounds. Syrens
+whooped, steam whistles shrieked hoarsely; the raucous voices of
+fog-horns proclaimed the whereabouts of scores of craft, passing up and
+down the river; but the trim-built barge slid noiselessly along,
+ghost-like, in the dun-colored "smother," giving no intimation of her
+proximity.
+
+Then it was that Mr. Bob Topper's moment for action arrived. In casual
+tones, he observed to the Skipper:
+
+"Pity, we ain't got something as'll make a sound o' some kind, so's to
+let people know as we 're a-comin'."
+
+Cap'n Pigg said nothing: but the anxiety deepened perceptibly in his
+face.
+
+"Where the blank blank are yer comin' to?" roared the voice of another
+bargeman, as, tooting loudly on a fog-horn, one of the "Medway flyers,"
+shaved past them.
+
+"Near thing, that," observed the mate, calmly.
+
+Cap'n Pigg went a shade paler beneath the tan on his weather-beaten
+face.
+
+"Cuss 'im! careless 'ound!" he muttered. "Might a' sunk us."
+
+"'Ad no proper lookout, I expect," returned Mr. Topper, "even if 'e 'ad,
+'e couldn't see anything, and we got no fog-'orn to show 'em where we
+was, yer see."
+
+"No. An' p'raps we shall go to the bottom, all along o' our 'aving lost
+our ole bit o' tin. It's a orful thing to think of, ain't it?" said
+Cap'n Pigg solemnly.
+
+The mate appeared to be in a brown study. Then, as though he had
+suddenly been inspired, he exclaimed:
+
+"What about the grammarphone, Skipper?"
+
+Even in the midst of his perturbation, Cap'n Pigg looked askance at
+mention of the hated instrument. But it was a case of 'any port in a
+storm,' and, with a grim nod, he relieved the mate at the wheel, and
+said:
+
+"Fetch the bloomin' consarn up."
+
+Mr. Topper obeyed, with alacrity in his step, and a wink in his eye. The
+'consarn' was quickly brought on deck, and the 'Washington Post' let
+loose on the astonished ears of fog-smothered mariners, right and left
+of them.
+
+One old shell-back, coming up river on a Gravesend shrimper, listened in
+blank astonishment for a minute, and then confided huskily to his mate
+that he thought their time had come.
+
+"'Eavenly, strains! It's wot they calls 'the music o' the spears,'" he
+said mysteriously, "Hangels' music wot comes just before a bloke's
+time's up. We better prepare for the wust."
+
+His mate, less superstitious and with more common sense, rejoined:
+
+"Garn! 'Music o' the spears' be blowed! It's more like a pianer-horgan
+or a 'urdy-gurdy."
+
+The shrimper glided on, and a tramp steamer, going dead slow, just
+shaved past the musical barge. Its master roared derisively from the
+bridge:
+
+"'Ullo, barge, ahoy! Wot yer got there? Punch and Judy show aboard?"
+
+Which cost Cap'n Pigg a nasty twinge. He had always prided himself on
+his seaman-like ways, and to proceed thus, down the great river, like a
+mountebank, or a Cockney out on a Bank Holiday, hurt his feelings more
+than he could say.
+
+Yet another insult was to be hurled at the _Saucy Sally_, for
+"Jacksonville," with its weird human chorus, having been turned on--when
+the "Ha! Ha! Ha!" rang out on the ears of a passing tug's captain, that
+outraged gentleman, thinking he was being personally derided, shouted,
+as the tide swept them out of sight:
+
+"Yah! 'Oo yer larfin' at? Set o' bloomin' monkeys!"
+
+But the gramophone was certainly playing a useful part in warning others
+off the _Saucy Sally_, down that fog-laden river. And, when, at the end
+of their day's slow journey, they let go their anchor, the "Washington
+Post" was again nasally shrieking out its march-time glories.
+
+The mate stopped the machine and carried it tenderly below, then,
+returning to the deck, he observed.
+
+"Good job as we 'ad the grammarphone aboard, Cap'n."
+
+Cap'n Pigg swallowed a lump in his throat, and looked like a child
+confronted with a dose of nauseous medicine, as he gruffly replied:
+
+"It's better n' nothin' when yer wants a row made."
+
+A pause ensued, and then the Skipper went on:
+
+"In future, I don't object--not very much--to the
+dammarphone--grammarphone, I mean--If you can stand music, well, so can
+I. But you can't contrarst the beauty o' the two instruments, and I'm
+goin' ashore, straight away, to buy myself a good, old-fashioned
+fog-'orn. The tone of that is altogether more 'armonious and more
+soothin' to the hear, than that there beastly grammarphone ever could
+be!"
+
+The mate heaved a deep sigh and sorrowfully went below. In the effort to
+ram music into his superior officer he had to admit himself defeated.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+MARY JANE'S DIVERSION
+
+A Western Tale
+
+By CHARLES ALDEN SELTZER
+
+
+TEXAS RANKIN stood in the street in front of the High Card Saloon, his
+lank body trembling with surprise, indecision, and indignation; his face
+alight with the fire of outraged dignity. Three long paces from him
+stood Sheriff Webster, indifferently fondling an ivory-handled .45.
+
+The sheriff was nonchalantly deliberative in his actions, betraying only
+a negative interest in Rankin's movements--for Rankin's holster yawned
+with eloquent emptiness. With his empty holster dragging on his desires,
+it seemed to Rankin that to await the sheriff's pleasure was his most
+logical course.
+
+And so he waited.
+
+The sheriff had come upon him, when, in an incautious moment, he had
+emerged from the High Card Saloon, having forgotten the very important
+fact that the sheriff was looking for him. This forgetfulness had been
+the cause of his undoing, for at the instant he had turned to go down
+the street the sheriff had reached for his gun. The empty holster was
+evidence of his success.
+
+After that there was no use in getting excited. True, Texas had flashed
+around in his tracks when he had felt the gun leaving its holster, and
+had made a lightning movement with his hand to prevent such a
+disgraceful occurrence. But he might just as well have reached for a
+rainbow. As he had faced about, rage-flushed and impotent, he saw his
+gun swinging loosely in Webster's left hand, while in Webster's right
+hand another big six-shooter had reached a foreboding level.
+
+The distance between the two men approximated ten feet; for Webster had
+wisely stepped back, knowing Rankin's reluctance toward submission.
+
+And now, over the ten feet of space, captive and captor surveyed one
+another with that narrowing of the eyes which denotes tension and warns
+of danger.
+
+"I reckon I was too quick for you, Texas," said Webster, with a
+gentleness that fell too softly to be genuine.
+
+Rankin gazed dolefully at his empty holster. The skin tensed over his
+teeth in a grinning sneer.
+
+"I ain't sayin' that you took a mean advantage," he said, raising his
+eyes and allowing them an expression of mild innocence that contrasted
+strangely with his drawn lips, "but you might have given me a chance to
+fight it out square. I wouldn't have took your gun, Jim."
+
+Knowing Texas less intimately, the sheriff might have been misled by
+this crude sentiment; but the sheriff's fingers only drew more closely
+around the ivory handle of his .45. And there came a glint of humor into
+his eyes.
+
+"I ain't sayin' you would, Texas. But as sheriff of Socorro County I
+ain't takin' any chances. I wanted to talk to you, an' I knew if I had
+your gun I'd feel easier."
+
+"Which means that you didn't want me to have a chance," complained Texas
+glumly. "Socorro's always been meaner'n ----"
+
+"'T ain't Socorro's fault," interrupted the sheriff with a sudden
+coldness; "you've been cuttin' didoes in Socorro for so long a time that
+you've disgraced yourself. You've gambled an' shot yourself into
+disfavor with the _élite_. You've been as ornery an' as compromisin' as
+it's possible for any human maverick to get without havin' to
+requisition the unwillin' mourners."
+
+"Not that I'm sayin' you're naturally bad, Texas. It's that you've got
+an overdose of what them modern brain specialists call exaggerated ego;
+which us common critters would call plain swell head. That there
+disease is listed an' catalogued in the text books of the New York
+Medical Institoot as bearin' a close relationship to the geni Loco;
+which is a scientific way of sayin' that you've got buzzers in your
+attic."
+
+Texas smiled, showing his teeth in wan sarcasm.
+
+"You wouldn't say that if I had my gun, Jim. It ain't like you to pour
+out your blackguardisms on a man what ain't armed."
+
+"I ain't blackguardin' you none," said Webster easily. "It's the naked
+truth, an' you know it. Takin' your gun was part of my official duty.
+Personally I could have talked to you without trampling down any of the
+niceties of etiquette, but officially I had to have your gun."
+
+Rankin's face lengthened with a deep melancholy. With this expression he
+intended to convey the impression that he was suffering a martyrdom. But
+the sheriff's acquaintance with Texas was not recent.
+
+"An' now that you've got the gun," said Texas, after an embarrassed
+silence, "what's the next thing on the programme?"
+
+"Takin' your gun," said the sheriff heavily, "was a preliminary; like
+they say in the sporting papers. The big event is that you're goin' to
+say your adoos to Socorro without bein' allowed to make any farewell
+announcement. The reason is that you an' Socorro is incongruous--like a
+side-saddle on a razor-back hog. Socorro won't stand for you a minute
+longer. You're a Public Favorite which has lost its popularity an' which
+has become heterogeneous to the established order of things. In other
+words, you're an outlaw; a soft-spoken, lazy, good-for-nothin'
+road-agent. An' though Socorro ain't never had anything on you before,
+it knows you had a hand in robbin' the express office last night. An'
+it's----"
+
+"You're a damn ----"
+
+"----like playin' a king-full against three deuces that you done the
+trick. You was seen goin' toward the station about an hour before Budd
+Tucker found Ridgely, the agent, stretched out on the floor of the
+office, a bullet from a .45 clean through him. An' there's five thousand
+dollars in gold gone, an' no trace of it. An' there's been no strangers
+in town. An' here's your gun, showin' plain that it's been shot off
+lately, for there's the powder smudge on the cylinder an' the barrel.
+That's a pay streak of circumstantial evidence or I ain't sheriff of
+Socorro!"
+
+Rankin's eyes had flashed with an unusual brilliancy as the sheriff had
+spoken of him being seen going toward the station previous to the
+finding of the agent's body, but they glazed over with unconcern during
+the rest of the recital. And as the sheriff concluded, Rankin gazed
+scornfully at him, sneering mildly:
+
+"I couldn't add nothin' to what you've just said." He idly kicked the
+gray dust that was mounded at his feet, standing loose and inert, as
+though he cared little what might be the outcome of this impromptu
+interview. And then, suddenly, his blue eyes twinkled humorously as he
+raised them to meet the sheriff's.
+
+"Give you time you might tell me where I spent the money," he said
+drily. "There's no tellin' where your theorizin' might end."
+
+The sheriff ignored this, but he eyed his prisoner meditatively.
+
+"There's been a rumor," he said coldly, "that you've got cracked on my
+daughter, Mary Jane. But I ain't never been able to properly confirm it.
+I meant to tell you some time ago that while I ain't had no objection to
+livin' in the same town with you, I'm some opposed to havin' you for a
+son-in-law. But now, since the express robbery, it won't be necessary
+for me to tell you not to nose around my house, for you're goin' to ride
+straight out of Socorro County, an' you ain't comin' back any more. If
+you do, I reckon you'll discover that Socorro's present leniency ain't
+elastic enough to be stretched to cover your home-comin'."
+
+"I ain't sayin' nothin'," said Texas, glancing with pensive eyes to a
+point far up the sun-baked street where his gaze rested upon a
+pretentious house in a neatly-fenced yard where there were green things
+that gave a restful impression. "Circumstantial evidence is sure
+convincin'." he sighed deeply. "I reckon you knowed all along that I
+thought a heap of Mary Jane. That's the reason you picked me out for the
+express job."
+
+He scowled as his eyes took in the meagre details of Socorro's one
+street. Because of long association these details had become mental
+fixtures. Socorro had been his home for ten years, and in ten years
+things grow into a man's heart. And civic pride had been his one great
+virtue. If in the summer the alkali dust of the street formed into
+miniature hills of grayish white which sifted into surrounding hollows
+under the whipping tread of the cow-pony's hoofs, Texas likened it unto
+ruffled waters that seek a level. The same condition in another town
+would have drawn a curse from him. If in the winter the huge windrows of
+caked mud stretched across the street in unlovely phalanx, Texas was
+reminded of itinerant mountain ranges. The stranger who would be so
+unwary as to take issue with him on this point would regret--if he
+lived. The unpainted shanties, the huddled, tottering dives, the
+tumble-down express station--all, even the maudlin masquerade of the
+High Card Saloon--were institutions inseparable from his thoughts,
+inviolable and sacred in the measure of his love for them.
+
+And now! Something caught in his throat and gave forth a choking sound.
+
+"But I reckon it's just as well," he said resignedly. "I sure ain't of
+much account." He hesitated and smiled weakly at the sheriff. "I ain't
+croakin'," he said apologetically; "there's the circumstantial
+evidence." He hesitated again, evidently battling a ponderous question.
+"You didn't happen to hear Mary Jane say anything about the express
+job?" he questioned with an expression of dog-like hopefulness.
+"Anything that would lead you to believe she knowed about it?"
+
+"I don't see what----"
+
+"No, of course!" He shuffled his feet awkwardly. "An' so she don't know
+anything. Didn't mention me at all?" The hopefulness was gone from his
+eyes, and in its place was the dull glaze of puzzled wonder. "Not that
+it makes any difference," he added quickly, as he caught a sudden sharp
+glance from the sheriff's eyes.
+
+"An' so I'm to leave Socorro." He looked dully at the sheriff. "Why, of
+course, there's the circumstantial evidence." His eyes swept the
+shanties, the street, the timber-dotted sides of the mountains that rose
+above the town--familiar landmarks of his long sojourn; landmarks that
+brought pleasant memories.
+
+"I've lived here a long time," he said, with abrupt melancholy, his
+voice grating with suppressed regret. "I won't forget soon."
+
+There ensued a silence which lasted long. It brought a suspicious lump
+into the sheriff's throat.
+
+"I wouldn't take it so hard, Texas," he said gently. "Mebbe it'll be the
+best for you in the long run. If you get away from here mebbe you make a
+man----"
+
+"Quit your damn croakin'!" flashed back Texas. "I ain't askin' for none
+of your mushy sentiment!" He straightened up suddenly and smiled with
+set lips. "I guess I've been a fool. If you'll hand over that
+six-shooter I'll be goin'. I've got business in San Marcial."
+
+"I'll walk up to the station platform an' lay the gun there," said the
+sheriff coldly; for Texas was less dangerous at a distance; "an' when
+you see me start away from the platform you can start for the gun. I'm
+takin' your word that you'll leave peaceable."
+
+And so, with his gun again in its holster, Texas threw himself astride
+his Pinto pony and loped down toward the sloping banks of the Rio Grande
+del Norte.
+
+A quarter of a mile from town he halted on the bare knob of a low hill
+and took a lingering look at the pretentious house amid the green
+surroundings.
+
+Near the house was something he had not seen when he had looked
+before--the flutter of a white dress against the background of green. As
+he looked the white figure moved rapidly through the garden and
+disappeared behind the house.
+
+"She didn't say a word," said Texas chokingly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ten hours out of Socorro Texas Rankin rode morosely into San Marcial.
+Into San Marcial the unbeautiful, with its vista of unpainted shanties
+and lurid dives. For in San Marcial foregathered the men of the mines
+and the ranges; men of forgotten morals, but of brawn and muscle, whose
+hearts beat not with a yearning for high ideals, but with a lust for
+wealth and gain--white, Indian, Mexican, half-breed; predatory spirits
+of many nations, opposed in the struggle for existence.
+
+For ten hours Texas had ridden the river trail, and for ten hours his
+ears had been burdened with the dull beat of his pony's hoofs on the
+matted mesquite grass, and the rattle of his wooden stirrups against the
+chaparral growth. And for ten hours his mind had been confused with a
+multitude of perplexities and resentments.
+
+But all mental confusions reach a culminating point when the mind
+finally throws aside the useless chaff of thought and considers only the
+questions that have to do with the heart. Wherefore, Texas Rankin's mind
+dwelt on Mary Jane. Subconsciously his mind harbored rebellion against
+her father, who had judged him; against Socorro, which had misunderstood
+him; against Fate, which had been unjust. All these atoms of personal
+interest were elements of a primitive emotion that finally evolved into
+one great concrete determination that he would show Jim Webster,
+Socorro, Mary Jane--the world, that he was not the creature they had
+thought him. Tearing aside all mental superfluities, there was revealed
+a new structure of thought:
+
+"I am goin' to be a man again!"
+
+And so Texas rode his tired pony in the gathering dusk; down the wide
+street that was beginning to flicker with the shafts of light from grimy
+windows; down to the hitching rail in front of the Top Notch
+Saloon--where he dismounted and stood stiffly beside his beast while he
+planned his regeneration.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Half an hour later Texas sat opposite a man at a card table in the rear
+of the Top Notch Saloon.
+
+The man conversed easily, but it was noticeable that he watched Texas
+with cat-like vigilance, and that he poured his whiskey with his left
+hand.
+
+Ordinarily Texas would have noticed this departure from the polite
+rules, but laboring under the excitement that his new determination
+brought him he was careless. For he had planned his regeneration, and
+his talk with the man was the beginning.
+
+"You lifted the express box at Socorro, Buck!" said Texas, so earnestly
+that the table trembled.
+
+Buck Reible, gambler, outlaw, murderer, pushed back his broad-brimmed
+hat with his hand--always he used his left--and gazed with level,
+menacing eyes at Texas. His lips parted with a half-sneer.
+
+"If a man does a job nowadays, there's always some one wants in on it!"
+he declared, voicing his suspicion of Rankin's motive in bringing up the
+subject. "Because you was lucky in bein' close when the game come off is
+the reason you want a share of the cash," he added satirically. "How
+much----"
+
+"Go easy, Buck," said Texas. "I ain't no angel, but I never played your
+style. I ain't askin' for a share."
+
+"Then what in----"
+
+"It's a new deal," declared Texas heavily. "A square deal. You took five
+thousand dollars out of Socorro, an' you salivated the agent doin' it.
+Jim Webster thought it was me, an' I was invited to a farewell
+performance in which I done the starrin'. Some night-prowler saw me
+down near the station just before you made your grand entrée, an'----"
+
+"Serves you right for spoonin' with a female so close to where gentlemen
+has business," said Buck. "I saw her when you come toward me shootin'."
+
+"An' what makes it more aggravatin'," continued Texas, unmoved by the
+interruption; "is that the lady was Jim Webster's daughter, an' we was
+thinkin' of gettin' married. But we didn't want Jim to know just then,
+an' she told me to keep mum, seein' that Jim was opposed. She said we'd
+keep it secret until----"
+
+"I admire the lady's choice," said Buck, sneering ironically.
+
+"----until I braced up an' was a man again," went on Texas, with
+bull-dog persistency.
+
+"Then you wasn't thinkin' of gettin' married soon," slurred Buck.
+
+"I reckon we was," returned Texas coldly; "that's why I came here. I'm
+goin' to take that five thousand back to Socorro with me!"
+
+And now Buck used his right hand. But quick as he was, he was late.
+Rankin's gun gaped at him across the table the while his own weapon
+lagged tardily half-way in its holster.
+
+"I'm goin' to be a man again," said Texas. There was a positiveness in
+his voice that awoke thoughts of death and violence.
+
+"You damn----" began Buck.
+
+"I'll count ten," said Texas frigidly. "If the money ain't on the table
+then I reckon you won't care what becomes of it!"
+
+"One!--Two!"
+
+With a snarl of rage and hate Buck rose from his chair and sprang clear,
+his gun flashing to a level with the movement, its savage roar
+shattering the silence.
+
+Texas did not wince as the heavy bullet struck him, but his face went
+white. He had been a principal in more than one shooting affray, and
+experience had taught him the value of instantaneous action. And so,
+even with the stinging pain in his left shoulder, his hand swept his gun
+lightly upward, and before it had reached a level he had begun to pull
+the trigger. But to his astonishment only the metallic click, click of
+the hammer striking the steel of the cylinder rewarded his efforts.
+Once, twice, thrice; so rapidly that the metallic clicks blended.
+
+And now he saw why he was to meet his death at the muzzle of Buck's gun.
+Fearing him, Jim Webster had removed the cartridges from his weapon
+before returning it to him that morning. He had committed a fatal error
+in not examining it after he had received it from Webster's hand. The
+Law, in judging him, had removed his chance of life.
+
+But he smiled with bitter irony into Buck's eyes as the latter, still
+snarling and relentless, deliberately shot again; once, twice.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+According to the ancient custom--which has many champions--and to the
+conventions--which are not to be violated with impunity--Texas should
+have recovered from his wounds to return to Mary Jane and Socorro. No
+narrative is complete without the entire vindication of the brave and
+the triumph of the honorable. But to the chronicler belongs only the
+simple task of true and conscientious record.
+
+Therefore is the end written thus:
+
+Came to Jim Webster's home in Socorro a week later a babbler from San
+Marcial, who told a tale:
+
+"There was a man by the name of Texas Rankin came down to San Marcial
+last week an' went gunnin' for Buck Reible. Quickest thing you ever saw.
+Buck peppered him so fast you couldn't count; an' I'm told Texas wasn't
+no slouch with a gun, either."
+
+"Dead?" questioned Webster.
+
+"As a door nail," returned the babbler.
+
+"Socorro's bad man," said Webster, sententiously. "Wasn't a bit of good
+in him. Gamblin', shootin', outlaw. Best job Buck ever done."
+
+He found Mary Jane in the kitchen, singing over the supper dishes.
+
+"Texas Rankin is dead over at San Marcial," he said, with the importance
+of one communicating delectable news.
+
+Mary Jane continued with her dishes, looking at her father over her
+shoulder with a mild unconcern.
+
+"At San Marcial?" she said wonderingly. "I didn't know he had left
+Socorro!"
+
+"A week now," returned Webster with much complacence. "Fired him from
+Socorro for doin' that express job. Socorro's bad enough without
+Texas----"
+
+His mouth opened with dumb astonishment as Mary Jane whirled around on
+him with a laugh on her lips.
+
+"Why, dad! Texas Rankin didn't do that job! It was Buck Reible. Texas
+told me the night it happened. We were walking down near the station and
+we heard some shooting. I wasn't close enough to see plainly, but Texas
+said he could recognize Buck by the flash of his gun. And so Texas is
+dead!"
+
+"I thought," said Webster feebly, "that you was pretty sweet on Texas."
+
+"Sweet!" said Mary Jane, blushing with maidenly modesty. "Socorro is so
+dull. A young lady must have some diversion."
+
+"Then you don't care----"
+
+"Why, dad! You old sobersides. To think--why I was only fooling with
+him. It was fun to see how serious----"
+
+"In that case----" began Webster. And then he went out and sat on the
+front stoop.
+
+Far into the night he sat, and always he stared in the direction of San
+Marcial.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+BETWEEN FRIENDS
+
+A Story of the Italian Quarter
+
+By ADRIANA SPADONI
+
+
+VINCENZA looked from the three crisp dollar bills to her husband, and
+back again, wonderingly and with fear in her eyes.
+
+"I understand nothing, Gino, and I am afraid. Perhaps it will bring the
+sickness, the money--it is of the devil, maybe----"
+
+Luigi laughed, but a little uneasily. "It is time, then, that the devil
+went to paradise; he makes better for us than the saints, to whom you
+pray so----"
+
+"S-sh!" Vincenza crossed herself quickly. "That is a great wickedness."
+
+Luigi picked up the bills, examining them closely. Apparently they were
+good. Nevertheless he put them down again, and went on carving a wooden
+cow for the little Carolina, with a puzzled look in his black eyes.
+
+"Gino," Vincenza stopped undressing the baby suddenly when the thought
+came to her. "Go thou and ask Biaggio. He has been many years in this
+country, and, besides, he is also a Genovese. He will tell thee."
+
+Luigi's eyes cleared, but he condescended to make no reply. It is not
+for a man to take the advice of a woman. But when it was dark, and
+Vincenza had gone to lie down with the Little One, Luigi took his hat
+and went over to the shop of Biaggio Franchini.
+
+Biaggio listened attentively; his pudgy hands, crossed on his stomach,
+rose and fell with the undulations of the rolls of flesh beneath. From
+time to time he ceased for a moment the contemplation of the strings of
+garlic and sausage that hung from the fly-specked ceiling of his
+diminutive shop, and turned his little black eyes sharply on Luigi.
+
+"So," he said at last, "to-day a lady came to thy house, and after to
+ask many questions left these three dollars. It was in this way?"
+
+"Just so," replied Luigi, "and questions the most marvelous I have ever
+heard. And in this country, where everyone asks the questions. How long
+that I do not work, and if we have to eat?" Luigi laughed; "of a surety,
+Biaggio, she asked that. She sees that we live--and she asks if we
+eat--_ma! chè!_ And then, if we have every day the meat? When I said
+once, sometimes twice in the week--thou knowest it is not possible to
+have more often, when one waits to buy the house--then it was she put on
+the table the three dollars, and gave me a paper to sign----"
+
+"Thou didst sign nothing?" Biaggio spoke eagerly.
+
+"No. Once I signed the paper in English and it cost me two dollars; not
+again. I said I could not write, and she wrote for me."
+
+"_Bene_," Biaggio nodded approval. "It is not thy writing. It can do
+nothing."
+
+"Perhaps it is because I voted twice at the election last week? But
+already I have taken the money for that. It was one only dollar. I----"
+
+"Non, non, it is not that. Listen!" Slowly Biaggio shut both eyes, as if
+to keep out the tremendous light that had dawned upon him, and nodded
+his head knowingly. Then he opened them, shifted his huge bulk upright,
+and clapped Luigi on the knee.
+
+"Thou art in great luck friend," he cried, "and it is well that thou
+hast asked me. If thou hadst gone to another, to a man not honest, who
+knows? Listen. In our country when a rich man dies, he leaves always
+something for the poor, but he leaves it to the church and it is the
+fathers who give away the money. Corpo di Bacco! what that means thou
+knowest well. Sometimes a little gets to the poor. Sometimes---- But in
+this country it is not so. He leaves to a society. There are many. And
+they pay the women, and sometimes the men, to give away the money----"
+
+"Santo Cristo," gasped Luigi, "they pay to give away the money?"
+
+"For them it is a job like any other. Didst think it was for love of
+thee or the red curls of thy Vincenza?"
+
+"Marvelous, most marvelous," murmured Luigi, "and it is possible then
+for all people to get----"
+
+"Ma, that no one can explain," and Biaggio shrugged his shoulders; in a
+gesture of absolute inability to solve the problem.
+
+"She will come then again, this lady?" Luigi leaned forward eagerly. He
+was beginning to grasp it.
+
+"It is for thee to say stop, my son, if thou hast in thy head anything
+but fat. But thou art a Genovese. Only I say," Biaggio laid a grimy
+thumb across his lips and winked knowingly--"Tell to none."
+
+"Thanks, many thanks friend," Luigi's voice was deeply grateful,
+"perhaps some day I can do for thee----?"
+
+"It is nothing--nothing," insisted Biaggio, patting the air with his
+pudgy hands in a gesture of denial, "a little kindness between friends."
+
+At great inconvenience to himself, Biaggio held the door open to give
+Luigi more light in crossing the street. As he closed it and turned out
+the gas, he smiled to himself. "And each bottle of oil will cost thee
+ten cents more, friend. Business is business, and yesterday thy Vincenza
+returned the carrots because they were not fresh. Ecco!"
+
+Back in his own room, Luigi folded the three notes neatly, while
+Vincenza watched him, her gray eyes wide with wonder.
+
+"Marvelous, marvelous," she whispered just as Luigi had done, "to-night
+I thank the Virgin."
+
+As Biaggio had foretold, the Lady in Fur came every day. Luigi did not
+understand all that she said, but he always listened politely and
+smiled, with his dark eyes and his lips and his glistening white teeth.
+It made her feel very old to see Luigi smile like that, when he had to
+live in one room with a leaking water pipe and a garbage can outside the
+door. Sometimes she was almost ashamed to offer the three dollars, and
+she was grateful for the gentle, sweet way Luigi accepted it.
+
+Then one day when the air was thick with snow, and the air in the
+tenement halls cut like needles of ice and the lamps had to be lit at
+two o'clock, the Lady in Brown Fur came unexpectedly. She had found work
+for Luigi. She kissed the Little One, patted Vincenza's shoulder and
+shook hands with Luigi. Again and again she made him repeat the name and
+address to make sure he had it quite right. The Lady in Brown Fur was
+very happy. When she went Vincenza leaned far over the banisters with
+the lamp while Luigi called out in his soft, broken English, directions
+for avoiding the lines of washing below and the refuse piled in dark
+turns of the stairs. When the Lady in Brown Fur had disappeared Vincenza
+turned to Luigi.
+
+"Of a surety, cara, the saints are good. Never before didst thou work
+before April. In the new house we will keep for ourselves two rooms.
+
+"These people have the 'pull' even more than the alderman, Biaggio
+says," replied Luigi with a dreamy look in his eyes. "It may be that
+from this work I shall take three dollars each day."
+
+"Madonna mia," gasped Vincenza, "it is beyond belief."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For five days Luigi stood four hours each afternoon, bent forward, to
+the lifting of a cardboard block, while Hugh Keswick painted, as he had
+not painted for months, the tense muscles under the olive skin, the
+strong neck and shoulders. The Building of the Temple advanced rapidly.
+And Luigi's arms and back ached so that each night Vincenza had to rub
+them with the oil which now cost ten cents more in the shop of Biaggio.
+
+On the Sixth day Luigi refused to go.
+
+"I tell thee it is a stupidness--to stand all day with the pain in the
+back. For what? Fifty cents. It is a work for old men and children----"
+
+"But thou canst not make the money, sitting in thy chair, with thy feet
+on the stove, like now----"
+
+"Dost thou wish then that I have every night the knives in my back? If
+so----"
+
+"Not so, caro, but----"
+
+"Listen. You understand nothing and talk as a woman. A lady comes to my
+house. She says--you have no work, here is money. Then she comes and
+says--here is work. But at this work I make not so much as before she
+gave; and in addition, I have the pain in the back. Ecco, when she comes
+again, I no longer have the work. It is her job to give away the money.
+She is not a fool, that Lady in Brown Fur. It is that I make her a
+kindness. Not so?"
+
+"As thou sayest," and Vincenza went on with her endless washing.
+
+But when the week passed and the Lady in Brown Fur did not come, Luigi's
+forehead wrinkled with the effort to understand. When the second had
+gone, Luigi was openly troubled. When the third was half over, he again
+took his hat and went over to the shop of Biaggio.
+
+As before Biaggio listened attentively, his eyes closed, until Luigi had
+finished. Then he opened them, made a clicking noise with his tongue,
+and laid one finger along the side of his nose.
+
+"Holy Body of Christ," he said softly, "in business thou hast the head
+like a rock. In one curl of thy Vincenza there is more sense than in all
+thy great body. Did I not tell thee to be careful, and it would stop
+only when thou didst wish. And now, without to ask my advice, you make
+the stupidness, bah----"
+
+"Ma, Dio mio," Luigi's hands made angry protest against the invective of
+Biaggio, "I said only like a man of sense. It is her job, it make no
+difference----"
+
+"Blood of the Lamb! Thou hast been in America eight months, and thou
+dost not know that they are mad, all quite mad, to work? Never do they
+stop. Even after to have fifty years, think, fifty years, still they
+work. They work even with the children old enough to keep them. For many
+months The Skinny One, she who gives milk to the baby of Giacomo, had
+the habit to find him such work, like the foolishness of your painter.
+And Giacomo has already three children more than fifteen. Ma----"
+Biaggio snorted his contempt. Then suddenly his manner changed. He
+leaned back in his chair, and apparently dismissed the subject with a
+wave of his fat hand.
+
+"And the little Carolina she is well in this weather of the devil?" But
+Luigi did not answer. He was thinking with a pucker between his black
+eyes. Biaggio watched him narrowly. At last he spoke, looking fixedly at
+the sausages above his head.
+
+"Of course--it--is--possible--you have made a--mistake--but----"
+
+Luigi leaned forward eagerly. "It is possible then to----"
+
+"All things are possible," Biaggio nodded his head at the sausages,
+blinking like a large, fat owl. Then he stopped.
+
+"Perhaps, you will tell--to me," Luigi was forced to it at last.
+
+Biaggio gave a little grunt as if he were being brought back from a deep
+meditation. "There is a way," he said slowly. "If thou write to her of
+the Brown Fur that thou art sick and cannot do the work----"
+
+"But never in my life was I better. Only last week Giacomo said I have
+grown fat. How the----"
+
+"It is possible," replied Biaggio wearily, "to be sick of a sickness
+that makes one neither thin nor white. With a sickness--of the legs like
+the rheumatism, for example, one eats, one sleeps, only one cannot walk
+or stand for many hours."
+
+In spite of his efforts to the contrary, the wonder and admiration grew
+deeper in Luigi's eyes. "Thou thinkest the----?"
+
+"I am sure," now that Luigi was reduced to the proper state of humility
+Biaggio gave up his attitude of distant oracle, and leaned close. "Thou
+hast made a mistake, but it is not too late. If thou dost wish I will
+write it for thee."
+
+"If thou sayest," replied Luigi and now it was his turn to gaze at the
+strings of garlic, "if you will do this favor."
+
+"With pleasure," Biaggio's fat hands made little gestures of willingness
+to oblige. "Of a truth it is not much, but when one wishes to buy the
+house, and already the family is begun, two dollars and a half each
+week----"
+
+Luigi glanced at him sharply. "Two and----"
+
+Biaggio drew the ink to him and dipped his pen. "Two and a half for
+thee, and for me----"
+
+"Bene, bene," Luigi interrupted quickly, "it is only just."
+
+"Between friends," explained Biaggio as he began to write.
+
+"Between friends," echoed Luigi, and added to himself, "closer than the
+skin of a snake art thou--friend."
+
+The Lady in the Brown Fur came next day. She had been very angry and
+disappointed in Luigi, too angry and disappointed to go near him. Now
+she felt very sorry and uncomfortable when she saw his right leg
+stretched out before, so stiff that he could not bend it. He smiled and
+made the motion of getting up, but could not do it, and sank back again
+with a gesture of helplessness more eloquent than words. When the Lady
+in Brown Fur had gone, Vincenza found an extra bill, brand new, tucked
+into the pocket of the little Carolina.
+
+Luigi waited until he was quite sure that Biaggio would be alone. There
+was a look of real sorrow in his dark eyes as he slipped a shiny quarter
+across the counter. "She left only two," he explained, "the reason I do
+not know. Perhaps next time----"
+
+"It is nothing, nothing between friends." Biaggio slipped the quarter
+into the cigar box under the counter and smiled a fat smile at Luigi.
+But he did not hold the door open when Luigi went, and his little eyes
+were hard like gimlet points. "So," he whispered softly. "So. One learns
+quickly, very quickly in this new country. Only two dollars this time.
+Bene, Gino mio, the price of sausage, as that of oil, goes up--between
+friends."
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+THE HAMMERPOND BURGLARY
+
+The Story of an Artist
+
+By H.G. WELLS
+
+
+IT is a moot point whether burglary is to be considered as a sport, a
+trade, or an art. For a trade the technique is scarcely rigid enough,
+and its claims to be considered an art are vitiated by the mercenary
+element that qualifies triumphs. On the whole it seems to be most justly
+ranked as sport, a sport for which no rules are at present formulated,
+and of which the prizes are distributed in an extremely informal manner.
+It was this informality of burglary that led to the regrettable
+extinction of two promising beginners at Hammerpond Park.
+
+The stakes offered in this affair consisted chiefly of diamonds and
+other personal _bric-à-brac_ belonging to the newly married Lady
+Aveling. Lady Aveling, as the reader will remember, was the only
+daughter of Mrs. Montague Pangs, the well-known hostess. Her marriage to
+Lord Aveling was extensively advertised in the papers, the quantity and
+quality of her wedding presents, and the fact that the honeymoon was to
+be spent at Hammerpond. The announcement of these valuable prizes
+created a considerable sensation in the small circle in which Mr. Teddy
+Watkins was the undisputed leader, and it was decided that, accompanied
+by a duly qualified assistant, he should visit the village of Hammerpond
+in his professional capacity.
+
+Being a man of naturally retiring and modest disposition, Mr. Watkins
+determined to make his visit _incog_, and, after due consideration of
+the conditions of his enterprise, he selected the rôle of a landscape
+artist, and the unassuming surname of Smith. He preceded his assistant,
+who, it was decided, should join him only on the last afternoon of his
+stay at Hammerpond. Now the village of Hammerpond is perhaps one of the
+prettiest little corners in Sussex; many thatched houses still survive,
+the flint-built church, with its tall spire nestling under the down, is
+one of the finest and least restored in the county, and the beech-woods
+and bracken jungles through which the road runs to the great house are
+singularly rich in what the vulgar artist and photographer call "bits."
+So that Mr. Watkins, on his arrival with two virgin canvases, a
+brand-new easel, a paint-boy, portmanteau, an ingenious little ladder
+made in sections; (after the pattern of that lamented master, Charles
+Peace), crowbar, and wire coils, found himself welcomed with effusion
+and some curiosity by half a dozen other brethren of the brush. It
+rendered the disguise he had chosen unexpectedly plausible, but it
+inflicted upon him a considerable amount of æsthetic conversation for
+which he was very imperfectly prepared.
+
+"Have you exhibited very much?" said young Porson in the bar-parlor of
+the "Coach and Horses," where Mr. Watkins was skilfully accumulating
+local information on the night of his arrival.
+
+"Very little," said Mr. Watkins; "just a snack here and there."
+
+"Academy?"
+
+"In course. _And_ at the Crystal Palace."
+
+"Did they hang you well?" said Porson.
+
+"Don't rot," said Mr. Watkins; "I don't like it."
+
+"I mean did they put you in a good place?"
+
+"Whatyer mean?" said Mr. Watkins suspiciously. "One 'ud think you were
+trying to make out I'd been put away."
+
+Porson was a gentlemanly young man even for an artist, and he did not
+know what being "put away" meant, but he thought it best to explain
+that he intended nothing of the sort. As the question of hanging seemed
+a sore point with Mr. Watkins, he tried to divert the conversation a
+little.
+
+"Did you do figure work at all?"
+
+"No, never had a head for figures," said Mr. Watkins. "My miss--Mrs.
+Smith, I mean, does all that."
+
+"She paints too!" said Porson. "That's rather jolly."
+
+"Very," said Mr. Watkins, though he really did not think so, and,
+feeling the conversation was drifting a little beyond his grasp, added:
+"I came down here to paint Hammerpond House by moonlight."
+
+"Really!" said Porson. "That's rather a novel idea."
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Watkins, "I thought it rather a good notion when it
+occurred to me. I expect to begin to-morrow night."
+
+"What! You don't mean to paint in the open, by night?"
+
+"I do, though."
+
+"But how will you see your canvas?"
+
+"Have a bloomin' cop's----" began Mr. Watkins, rising too quickly to the
+question, and then realizing this, bawled to Miss Durgan for another
+glass of beer. "I'm goin' to have a thing called a dark lantern," he
+said to Porson.
+
+"But it's about new moon now," objected Porson. "There won't be any
+moon."
+
+"There'll be the house," said Watkins, "at any rate. I'm goin', you see,
+to paint the house first and the moon afterward."
+
+"Oh!" said Porson, too staggered to continue the conversation.
+
+Toward sunset next day Mr. Watkins, virgin canvas, easel, and a very
+considerable case of other appliances in hand, strolled up the pleasant
+pathway through the beech-woods to Hammerpond Park, and pitched his
+apparatus in a strategic position commanding the house. Here he was
+observed by Mr. Raphael Sant, who was returning across the park from a
+study of the chalk-pits. His curiosity having been fired by Porson's
+account of the new arrival, he turned aside with the idea of discussing
+nocturnal art.
+
+Mr. Watkins was mixing color with an air of great industry. Sant,
+approaching more nearly, was surprised to see the color in question was
+as harsh and brilliant an emerald green as it is possible to imagine.
+Having cultivated an extreme sensibility to color from his earliest
+years, he drew the air in sharply between his teeth at the very first
+glimpse of this brew. Mr. Watkins turned round. He looked annoyed.
+
+"What on earth are you going to do with that _beastly_ green?" said
+Sant.
+
+Mr. Watkins realized that his zeal to appear busy in the eyes of the
+butler had evidently betrayed him into some technical error. He looked
+at Sant and hesitated.
+
+"Pardon my rudeness," said Sant; "but, really, that green is altogether
+too amazing. It came as a shock. What _do_ you mean to do with it?"
+
+Mr. Watkins was collecting his resources. Nothing could save the
+situation but decision. "If you come here interrupting my work," he
+said, "I'm a-goin' to paint your face with it."
+
+Sant retired, for he was a humorist and a peaceful man. Going down the
+hill he met Porson and Wainwright. "Either that man is a genius or he is
+a dangerous lunatic," said he. "Just go up and look at his green." And
+he continued his way, his countenance brightened by a pleasant
+anticipation of a cheerful affray round an easel in the gloaming, and
+the shedding of much green paint.
+
+But to Porson and Wainwright Mr. Watkins was less aggressive, and
+explained that the green was intended to be the first coating of his
+picture. It was, he admitted, in response to a remark, an absolutely new
+method, invented by himself.
+
+Twilight deepened, first one then another star appeared. The rooks amid
+the tall trees to the left of the house had long since lapsed into
+slumberous silence, the house itself lost all the details of its
+architecture and became a dark gray outline, and then the windows of
+the salon shone out brilliantly, the conservatory was lighted up, and
+here and there a bedroom window burnt yellow. Had any one approached the
+easel in the park it would have been found deserted. One brief uncivil
+word in brilliant green sullied the purity of its canvas. Mr. Watkins
+was busy in the shrubbery with his assistant, who had discreetly joined
+him from the carriage-drive.
+
+Mr. Watkins was inclined to be self-congratulatory upon the ingenious
+device by which he had carried all his apparatus boldly, and in the
+sight of all men, right up to the scene of operations. "That's the
+dressing-room," he said to his assistant, "and, as soon as the maid
+takes the candle away and goes down to supper, we'll call in. My! how
+nice the house do look, to be sure, against the starlight, and with all
+its windows and lights! Swop me, Jim, I almost wish I _was_ a
+painter-chap. Have you fixed that there wire across the path from the
+laundry?"
+
+He cautiously approached the house until he stood below the
+dressing-room window, and began to put together his folding ladder. He
+was too experienced a practitioner to feel any unusual excitement. Jim
+was reconnoitring the smoking-room. Suddenly, close beside Mr. Watkins
+in the bushes, there was a violent crash and a stifled curse. Some one
+had tumbled over the wire which his assistant had just arranged. He
+heard feet running on the gravel pathway beyond. Mr. Watkins, like all
+true artists, was a singularly shy man, and he incontinently dropped his
+folding ladder and began running circumspectly through the shrubbery. He
+was indistinctly aware of two people hot upon his heels, and he fancied
+that he distinguished the outline of his assistant in front of him. In
+another moment he had vaulted the low stone wall bounding the shrubbery,
+and was in the open park. Two thuds on the turf followed his own leap.
+
+It was a close chase in the darkness through the trees. Mr. Watkins was
+a loosely built man and in good training, and he gained hand over hand
+upon the hoarsely panting figure in front. Neither spoke, but, as Mr.
+Watkins pulled up alongside, a qualm of awful doubt came over him. The
+other man turned his head at the same moment and gave an exclamation of
+surprise. "It's not Jim," thought Mr. Watkins, and simultaneously the
+stranger flung himself, as it were, at Watkins's knees, and they were
+forthwith grappling on the ground together. "Lend a hand, Bill," cried
+the stranger, as the third man came up. And Bill did--two hands, in
+fact, and some accentuated feet. The fourth man, presumably Jim, had
+apparently turned aside and made off in a different direction. At any
+rate, he did not join the trio.
+
+Mr. Watkins's memory of the incidents of the next two minutes is
+extremely vague. He has a dim recollection of having his thumb in the
+corner of the mouth of the first man, and feeling anxious about its
+safety, and for some seconds at least he held the head of the gentleman
+answering to the name of Bill to the ground by the hair. He was also
+kicked in a great number of different places, and apparently by a vast
+multitude of people. Then the gentleman who was not Bill got his knee
+below Mr. Watkins's diaphragm and tried to curl him up upon it.
+
+When his sensations became less entangled he was sitting upon the turf,
+and eight or ten men--the night was dark, and he was rather too confused
+to count--standing around him, apparently waiting for him to recover. He
+mournfully assumed that he was captured, and would probably have made
+some philosophical reflections on the fickleness of fortune, had not his
+internal sensations disinclined him to speech.
+
+He noticed very quickly that his wrists were not handcuffed, and then a
+flask of brandy was put in his hands. This touched him a little--it was
+such unexpected kindness.
+
+"He's a-comin' round," said a voice which he fancied he recognized as
+belonging to the Hammerpond second footman.
+
+"We've got 'em, sir, both of 'em," said the Hammerpond butler, the man
+who had handed him the flask. "Thanks to _you_."
+
+No one answered his remark. Yet he failed to see how it applied to him.
+
+"He's fair dazed," said a strange voice; "the villain's half-murdered
+him."
+
+Mr. Teddy Watkins decided to remain fair dazed until he had a better
+grasp of the situation. He perceived that two of the black figures round
+him stood side by side with a dejected air, and there was something in
+the carriage of their shoulders that suggested to his experienced eye
+hands that were bound together. In a flash he rose to his position. He
+emptied the little flask and staggered--obsequious hands assisting
+him--to his feet. There was a sympathetic murmur.
+
+"Shake hands, sir, shake hands," said one of the figures near him.
+"Permit me to introduce myself. I am very greatly indebted to you. It
+was the jewels of my wife, Lady Aveling, which attracted these
+scoundrels to the house."
+
+"Very glad to make your lordship's acquaintance," said Teddy Watkins.
+
+"I presume you saw the rascals making for the shrubbery, and dropped
+down on them?"
+
+"That's exactly how it happened," said Mr. Watkins.
+
+"You should have waited till they got in at the window," said Lord
+Aveling; "they would get it hotter if they had actually committed the
+burglary. And it was lucky for you two of the policemen were out by the
+gates, and followed up the three of you. I doubt if you could have
+secured the two of them--though it was confoundedly plucky of you, all
+the same."
+
+"Yes, I ought to have thought of all that," said Mr. Watkins; "but one
+can't think of everything."
+
+"Certainly not," said Lord Aveling. "I am afraid they have mauled you a
+little," he added. The party was now moving toward the house. "You walk
+rather lame. May I offer you my arm?"
+
+And instead of entering Hammerpond House by the dressing-room window,
+Mr. Watkins entered it--slightly intoxicated, and inclined now to
+cheerfulness again--on the arm of a real live peer, and by the front
+door. "This," thought Mr. Watkins, "is burgling in style!" The
+"scoundrels," seen by the gaslight, proved to be mere local amateurs
+unknown to Mr. Watkins, and they were taken down into the pantry and
+there watched over by the three policemen, two gamekeepers with loaded
+guns, the butler, an ostler, and a carman, until the dawn allowed of
+their removal to Hazelhurst police-station. Mr. Watkins was made much of
+in the salon. They devoted a sofa to him, and would not hear of a return
+to the village that night. Lady Aveling was sure he was brilliantly
+original, and said her idea of Turner was just such another rough,
+half-inebriated, deep-eyed, brave, and clever man. Some one brought up a
+remarkable little folding-ladder that had been picked up in the
+shrubbery, and showed him how it was put together. They also described
+how wires had been found in the shrubbery, evidently placed there to
+trip up unwary pursuers. It was lucky he had escaped these snares. And
+they showed him the jewels.
+
+Mr. Watkins had the sense not to talk too much, and in any
+conversational difficulty fell back on his internal pains. At last he
+was seized with stiffness in the back and yawning. Everyone suddenly
+awoke to the fact that it was a shame to keep him talking after his
+affray, so he retired early to his room, the little red room next to
+Lord Aveling's suite.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The dawn found a deserted easel bearing a canvas with a green
+inscription, in the Hammerpond Park, and it found Hammerpond House in
+commotion. But if the dawn found Mr. Teddy Watkins and the Aveling
+diamonds, it did not communicate the information to the police.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+A FO'C'S'LE TRAGEDY
+
+An Ancient Mariner's Yarn
+
+By PERCY LONGHURST
+
+
+"YEH may gas about torpedoes an' 'fernal machines an' such like, but yeh
+can't learn me nothin'; onct I had t' do wi' suthin' o' th' sort that
+turned th' heads o' a dozen men from black ter white in 'bout ten
+minutes," and the ancient mariner looked at me with careful
+impressiveness.
+
+"Bad, eh?" I inquired.
+
+"Sh'd think it was--for them poor chaps."
+
+"Didn't turn your hair white, Uncle?"
+
+"Gue-e-ss not," and the ancient mariner had a fit of chuckling that
+nearly choked him.
+
+When he recovered he told me the yarn. I had heard several of old
+Steve's yarns, and I considered that his fine talents were miserably
+wasted; he ought to have been a politician or a real estate agent. This
+yarn, however, might very well have been true.
+
+"It was 'bout nineteen years ago," Steve commenced, "an' I'd jest taken
+up a job as cook on the _Here at Last_, a blamed old Noah's Ark of a
+wind-jammer from New York to Jamaica. She did th' trip in 'bout th' same
+time as yeh'd walk it. She was a beauty--an' th' crew 'bout fitted her.
+Where th' old man had gathered 'em from th' Lord on'y knows; but they
+was th' most difficult lot I've ever sailed with, which is sayin' a deal
+consid'rin' that, man an' boy, I've been a sailor for forty years. They
+was as contrairy as women, an' as stoopid as donkeys. I couldn't do
+nothin' right for 'em. They complained of the coffee, grumbled at th'
+biscuit, an' swore terrible at th' meat. But most of all they swore at
+me."
+
+"'It all lies in th' cookin',' an old one-eyed chap, named Barton, used
+ter say. 'Any cook that is worth his salt can do wonders wi' th' worst
+vittles'; an' he told me how he'd once sailed with a cook as c'd make a
+stewed cat taste better'n a rabbit. An', durn me, when I went ashore
+next, an' at great risk managed to lay holt of a big tom and cooked it
+for em, hopin' to please 'em, an' went inter th' fo'c's'le arter dinner
+an' told 'em what I'd done, ef that self-same chap, Barton, didn't hit
+me over th' head wi' his tin can for tryin' ter poison 'em, as he said.
+They complained to th' old man, too, which was worse; for when we got t'
+th' next port my leave ashore was stopped, an' all for tryin' to please
+'em. Rank ingratitood, I call it.
+
+"Another time I tried to give the junk--it really was bad, but as I hadn't
+bought th' stores, that wasn't no fault o' mine--a bit of a more
+pleasant flavor by bilin' with it a packet o' spice I found in th'
+skipper's cabin. One o' th' sailors comes into my galley in a towerin'
+rage arter dinner.
+
+"'Yer blamed rascal,' he said, an' there was suthin' like murder in his
+starin' eyes. 'Yeh blamed rascal, whatcher been doin' ter our grub now?'
+
+"'What's th' trouble, Joe?' I asks quietly.
+
+"'Trouble, yeh skunk,' he howls; 'our throats is hot as hell, all th'
+skin's comin' off 'em; Bill Tomson's got his lips that blistered he
+can't hold his pipe between 'em. What yeh been doin?'
+
+"'Hold hard a jiffy,' I said, an' looks at what was left o' th' spice
+I'd used. I nearly had a fit.
+
+"'Go 'way,' I says, pullin' myself together; ''t ain't nuthin'.'
+
+"An' it wasn't nuthin'; but there was such an almighty run on th' water
+barrel that arternoon th' old man was beginnin' ter think a teetotal
+revival had struck th' _Here at Last_. But though cayenne pepper drives
+a chap ter water pretty often while th' effect lasts, it don't have no
+permanent result, as th' old man found out. Course it was a mistake o'
+mine; but ain't we all liable to go a bit astray?
+
+"I'm jest givin' yeh these few examples t' show yeh that things wasn't
+altogether O.K. 'tween me an' the crew. They was always swearin' at me,
+an' callin' of me names, an' heavin' things at me head, because I'd done
+or hadn't done suthin' or other. An angel from heaven wouldn't have
+pleased 'em; an' as I never held much stock in the angelic trust yeh kin
+easily understand we was most times very much at sixes an' sevens.
+
+"One evenin' I was sittin' in th' fo'c's'le patiently listenin' ter th'
+horrible language in which they reproached me because one o' 'em had
+managed t' break a front tooth in biting a bit o' th' salt pork they'd
+had for dinner, which was certainly no fault o' mine, when one of 'em,
+an English chap he was, an' the worst grumbler of all, suddenly cries:
+
+"'Jeerusalem, wouldn't I give somethin' fer a drop of beer just now.
+Strike me pink if I ain't a'most forgotten what the taste o' it's like.'
+
+"'Me, too,' said Harry Towers, the carpenter. 'A schooner o' lager an'
+ale! Sakes! Wouldn't it jest sizzle down a day like this?'
+
+"'My aunt! I'd give a month's pay f'r a quart,' the surly Britisher says
+fiercely.
+
+"'A quart, why don't yeh ask for a barrel while yeh're about it; then
+I'd help yeh drink it,' I says.
+
+"'Yer, yer blighted, perishin' idiot,' he shouts--it was him that'd
+broken his tooth. 'What, waste good beer on yer that's fit fer nothin'
+but cuttin' up into shark bait!'
+
+"'That ain't th' way t' talk to a man as is always ready an' willin' t'
+help yeh,' I says reproachfully.
+
+"The chap glares at me like a tiger with the colic. His language was
+awful. 'Lord 'elp us,' he finishes up with, 'why, yer've done nuthin'
+but try ter pizen us ever since we come aboard. Ain't I right, mates?'
+
+"'Righto,' they choruses; an' I begin t' think they'd soon be gittin' up
+to mischief.
+
+"'P'raps I might help yeh t' git some beer if yer was more respectful,'
+I says hurriedly.
+
+"'Beer!' they all yells, an' looks up at me all to onct as if I was a
+dime museum freak.
+
+"'Yes, beer,' I says quietly.
+
+"'An' where'd you be gittin' it from?' asks one.
+
+"'Never yeh mind that,' I answers. 'I've a dozen or two bottles of
+English stout I brought aboard, an' since yeh're so anxious to taste a
+drop o' beer, I don't mind lettin' yeh have some--at a price, o'
+course.'
+
+"'What's the figure?' Towers inquires suspiciously. He was a Michigan
+man.
+
+"'A dollar th' bottle.'
+
+"'What!' shouts th' man as was ready t' give a month's pay fer a quart.
+'A dollar th' bottle! Why, yer miserable old skinflint!'
+
+"'A dollar th' bottle. That's the terms, take 'em or leave 'em,' says I,
+very firmly.
+
+"They talked a lot, and they swore a lot more, but finally seem' as I
+wasn't t' be moved, and that they couldn't get the beer except at my
+price, the hull ten of 'em agreed to have a bottle apiece.
+
+"'Money down,' I stipulates; an' after a lot o' trouble they collects
+seven dollars between 'em, an' tells me it's all they've got, an' if I
+didn't bring up th' ten bottles mighty quick they'd knock me on th' head
+an' drop me overboard.
+
+"'Mind,' I said, as I goes off to th' galley, money in my hand; 'don't
+yeh let th' officers see yeh drinkin' it or they'll think yeh've been
+broachin' cargo, an' that's little short o' mutiny.'
+
+"'Bring up that beer,' growls the Britisher, almost foamin' at th'
+mouth.
+
+"When I came back with th' ten bottles o' stout in a basket they all
+looked so pleased an' happy it did my heart good ter look at 'em.
+
+"'Hand it over,' they shouts impatiently.
+
+"'I'm afraid it's gone a bit flat,' I said, as I handed th' bottles
+round. 'But I've tried to pull it round.'
+
+"Flat or not, they weren't goin' to kick; an' they was jest 'bout to
+unscrew the stoppers when the second mate suddenly shoves his head down
+the hatchway an' yells out:
+
+"'On deck, yer lazy, skulking, highly colored lubbers. Tumble up at
+once, an' git a lively move on, or I'll be down an' smarten ye up!'
+
+"McClosky, the second mate, was not a fellow who stood any nonsense, an'
+th' men weren't long before they was out o' th' fo'c's'le, grumblin'
+an' swearin' as only men who've lost their watch below can. They just
+stayed long enough t' shove th' unopened bottles o' stout well out o'
+sight underneath th' mattresses o' their bunks an' then they was up on
+deck working like niggers. A squall had struck the _Here at Last_;
+mighty inconvenient, these squalls in the Caribbean Sea are, an' th'
+_Here at Last_ wasn't best calc'lated t' weather 'em. For two mortal
+hours everyone was hard at it, takin' in sail, doublin' ropes, an'
+makin' all ready for what promised t' be a dirty night. All thoughts o'
+beer was driven out o' their heads. An' when everythin' was ship-shape
+an' they came below again, soakin' wet an' dog-tired, they just climbed
+into their berths without stoppin' to think of th' precious bottles o'
+stout.
+
+"'Bout two o'clock in th' mornin', I was woke up by what sounded like a
+pistol shot in th' fo'c's'le, an' before I c'd rub th' sleep out er my
+eyes, there was another, an' another an' another, an' I saw four sailors
+tumble outer their bunks an' fall on th' floor shriekin' as if they'd
+been attacked by th' most awful pain. Everyone else in th' fo'c's'le
+sits up, wide awake, an' starin' at th' sufferin' wretches on th' floor.
+
+"'Wot th' 'ell's up?' asks th' Britisher; but no one knew, an' th' nex'
+second there was another explosion, an' he suddenly gave a scream that
+lifted th' hair on my scalp, an' leaps outer his bunk as if he'd been
+suddenly prodded in a tender spot wi' a red hot poker.
+
+"'My Gawd!' he screeches; 'th' bunk's exploded an' I'm bleedin' ter
+death;' an' he starts yellin' like a catamount, runnin' up an' down th'
+gangway, an' tramplin' upon th' four shriekin', cursin', prayin' sailors
+who'd been attacked fust.
+
+"'It's an infernal machine, an' it's blowed a hole in me back,' the
+Britisher yelled; an' we who was lookin' on c'd certainly hear suthin'
+drippin' from th' bunk he'd just got out of.
+
+"'Owch! I'm blowed t' bits. I'm bein' murdered. I'm dyin', Lord help
+me,' Harry Towers, the carpenter, wails; an' there was another terrific
+bang, an' outer his bunk Harry shot, landin', on th' chest o' one o' th'
+moanin' squirmin' sailors. Th' poor fellow, findin' himself thus
+flattened out, an' not knowin' what it was had fallen on him, gives a
+gaspin' sort er yell, an' drives Towers in th' back wi' his fist.
+
+"Th' row goin' on was suthin' terrible; a' 'sylum full o' ravin'
+lunatics on th' rampage couldn't have made more noise; an' them that
+hadn't been hurt was beginnin' t' feel as bad as them that was, when
+someone scrambles down th' companionway.
+
+"It was McClosky, th' second mate, whose watch on deck it was. He'd
+heard th' row--an' no wonder--an' thinkin', I dessay, that murder or
+mutiny was goin' on, came forward to investigate. He was a red-headed,
+hot-tempered Irishman, an' c'd handle a crew in rare style.
+
+"'What th' dickens----' he commences, when one o' th' men on th' floor,
+seein' th' gun in his hand, an' not recognizin' him, shouted, 'They're
+comin' t' finish us,' an' grabs th' mate round th' legs wi' th' grip of
+a boa constrictor.
+
+"Th' mate, sure it was mutiny, lets off his gun permiscuous. A clip on
+the jaw made th' sailor let go, an' th' mate, seein' Towers groanin' on
+th' floor quite close, kicks him hard an' asks what's th' matter.
+
+"'We're blown up, sir,' Towers whimpers.
+
+"'Blown up, ye fool, what d' ye mean? Who's blowin' ye up?' demands
+McClosky.
+
+"'Dunno, sir,' Harry stammered; an' just then there was two more
+explosions, an' a couple more o' the seamen bundled headlong out er
+their berths, utterin' doleful shrieks that'd make yer heart stand
+still.
+
+"Th' mate was kickin', swearin', and shoutin' like a demon, th' men all
+th' while keepin' up their row as if they was bein' paid a dollar a
+minute to yell. Then th' skipper put in an appearance. His face was
+white as chalk, but his hands, in each o' which was a big Colt, were
+steady as rocks, an' he come down th' ladder like a man who reckons he's
+in for a good fight.
+
+"'What's all this mean, Mr. McClosky?' he asks, pausin' when he sees
+there's no fightin' goin' on.
+
+"Whatever th' mate said was drowned by th' row th' sailors was makin',
+though he bellowed like a frisky bull. Th' old man didn't seem a bit
+frightened; droppin' one o' th' Colts inter his pocket, he roars,
+'Silence'; and steps over to th' berth where Joe Harper, th' bo'sun, was
+sittin' upright, stiff as a poker, an' his eyes fairly startin' out er
+his head wi' terror.
+
+"'Now, then, Harper,' he says, an' judgin' by his face th' skipper was
+'bout as mad as a bear with a sore head. 'What th' blazes does it mean?
+Have yeh all gone mad?'
+
+"But th' bo'sun, he was too scared to do more than gape at th' skipper
+like a codfish three days out er water, an th' old man gits a bit
+madder.
+
+"'Answer, yeh damn rascal,' he shouted; an' he grabs Harper by th'
+shoulder an' shakes him until his teeth fairly rattled. But th' bo'sun
+couldn't say a word.
+
+"'If this ain't enough t' drive a man crazy,' th' skipper yells;
+'McClosky, have yeh lost yer senses like all these condemned rascals
+here? What's th' meanin' o' it?'
+
+"'Don't know, sir; I heard 'em ravin' an' screamin' like lunatics, but I
+can't get a word out of 'em. Think they must all have become mad,' an'
+th' mate kicked Towers again t' relieve his feelin's.
+
+"He'd just finished speakin' when suthin' busted underneath th' bo'sun.
+Harper screams, th' skipper gives a jump an' lets go of his arm, an'
+Harper falls out er his berth as if he'd been suddenly shot dead, only
+he was makin' a row like a man suddenly attacked wi' D.T.'s. And at that
+all th' other miserable wretches on th' floor starts worse than ever.
+
+"Th' skipper pulls himself together, an' goin' t' th' bo'sun's bunk,
+leans over an' examines it. He poked about f'r a bit, put his fingers
+into a stream of suthin' that was fallin' from th' bunk to th' floor,
+an' then by th' light o' th' swingin' oil lamp, I see his face turn a
+blazin' crimson. I see him take suthin' outer th' bed, an' then he
+swings round an' faces th' men.
+
+"'Yeh low down, thievin', chicken-hearted, blank, blank scoundrels,' he
+yells, an' his voice was that loud an' so full o' passion th' sailors
+were scared into quietness. 'Yeh miserable sneakin' apologies for men!
+So this is what's th' matter, is it? By gum! If I don't have every
+mother's son of ye clapped into jail soon as we reach Kingstown, call me
+a crimson Dutchman. Blown up, are ye? I wish t' th' Lord some of ye had
+been. Sailors, yeh calls yeh-selves! Why, by gosh! yeh haven't enough
+spirit t' rob a mouse. What's that yeh say, Towers? Infernal machines,
+eh? Dyin'! If yeh don't all get a move on ye in double quick time, some
+of yeh will be. Git out o' my sight, ye blubberin' babies; I'm sick an'
+ashamed of ye.'
+
+"A more sick an' unhappy lookin' drove I never saw when th' men got on
+their legs again an' found out they weren't hurt a little bit; an'
+discovered what it was had caused th' explosions. They wouldn't look at
+each other; an' they daren't speak or else there'd have been fightin'.
+
+"I went about in fear of my life for days, but they did nothin'; though
+if they'd known that I--quite innocent o' mischief, yeh understand--had
+put a dozen grains or so of rice inter every bottle o' stout--amazin'
+stuff rice for causin' fermentation in hot climates--they wouldn't have
+stopped short at mere profanity. My life wouldn't have been worth a
+moment's purchase."
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+THE ADOPTED SON
+
+A Tale of Peasant Life
+
+From the French of GUY de MAUPASSANT
+
+
+THE two cottages stood side by side at the foot of a hill near a little
+seaside resort. The two peasants labored hard on the unproductive soil
+to rear their little ones, of which each family had four.
+
+In front of the adjoining doors the whole troop of urchins sprang and
+tumbled about from morning till night. The two eldest were six years
+old, and the two youngest were about fifteen months; the marriages, and
+afterward the births, having taken place nearly simultaneously in both
+families.
+
+The two mothers could hardly distinguish their own offspring among the
+lot, and as for the fathers, they were altogether at sea. The eight
+names danced in their heads; they were always getting them mixed up; and
+when they wished to call one child, the men often called three names
+before getting the right one.
+
+The first of the two dwellings, coming from the direction of the
+sea-bath, Belleport, was occupied by the Tuvaches, who had three girls
+and one boy; the other house sheltered the Vallins, who had one girl and
+three boys.
+
+They all subsisted with difficulty on soup, potatoes, and the open air.
+At seven o'clock in the morning, then at noon, then at six o'clock in
+the evening, the housewives got their nestlings together to give them
+their food, as the goose-herds collect their charges. The children were
+seated, according to age, before the wooden table, varnished by fifty
+years of use; the mouths of the youngest hardly reaching the level of
+the table. Before them was placed a deep dish filled with bread, soaked
+in the water in which the potatoes had been boiled, half a cabbage, and
+three onions; and the whole line ate until their hunger was appeased.
+The mother herself fed the smallest.
+
+A little meat, boiled in a soup, on Sunday, was a feast for all; and the
+father on this day sat longer over the repast, repeating: "I should like
+this every day."
+
+One afternoon, in the month of August, a light carriage stopped suddenly
+in front of the cottages, and a young woman, who was driving the horses,
+said to the gentleman sitting at her side:
+
+"Oh, look, Henri, at all those children! How pretty they are, tumbling
+about in the dust, like that!"
+
+The man did not answer, being accustomed to these outbursts of
+admiration, which were a pain and almost a reproach to him. The young
+woman continued:
+
+"I must hug them! Oh, how I should like to have one of them--that one
+there--the little bit of a one!"
+
+Springing down from the carriage, she ran toward the children, took one
+of the two youngest--that of the Tuvaches, and lifting it up in her
+arms, she kissed him passionately on his dirty cheeks, on his frowzy
+hair daubed with earth, and on his little hands, which he swung
+vigorously, to get rid of the caresses which displeased him.
+
+Then she got up into the carriage again, and drove off at a lively trot.
+But she returned the following week, and seating herself on the ground,
+took the youngster in her arms, stuffed him with cakes, gave bon-bons to
+all the others, and played with them like a young girl, while the
+husband waited patiently in the frail carriage.
+
+She returned again; made the acquaintance of the parents, and reappeared
+every day with her pockets full of dainties and of pennies.
+
+Her name was Madame Henri d'Hubières.
+
+One morning, on arriving, her husband alighted with her, and without
+stopping with the children, who now knew her well, she entered the
+peasants' cottage.
+
+They were busy splitting wood to cook the soup. They straightened up,
+much surprised, offered chairs, and waited expectantly.
+
+Then the woman, in a broken, trembling voice, began:
+
+"My good people, I have come to see you, because I should like--I should
+like to take--your little boy with me----"
+
+The country people, too stupefied to think, did not answer.
+
+She recovered her breath, and continued: "We are alone, my husband and
+I. We should keep it--Are you willing?"
+
+The peasant woman began to understand. She asked:
+
+"You want to take Charlot from us? Oh, no, indeed!"
+
+Then M. d'Hubières intervened:
+
+"My wife has not explained clearly what she means. We wish to adopt him,
+but he will come back to see you. If he turns out well, as there is
+every reason to expect, he will be our heir. If we, perchance, should
+have children, he will share equally with them; but if he should not
+reward our care, we should give him, when he comes of age, a sum of
+twenty thousand francs, which shall be deposited immediately in his
+name, with a notary. As we have thought also of you, we should pay you,
+until your death, a pension of one hundred francs a month. Have you
+quite understood me?"
+
+The woman had arisen, furious.
+
+"You want me to sell you Charlot? Oh, no, that's not the sort of thing
+to ask of a mother! Oh, no! That would be an abomination!"
+
+The man, grave and deliberate, said nothing; but approved of what his
+wife said by a continued nodding of his head.
+
+Mme. d'Hubières, in dismay, began to weep, and turning to her husband,
+with a voice full of tears, the voice of a child used to having all its
+wishes gratified, she stammered:
+
+"They will not do it, Henri, they will not do it."
+
+Then he made a last attempt: "But, my friends, think of the child's
+future, of his happiness, of----"
+
+The peasant woman, however, exasperated, cut him short:
+
+"It's all considered! It's all understood! Get out of this, and don't
+let me see you here again--the idea of wanting to take away a child like
+that!"
+
+Then Mme. d'Hubières bethought herself that there were two children,
+quite little, and she asked, through her tears, with the tenacity of a
+wilful and spoiled woman:
+
+"But is the other little one not yours?"
+
+Father Tuvache answered: "No, it is our neighbors'. You can go to them,
+if you wish." And he went back into his house whence resounded the
+indignant voice of his wife.
+
+The Vallins were at table, in the act of slowly eating slices of bread
+which they parsimoniously spread with a little rancid butter on a plate
+between the two.
+
+M. d'Hubières recommenced his propositions, but with more insinuations,
+more oratorical precautions, more guile.
+
+The two country people shook their heads, in sign of refusal, but when
+they learned that they were to have a hundred francs a month, they
+considered, consulting one another by glances, much disturbed. They kept
+silent for a long time, tortured, hesitating. At last the woman asked:
+"What do you think about it, man?" In a sententious tone he said: "I say
+that it's not to be despised."
+
+Then Mme. d'Hubières, trembling with anguish, spoke of the future of
+their child, of his happiness, and of the money which he could give them
+later.
+
+The peasant asked: "This pension of twelve hundred francs, will it be
+promised before a notary?"
+
+M. d'Hubières responded: "Why, certainly, beginning with to-morrow."
+
+The woman, who was thinking it over, continued:
+
+"A hundred francs a month is not enough to deprive us of the child. That
+child would be working in a few years; we must have a hundred and twenty
+francs."
+
+Stamping with impatience, Mme. d'Hubières granted it at once, and as she
+wished to carry off the child with her, she gave a hundred francs as a
+present, while her husband drew up a writing. And the young woman,
+radiant, carried off the howling brat, as one carries away a wished-for
+knick-knack from a shop.
+
+The Tuvaches, from their door, watched her departure; mute, severe,
+perhaps regretting their refusal.
+
+Nothing more was heard of little Jean Vallin. The parents went to the
+notary every month to collect their hundred and twenty francs, and they
+were angry with their neighbors, because Mother Tuvache grossly insulted
+them, repeating without ceasing from door to door, that one must be
+unnatural to sell one's child; that it was horrible, nasty, and many
+other vile expressions. Sometimes she would take her Chariot in her arms
+with ostentation, exclaiming, as if he understood:
+
+"I didn't sell _you_, I didn't! I didn't sell _you_, my little one! I'm
+not rich, but I don't sell my children!"
+
+The Vallins lived at their ease, thanks to the pension. That was the
+cause of the inappeasable fury of the Tuvaches, who had remained
+miserably poor. Their eldest son went away into service; Charlot alone
+remained to labor with his old father, to support the mother and two
+younger sisters which he had.
+
+He had reached twenty-one years, when, one morning, a brilliant carriage
+stopped before the two cottages. A young gentleman, with a gold watch
+chain, got out, giving his hand to an aged, white-haired lady. The old
+lady said to him: "It is there, my child, at the second house." And he
+entered the house of the Vallins, as if he were at home.
+
+The old mother was washing her aprons; the infirm father slumbered at
+the chimney-corner. Both raised their heads, and the young man said:
+
+"Good morning, papa; good morning, mamma!"
+
+They both stood up, frightened. In a flutter, the peasant woman dropped
+her soap into the water, and stammered:
+
+"Is it you, my child? Is it you, my child?"
+
+He took her in his arms and hugged her, repeating: "Good morning,
+mamma," while the old man, all in a tremble, said, in his calm tone
+which he never lost: "Here you are, back again, Jean," as if he had seen
+him a month before.
+
+When they had got to know one another again the parents wished to take
+their boy out through the neighborhood, and show him. They took him to
+the mayor, to the deputy, to the curé, and to the schoolmaster.
+
+Charlot, standing on the threshold of his cottage, watched him pass.
+
+In the evening, at supper, he said to the old people: "You must have
+been stupid to let the Vallins's boy be taken."
+
+The mother answered, obstinately: "I wouldn't sell _my_ child."
+
+The father said nothing. The son continued:
+
+"It is unfortunate to be sacrificed like that." Then Father Tuvache, in
+an angry tone, said:
+
+"Are you going to reproach us for having kept you?" And the young man
+said, brutally:
+
+"Yes, I reproach you for having been such simpletons. Parents like you
+make the misfortune of their children. You deserve that I should leave
+you."
+
+The old woman wept over her plate. She moaned, as she swallowed the
+spoonfuls of soup, half of which she spilled: "One may kill one's self
+to bring up children."
+
+Then the boy said, roughly: "I'd rather not have been born than be what
+I am. When I saw the other my heart stood still. I said to myself: 'See
+what I should have been now!'" He arose: "See here, I feel that I would
+do better not to stay here, because I should bring it up against you
+from morning till night, and I should make your life miserable. I shall
+never forgive you that, you know!"
+
+The two old people were silent, downcast, in tears.
+
+He continued: "No, the thought of that would be too hard. I'd rather go
+look for a living somewhere else."
+
+He opened the door. A sound of voices entered. The Vallins were
+celebrating the return of their child.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+PROVIDENCE AND MRS. URMY
+
+The Story of an International Marriage
+
+By ARMIGER BARCLAY and OLIVER SANDYS
+
+
+LADY HARTLEY (_née_ Miss Persis Van Ness) gave a little gasp. In her
+excitement the paper rustled noisily to her knee.
+
+"O-h! Have you seen this?" She shot the _Morning Post_ across the
+breakfast table to Mrs. Rufus P. Urmy, with her finger marking a
+paragraph.
+
+Mrs. Urmy glanced at it. "I guess it ought to corral him right away,"
+she said, with the merest suspicion of embarrassment. "You see, it's
+Jeannette's last chance. Two seasons in England and never a catch, so
+I----"
+
+"_You_ did it?" Lady Hartley looked at her friend in round-eyed wonder.
+
+"I--I had to do something," allowed Mrs. Urmy, with a dawning suspicion
+that perhaps she had, after all, run afoul of British conventions, which
+she found as difficult of comprehension as her regular morning study of
+Debrett.
+
+"But Jeannette!"
+
+"That's so. Jeannette'll raise Cain." Mrs. Urmy got up from the table.
+"It's this a-way, Persis. I reckon I fixed your little affair up with
+Lord Hartley to home, and you've got to thank me for it. Now, I'm trying
+to do the same for my girl. She can't, or she won't, play her own hand.
+Every chance she's had she's let slide, and I allow she's got to marry a
+title before I go back to the States. Some one's got to hustle when
+Providence isn't attending to business, and as there's nobody else to do
+it, I've taken on the contract." She pointed to the paragraph. "I own
+up I don't see just how, but there wasn't much time, and it was the best
+I could do."
+
+Lady Hartley slowly reread the incriminating paragraph:
+
+"A marriage has been arranged, and will shortly take place between the
+Earl of Chilminster, of Sapworth Hall, Wilts, and Miss Jeannette L.
+Urmy, of Boston, Massachusetts."
+
+"It knocks me out!" she murmured, lapsing into the Western idiom which a
+whole week spent in the society of her bosom friend was bound to call
+up. "But why Lord Chilminster?" She pronounced the name Chilster.
+
+"Why won't he do? Isn't he the real thing? I picked him out in my sample
+book of the aristocracy, and when I fitted the name on to Jeannette--the
+Countess of Chilminster--it sounded quite elegant."
+
+"Then it wasn't because you knew I knew him?" demanded Mrs. Urmy's
+hostess with growing amazement.
+
+Mrs. Urmy's face took on a blank expression.
+
+"You've heard me mention the name. That's how it's pronounced,"
+explained Lady Hartley. "His place isn't far from here."
+
+"You don't say! The way these British titles are pronounced is enough to
+make you doubt your own eyesight. I didn't know. But if he's a friend of
+yours that'll likely make it all the easier."
+
+"Lord Chilminster!" Lady Hartley spoke in an awed tone.
+
+She felt it would be useless to make Mrs. Urmy understand the enormity
+of her offence against good taste, and presently her astonishment gave
+way to amusement.
+
+"Lavinia," she rippled, "as a matchmaker you take the cake! I don't
+believe----" She paused, listening. "Hush! Here's Jeannette!"
+
+Miss Jeannette Urmy came in through the open French window. She was
+dressed in a natty little cotton frock, looked fresh and chic, and only
+pleasantly American. Perhaps she inherited her good looks and refined
+tastes from "popper" Urmy, deceased, in which case that gentleman must
+have committed one serious error of taste and judgment when he selected
+Jeannette's mother for his better half.
+
+"My! You're late, Jeannette!" observed Mrs. Urmy, shooting a quick
+glance at Lady Hartley.
+
+At the same moment, both ladies, by common consent, sauntered toward the
+door. They knew Jeannette's temperament. A crisis, such as the
+announcement in the _Morning Post_ was sure to evoke, was one at which
+they were not anxious to assist.
+
+"Oh, I'm ahead of time," answered Jeannette. "I've been up since six
+looking for eggs."
+
+"Eggs?" echoed Lady Hartley.
+
+"Yes; I collect birds' eggs." She picked up the newspaper and let her
+eye wander along the items in the Court Circular. "But getting up early
+makes me homesick. The best time of my life was when I was a kid, when I
+hadn't an idea beyond the woods on the old Massachusetts farm, when
+popper kept his store, and--Oh!"
+
+She had reached the fatal announcement, and sat with parted lips, rigid
+as stone, while the world seemed toppling about her ears. There was a
+long pause. Jeannette's lips gradually tightened, and her firm hand
+crumpled up the paper.
+
+"Mommer!" she exclaimed. "Here, Mommer!" But Mrs. Urmy and Lady Hartley
+had beaten a diplomatic retreat. Jeannette jumped to her feet, the color
+flaming in her face, her eyes snapping with indignation. "Oh!" she
+cried, impotently. "I'll--I'll--oh! what can I do? It must come out! He
+must apologize. Who did it? Oh, I don't even know him, the--wretch!"
+
+The "chuff-chuff" of a motor-car coming up the drive interrupted her
+outburst, and she looked up to see it being driven up and halted before
+the entrance. Lady Hartley had a perfect fleet of cars. Jeannette at
+once jumped to the conclusion that this was one of them. She had a
+sudden inspiration. It was running free--ready to start. There was
+temptation in the soft purr of its engine. The driver, quietly dressed,
+but not in livery, she appraised as one of Lady Hartley's motor-men.
+
+"Shall I?" she whispered. "Dare I? I can set things straight at once if
+I do. Persis will be wild with me for going off without a word, but
+I'll--I'll chance it!"
+
+She ran into the hall, slipped into her motoring coat, and, throwing
+discretion to the winds, walked out to the front of the house and
+quickly up to the car.
+
+"How soon can you drive me to Sapworth Hall?" she asked, getting in and
+pulling the rug around her.
+
+The barefaced appropriation of his car by an unknown young woman almost
+took Lord Chilminster's breath away. He had, at much inconvenience to
+himself, motored all the way to Lady Hartley's to contradict and sift an
+amazing and annoying report that he had discovered in the _Morning
+Post_. He had heard Lady Hartley mention the name of Urmy as that of a
+friend of hers, and naturally decided that she was the proper person to
+consult. But before he had time to get out of his car and ring the bell
+here was a young person, springing from goodness knows where, mistaking
+him for a motor-man, and ordering him about. For a moment he was
+speechless. Then, as the humor of the situation began to appeal to him,
+so did the good looks of the girl.
+
+"Really," he began. "You see I----"
+
+"Don't talk, get under way!" commanded Jeannette. "Quick! Her ladyship
+has altered her mind about going out. You've got to take me to Sapworth
+Hall. It's thirty miles. I want to be there by lunch-time. Do you know
+the way?"
+
+"I--I think so," stammered Chilminster.
+
+Her bewildering eagerness to be off was infectious. The noble owner of
+the car felt it. But apart from that, he was quite ready for an
+adventure in such pleasant company. He forgot all about the object of
+his visit. Without another word he let in the clutch and started.
+
+Jeannette sank back with a sigh of relief. She credited herself with
+having secured Persis's car very neatly. The man might, perhaps, get
+into trouble, but she could make that up to him by a generous tip. Her
+one idea was to contradict and confute the disgraceful announcement at
+its fountain-head. It was providential that the unknown Lord
+Chilminster's place was so near; but had it been ten times as far off,
+Jeannette, boiling with justifiable indignation, and with her mind made
+up to exact reparation, would have gone there.
+
+"It's awful! It's unheard of! I--I won't have it! Who can have done it?"
+she kept repeating through white teeth set viciously. "I'll have it
+contradicted in large print by this time to-morrow, or the American
+Ambassador shall----"
+
+She was not quite sure what ambassadors did under similar circumstances,
+and she left the mental threat unfinished. Anyhow, it was a disgrace to
+herself, and her sex, if not a slight on her country, and it redoubled
+her determination to "get even" with the perpetrator of it. She leaned
+forward to make herself heard.
+
+"Set a killing pace," she called. "I'll make it up to you."
+
+Chilminster nodded, hid a smile, and let the car out to the top of its
+speed. It ate up mile after mile; and as it came to Jeannette that each
+one brought her nearer and nearer to the hateful person whose name had
+been so scandalously bracketed with her own, she experienced a feeling
+of nervousness. The boldness of her escapade began to alarm her. What
+should she say? How express in words her view of an intolerable
+situation which no self-respecting girl could even calmly think about?
+
+Lord Chilminster's mind was almost similarly engaged. He was wondering
+who Miss Jeannette L. Urmy could be, and whether she was aware of the
+obnoxious paragraph in the paper. He did not do her the injustice to
+suppose that she had inspired it (he had an open mind on that point),
+but as he was not responsible for it himself, he had a suspicion that
+she might be. Chilminster had met very few unmarried American girls, but
+like most Englishmen, he was aware of their capacity for resolution in
+most matters. Then, again, it was leap year. Suppose---- For a little
+while he did a lot of hard thinking.
+
+"I say," he called suddenly, looking over his shoulder. "Isn't there a
+Miss Urmy staying at the White House?"
+
+Jeannette drew herself up and fixed him with a stony stare.
+
+"I am Miss Urmy," she answered frigidly.
+
+The start that Chilminster gave unconsciously affected the
+steering-wheel, and the car swerved sharply.
+
+"What are you doing? You're driving disgracefully!" exclaimed Jeannette.
+
+"I--I beg your pardon," faltered Chilminster. "I thought you were her
+lady's maid."
+
+He felt he owed her that one. A girl who could announce her approaching
+marriage with a stranger (Chilminster no longer gave her the benefit of
+the doubt) and follow up that glaring indiscretion by a visit to her
+victim, was---- The imminence of such a thing alarmed him. Was she
+coming to propose--to molest him? He got hot thinking of it.
+
+The situation had undergone a complete change since he had started out
+in a rage, and some trepidation, to confront Miss Urmy herself, if need
+be. Now trepidation over-balanced all his other emotions. Miss Urmy was
+behind him, in his own automobile, and he was meekly driving her at a
+cracking speed to his own house! It was too late to turn back now. The
+thing had to be seen through. Besides, he could not help feeling a
+curiosity to know what was in his passenger's mind, and to discover her
+bewildering plan of action.
+
+Neither spoke for the rest of the journey, and at length the car passed
+through the lodge gates, swept up the drive, and stopped at the entrance
+to Sapworth Hall. Jeannette got out.
+
+"You had better go round to the stables and ask for something to eat. I
+may be some time," was all she volunteered as she rang the bell.
+
+Rather staggered by the order, but foreseeing a bad quarter of an hour
+ahead of him, Chilminster was glad of the respite. He opened the
+throttle and slid out of sight as Jeannette was admitted.
+
+His lordship was out, the butler informed her. Then she would wait--wait
+all day, if necessary, she said decisively, following the man into the
+library. No, she was in no need of refreshment, but her _chauffeur_, who
+had gone round to the stables, might be glad of something in the
+servants' hall.
+
+With a foot impatiently tapping the polished floor, she sat summoning up
+all her determination whilst awaiting the ordeal before her. For, by
+this time had come the inevitable reaction, and the sudden impulse that
+had made her act as she had seemed, somehow, out of relation to the
+motive that had inspired it. Not that she regretted having come: her
+self-respect demanded that sacrifice; but she wished the unpleasant
+affair over.
+
+An intolerable ten minutes passed. The beautiful seventeenth century
+room, like a reflection on the spirit of democracy, was getting on
+Jeannette's nerves. The strain of listening, watching the big mahogany
+door for the expected entrance of Lord Chilminster, at last reduced her
+to a state of apathy, and when he did come quietly in she was taken by
+surprise.
+
+"I'm so sorry to have kept you waiting," he said.
+
+Jeannette stared. Bareheaded, gaiterless, minus his driving coat, very
+self-contained and eminently aristocratic, the supposed motor-man
+advanced into the room.
+
+"You see, you told me to take the car round to the stables," he
+proceeded, with a touch of apology in his tone.
+
+"You--you are the Earl of Chilminster?" she gasped.
+
+"Of Sapworth Hall, Wilts," he augmented, like one who quotes. "And you
+are Miss Jeannette L. Urmy, of Boston, Massachusetts, I believe."
+
+There was quite a long silence.
+
+"You knew all along," she flushed angrily.
+
+Chilminster raised a hand in protest. "Not until you told me."
+
+"Then why didn't you stop? You ought to have taken me back immediately
+you knew who I was."
+
+"So I would have if----"
+
+"You mean you didn't believe me. You thought I was a lady's maid!"
+Jeannette interrupted indignantly.
+
+"That was an error of judgment for which I humbly apologize. We are all
+liable to make mistakes sometimes. You, Miss Urmy, for instance, took me
+for a motor-man. You also appropriated my car, and commanded me to bring
+you here at a murderous--no, a killing pace. And I think you added that
+you would make it up to me."
+
+Jeannette's face tingled. She had come to accuse, and, instead, found
+herself patiently listening to a recital of her indiscretions. But if
+Lord Chilminster was a strategist, Jeannette was a tactician. She
+appreciated the danger of a passive defense, and conversely, of the
+value of a vigorous aggression. Without a moment's hesitation she began
+a counter attack.
+
+"In to-day's _Morning Post_----" she commenced.
+
+"Ah, the _Morning Post_!" echoed Chilminster, also changing front.
+
+"There was a disgraceful announcement."
+
+"Half of it certainly was--irksome."
+
+"Which half?" asked Jeannette suspiciously.
+
+"I have no conscientious scruples about matrimony in the abstract,"
+parried Chilminster.
+
+"But I have. I object altogether to the paragraph. I resent it."
+
+"Then you did not insert it?"
+
+"I insert it? _I?_" flamed Jeannette. She drew herself up as haughtily
+as a pretty woman can under the disadvantage of being seated in a
+yielding easy chair. "Do you mean to assert, Lord Chilminster, that
+I----?"
+
+She was interrupted by the entrance of the butler.
+
+"Luncheon is served, my lord," he announced.
+
+"You will take off your coat?"
+
+Lord Chilminster turned to Miss Urmy, and advanced a step in
+anticipation. The butler--with a well-trained butler's promptness--was
+behind her, and before she could frame a word of objection, the
+fur-lined garment had slipped from her shoulders.
+
+Thus must martyrs have marched to the stake, was one of Jeannette's
+bewildered reflections as she preceded her host out of the room, and, as
+in a dream, found herself a few minutes later facing him across the
+luncheon table. Outwardly, the meal proceeded in well-ordered calm. Lord
+Chilminster made no further reference to the debatable topic; only
+talked lightly and pleasantly on a variety of non-committal subjects.
+
+As the lady's host that, of course, was the only attitude he could
+adopt; but the fact remains that he did so _de bonne volonté_. Perhaps
+because, so far, he had scored more points than his opponent in the
+morning's encounter; perhaps, also, because of her undeniable good
+looks, his irritation, due to the circumstances that had prompted that
+encounter, began to lessen with _truites en papilotte_, was almost
+forgotten in face of a _mousse de volaille_, and entirely vanished among
+_asperges vertes mousseline_.
+
+Miss Jeannette L. Urmy, with her veil lifted, and relieved of her
+voluminous coat, was, he had to admit, distractingly pretty; not at all
+the type he had pictured as the original of the name. Young, pretty, and
+charming women (he was convinced that _au fond_ she was charming) ought
+to have no obstinate prejudices against marriage. He even ventured to
+think that Miss Urmy's mind had become obscured on that point by
+those--well, indiscreet lines in the _Morning Post_. They had upset him;
+then why not her? They were so--premature.
+
+As for Jeannette, in spite of Lord Chilminster's effortless ease, her
+powers of conversation were frozen. She was reduced to monosyllables,
+and she ate in proportion. It was a humiliating experience to be
+accepting the hospitality of the enemy; one, moreover, that made it
+awkward for her to prolong hostilities. Having broken bread in his
+tents (a Puritan strain was responsible for the illustration) she felt
+disarmed. Besides, she was rather ashamed of her maladroitness in
+mistaking Lord Chilminster for a common motor-man. It argued
+_gaucherie_. Perhaps he thought her unconventional call a violation of
+good taste--considered her forward! He had plainly shown his annoyance
+about that obnox--that embarrassing paragraph, and that fact spiked most
+of her batteries. He might, after all, prove to be quite----
+
+"Do you mind if I smoke?"
+
+Lord Chilminster's voice startled her out of her reverie. The servants
+had noiselessly retired, and they were alone.
+
+"I--I feel ready to sink through the floor," she rejoined
+inconsequently.
+
+He returned his cigarette case to his pocket, looking quite concerned.
+"I'm so sorry. I ought not to have----"
+
+"No, no. Please smoke. It isn't that," stammered Jeannette.
+
+"It's the _Morning Post_?"
+
+Jeannette evaded his eye.
+
+"Yes; it does put us in rather a tight place," mediated Chilminster.
+
+Nothing was said for a moment.
+
+"Engaged!" he murmured.
+
+Jeannette raised her eyes and noted his reflective attitude.
+
+"Who can have put it in?" he went on.
+
+"I can't imagine."
+
+"And why?"
+
+"It does seem strange," admitted Jeannette in a detached tone.
+
+"It's not as if we were----"
+
+"No," she interposed hurriedly.
+
+"Well, what ought we to do about it? Of course, we can contradict it,
+but----"
+
+"But what?" she asked, filling his pause.
+
+"I hate advertisement--that is, _unnecessary_ advertisement,"
+Chilminster corrected himself. "It would make us--I mean me--look so--so
+vacillating."
+
+He looked up rather suddenly, and just missed Jeannette's eyes by the
+thousandth of a second.
+
+What could he mean? she asked herself, while her heart pumped
+boisterously. Was he magnanimous enough to be thinking of accepting a
+compromising situation to save her? What he had said sounded very
+unselfish. Of course, she couldn't allow him to. What a pity he was not
+an American--or something quite ordinary. Then she might----
+
+"There's nothing for it but to write to the paper, I suppose?" he said
+ruefully.
+
+"I--I suppose not." The comment was dragged from Jeannette in a tone as
+unconsciously reluctant as his was rueful.
+
+Chilminster sighed. "It's so rough on you."
+
+Jeannette felt a consuming anxiety to know whether his sympathy was
+occasioned by the announcement or the suggested denial of it.
+
+"And on you, too," she admitted. "What were you thinking--how did you
+propose to phrase it?"
+
+"I?" he asked apprehensively. "To be quite frank. I haven't got as far
+as that. Never wrote to the papers in my life," he added
+pusillanimously.
+
+"But _I_ can't," argued Jeannette. Her determination of two hours ago
+had vanished into the Ewigkeit.
+
+Chilminster had an inspiration. "What do you say if we do it together?"
+
+While she digested this expedient he fetched paper and pencil, and then
+sat gazing at the ceiling for inspiration.
+
+"Well?" she queried at the end of a minute.
+
+"How ought one to begin these things?" asked the desperate man.
+
+Jeannette cogitated deeply. "It's so difficult to say what one wants to
+a stranger in a letter, isn't it?" she hesitated. "Wouldn't a telegram
+do?"
+
+"By Jove! Yes; and simply say: 'Miss Urmy wishes to deny----'"
+
+"In _my_ name!" exclaimed Jeannette.
+
+"Well--you are the person aggrieved."
+
+"I really don't think it's fair to put the whole of the responsibility
+on my shoulders," she demurred.
+
+"No, I suppose not," Chilminster admitted grudgingly. "How would this
+do: 'Miss Urmy and Lord Chilminster wish to contradict their
+engagement----'"
+
+"But that implies that there _was_ an engagement!"
+
+Chilminster pondered the deduction. "So it does. I see. People would
+jump to the conclusion that we were in a desperate hurry to alter our
+minds!"
+
+"And, of course, we haven't."
+
+"Y-es. I don't know how you feel about it, but if there's one thing I
+dislike it's tittle-tattle about my private affairs."
+
+"Horrid!" shivered Jeannette. "What _are_ we to do?"
+
+Her tone was so hopeless, so full of tears, that it melted Chilminster.
+Susceptibilities that had been simmering within him for an hour past
+came unexpectedly to the boil; and as they did so the difficulty
+vanished.
+
+"Why need we bother at all about it?" he asked impulsively.
+
+For a world of moments, Jeannette stared at him, revolving the question.
+Then a faint radiance came into her face, and grew and grew until it
+burned. Jeannette bit her lip. Jeannette looked down.
+
+"What do you mean?" she asked in confusion.
+
+"Don't--don't you think we had better--take the consequences?" said
+Chilminster, as he reached across the table and let his hand fall on
+hers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mrs. Urmy stood at the window looking with lack-lustre eyes across the
+park. She had had six solid hours in which to reflect on that risky
+communication of hers to the _Morning Post_, and Jeannette's
+disappearance since breakfast time provided a gloomy commentary on it.
+She fidgeted uneasily as she recalled her daughter's scared look when
+reading the paper, and maternal forebodings discounted her interest in
+an automobile that showed at intervals between the trees of the drive as
+it approached the White House.
+
+But two moments later it occurred to her that it was Jeannette who sat
+on its front seat beside the driver; and, as the car drew up, her
+experienced eye detected something in the demeanor of the pair that
+startled but elated her.
+
+"Here's Jeannette!" she called over her shoulder to Lady Hartley. "In an
+auto with a young man. Say, Persis, who is he?"
+
+Lady Hartley hurried to the window, gave one look, and doubted the
+evidence of her eyes.
+
+"Lavinia, it's Lord Chilminster!" she cried, with a catch in her voice.
+
+The two women flashed a glance brimful of significance at one another.
+Lady Hartley's expressed uncertainty; Mrs. Urmy's triumph--sheer,
+complete, perfect triumph.
+
+"Didn't I say it was a sure thing?" she shrilled excitedly. "It's fixed
+them up! Come right ahead and introduce me to my future son-in-law!"
+
+As she raced to the door she added half to herself: "I don't want to
+boast, but, thank the Lord, I've got Jeannette off this season!"
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+THE MILLION DOLLAR FREIGHT TRAIN
+
+The Story of a Young Engineer
+
+By FRANK H. SPEARMAN
+
+
+IT WAS the second month of the strike, and not a pound of freight had
+been moved. Things did look smoky on the West End. The General
+Superintendent happened to be with us when the news came. "You can't
+handle it, boys," said he nervously. "What you'd better do is to turn it
+over to the Columbian Pacific."
+
+Our contracting freight agent on the Coast at that time was a fellow so
+erratic that he was nicknamed "Crazy-horse." Right in the midst of the
+strike Crazy-horse wired that he had secured a big silk shipment for New
+York. We were paralyzed. We had no engineers, no firemen, and no motive
+power to speak of. The strikers were pounding our men, wrecking our
+trains, and giving us the worst of it generally; that is, when we
+couldn't give it to them. Why the fellow displayed his activity at that
+particular juncture still remains a mystery. Perhaps he had a grudge
+against the road; if so, he took an artful revenge. Everybody on the
+system with ordinary railroad sense knew that our struggle was to keep
+clear of freight business until we got rid of our strike. Anything
+valuable or perishable was especially unwelcome. But the stuff was
+docked, and loaded, and consigned in our care before we knew it. After
+that, a refusal to carry it would be like hoisting the white flag; and
+that is something which never yet flew over the West End.
+
+"Turn it over to the Columbian," said the General Superintendent; but
+the General Superintendent was not looked up to on our division. He
+hadn't enough sand. Our head was a fighter, and he gave tone to every
+man under him. "No," he thundered, bringing down his fist. "Not in a
+thousand years. We'll move it ourselves. Wire Montgomery (the General
+Manager) that we will take care of it. And wire him to fire
+Crazy-horse--and to do it right off." And before the silk was turned
+over to us Crazy-horse was looking for another job. It is the only case
+on record where a freight hustler was discharged for getting business.
+
+There were twelve carloads; it was insured for $85,000 a car; you can
+figure how far the title is wrong, but you never can estimate the worry
+the stuff gave us. It looked as big as twelve million dollars' worth. In
+fact, one scrub car-link, with the glory of the West End at heart, had a
+fight over the amount with a skeptical hostler. He maintained that the
+actual money value was a hundred and twenty millions; but I give you the
+figures just as they went over the wire, and they are right.
+
+What bothered us most was that the strikers had the tip almost as soon
+as we had it. Having friends on every road in the country, they knew as
+much about our business as we ourselves. The minute it was announced
+that we should move the silk, they were after us. It was a defiance; a
+last one. If we could move freight--for we were already moving
+passengers after a fashion--the strike might be well accounted beaten.
+
+Stewart, the leader of the local contingent, together with his
+followers, got after me at once. "You don't show much sense, Reed," said
+he. "You fellows here are breaking your necks to get things moving, and
+when this strike's over, if our boys ask for your discharge, they'll get
+it. This road can't run without our engineers. We're going to beat you.
+If you dare try to move this silk, we'll have your scalp when it's over.
+You'll never get your silk to Zanesville, I'll promise you that. And if
+you ditch it and make a million-dollar loss, you'll get let out anyway,
+my buck."
+
+"I'm here to obey orders, Stewart," said I. What was the use of more? I
+felt uncomfortable; but we had determined to move the silk; there was no
+more to be said.
+
+When I went over to the round-house and told Neighbor the decision, he
+said never a word; but he looked a great deal. Neighbor's task was to
+supply the motive power. All that we had, uncrippled, was in the
+passenger service, because passengers should be taken care of first of
+all. In order to win a strike, you must have public opinion on your
+side.
+
+"Nevertheless, Neighbor," said I, after we had talked awhile, "we must
+move the silk also."
+
+Neighbor studied; then he roared at his foreman. "Send Bartholomew
+Mullen here." He spoke with a decision that made me think the business
+was done. I had never happened, it is true, to hear of Bartholomew
+Mullen in the department of motive power; but the impression the name
+gave me was of a monstrous fellow, big as Neighbor, or old man Sankey,
+or Dad Hamilton. "I'll put Bartholomew ahead of it," said Neighbor
+tightly.
+
+I saw a boy walk into the office. "Mr. Garten said you wanted me, sir,"
+said he, addressing the Master Mechanic.
+
+"I do, Bartholomew," responded Neighbor.
+
+The figure in my mind's eye shrunk in a twinkling. Then it occurred to
+me that it must be this boy's father who was wanted.
+
+"You have been begging for a chance to take out an engine, Bartholomew,"
+began Neighbor coldly; and I knew it was on.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"You want to get killed, Bartholomew."
+
+Bartholomew smiled as if the idea was not altogether displeasing.
+
+"How would you like to go pilot to-morrow for McCurdy? You to take the
+44 and run as first Seventy-eight. McCurdy will run as second
+Seventy-eight."
+
+"I know I could run an engine all right," ventured Bartholomew, as if
+Neighbor were the only one taking the chances in giving him an engine.
+"I know the track from here to Zanesville. I helped McNeff fire one
+week."
+
+"Then go home, and go to bed; and be over here at six o'clock to-morrow
+morning. And sleep sound, for it may be your last chance."
+
+It was plain that the Master Mechanic hated to do it; it was simply
+sheer necessity. "He's a wiper," mused Neighbor, as Bartholomew walked
+springily away. "I took him in here sweeping two years ago. He ought to
+be firing now, but the union held him back; that's why he don't like
+them. He knows more about an engine now than half the lodge. They'd
+better have let him in," said the Master Mechanic grimly. "He may be the
+means of breaking their backs yet. If I give him an engine and he runs
+it, I'll never take him off, union or no union, strike or no strike."
+
+"How old is that boy?" I asked.
+
+"Eighteen; and never a kith or a kin that I know of. Bartholomew
+Mullen," mused Neighbor, as the slight figure moved across the flat,
+"big name--small boy. Well, Bartholomew, you'll know something more by
+to-morrow night about running an engine, or a whole lot less: that's as
+it happens. If he gets killed, it's your fault, Reed."
+
+He meant that I was calling on him for men when he couldn't supply them.
+
+"I heard once," he went on, "about a fellow named Bartholomew being
+mixed up in a massacre. But I take it he must have been an older man
+than our Bartholomew--nor his other name wasn't Mullen, neither. I
+disremember just what it was; but it wasn't Mullen."
+
+"Well, don't say I want to get the boy killed, Neighbor," I protested.
+"I've got plenty to answer for. I'm here to run trains--when there are
+any to run; that's murder enough for me. You needn't send Bartholomew
+out on my account."
+
+"Give him a slow schedule, and I'll give him orders to jump early;
+that's all we can do. If the strikers don't ditch him, he'll get through
+somehow."
+
+It stuck in my crop--the idea of putting that boy on a pilot engine to
+take all the dangers ahead of that particular train; but I had a good
+deal else to think of besides. From the minute the silk got into the
+McCloud yards, we posted double guards around. About twelve o'clock that
+night we held a council of war, which ended in our running the train
+into the out freight-house. The result was that by morning we had a new
+train made up. It consisted of fourteen refrigerator cars loaded with
+oranges which had come in mysteriously the night before. It was
+announced that the silk would be held for the present and the oranges
+rushed through at once. Bright and early the refrigerator train was run
+down to the icehouses, and twenty men were put to work icing the
+oranges. At seven o'clock, McCurdy pulled in the local passenger with
+engine 105. Our plan was to cancel the load and run him right out with
+the oranges. When he got in, he reported that the 105 had sprung a tire;
+this threw us out entirely. There was a hurried conference in the
+round-house.
+
+"What can you do?" asked the Superintendent in desperation.
+
+"There's only one thing I can do. Put Bartholomew Mullen on it with the
+44, and put McCurdy to bed for Number Two to-night," responded Neighbor.
+
+It was eight o'clock. I looked into the locomotive stalls. The
+first--the only--man in sight was Bartholomew Mullen. He was very busy
+polishing the 44. He had good steam on her, and the old tub was wheezing
+away as if she had the asthma. The 44 was old; she was homely; she was
+rickety; but Bartholomew Mullen wiped her battered nose as deferentially
+as if she had been a spick-span, spider-driver, tail-truck mail-racer.
+She wasn't much--the 44. But in those days Bartholomew wasn't much:
+and the 44 was Bartholomew's.
+
+"How is she steaming, Bartholomew?" I sang out; he was right in the
+middle of her. Looking up, he fingered his waste modestly and blushed
+through a dab of crude-petroleum over his eye. "Hundred and thirty
+pounds, sir. She's a terrible free steamer, the old 44. I'm all ready
+to run her out."
+
+"Who's marked up to fire for you, Bartholomew?"
+
+Bartholomew Mullen looked at me fraternally. "Neighbor couldn't give me
+anybody but a wiper, sir," said Bartholomew, in a sort of a
+wouldn't-that-kill-you tone.
+
+The unconscious arrogance of the boy quite knocked me: so soon had
+honors changed his point of view. Last night a despised wiper; at
+daybreak, an engineer; and his nose in the air at the idea of taking on
+a wiper for fireman. And all so innocent.
+
+"Would you object, Bartholomew," I suggested gently, "to a train-master
+for fireman?"
+
+"I don't--think so, sir."
+
+"Thank you; because I am going down to Zanesville this morning myself,
+and I thought I'd ride with you. Is it all right?"
+
+"Oh, yes, sir--if Neighbor doesn't care."
+
+I smiled: he didn't know whom Neighbor took orders from; but he thought,
+evidently, not from me.
+
+"Then run her down to the oranges, Bartholomew, and couple on, and we'll
+order ourselves out. See?"
+
+The 44 looked like a baby-carriage when we got her in front of the
+refrigerators. However, after the necessary preliminaries, we gave a
+very sporty toot, and pulled out. In a few minutes we were sailing down
+the valley.
+
+For fifty miles we bobbed along with our cargo of iced silk as easy as
+old shoes; for I need hardly explain that we had packed the silk into
+the refrigerators to confuse the strikers. The great risk was that they
+would try to ditch us.
+
+I was watching the track as a mouse would a cat, looking every minute
+for trouble. We cleared the gumbo cut west of the Beaver at a pretty
+good clip, in order to make the grade on the other side. The bridge
+there is hidden in summer by a grove of hackberries. I had just pulled
+open to cool her a bit when I noticed how high the back-water was on
+each side of the track. Suddenly I felt the fill going soft under the
+drivers; felt the 44 wobble and slew. Bartholomew shut off hard, and
+threw the air as I sprang to the window. The peaceful little creek ahead
+looked as angry as the Platte in April water, and the bottoms were a
+lake.
+
+Somewhere up the valley there had been a cloudburst, for overhead the
+sun was bright. The Beaver was roaring over its banks, and the bridge
+was out. Bartholomew screamed for brakes: it looked as if we were
+against it--and hard. A soft track to stop on; a torrent of storm-water
+ahead, and ten hundred thousand dollars' worth of silk behind, not to
+mention equipment.
+
+I yelled at Bartholomew, and motioned for him to jump; my conscience is
+clear on that point. The 44 was stumbling along, trying like a drunken
+man to hang to the rotten track.
+
+"Bartholomew!" I yelled; but he was head out and looking back at his
+train while he jerked frantically at the air-lever. I understood: the
+air wouldn't work; it never will on those old tubs when you need it. The
+sweat pushed out on me. I was thinking of how much the silk would bring
+us after the bath in the Beaver. Bartholomew stuck to his levers like a
+man in a signal-tower, but every second brought us closer to open water.
+Watching him intent only on saving his first train--heedless of his
+life--I was actually ashamed to jump. While I hesitated he somehow got
+the brakes to set; the old 44 bucked like a bronco.
+
+It wasn't too soon. She checked her train nobly at the last, but I saw
+nothing could keep her from the drink. I gave Bartholomew a terrific
+slap, and again I yelled; then turning to the gangway, I dropped into
+the soft mud on my side: the 44 hung low, and it was easy lighting.
+
+Bartholomew sprang from his seat a second later; but his blouse caught
+in the teeth of the quadrant. He stooped quick as thought, and peeled
+the thing over his head. Then he was caught fast by the wristbands, and
+the ponies of the 44 tipped over the broken abutment. Pull as he would
+he couldn't get free. The pilot dipped into the torrent slowly. But
+losing her balance, the 44 kicked her heels into the air like
+lightning, and shot with a frightened wheeze plump into the creek,
+dragging her engineer with her.
+
+The head car stopped on the brink. Running across the track, I looked
+for Bartholomew. He wasn't there; I knew he must have gone down with his
+engine. Throwing off my gloves, I dived, just as I stood, close to the
+tender, which hung half submerged. I am a good bit of a fish under
+water, but no self-respecting fish would be caught in that yellow mud. I
+realized, too, the instant I struck the water, that I should have dived
+on the upstream side. The current took me away whirling; when I came up
+for air, I was fifty feet below the pier. I scrambled out, feeling it
+was all up with Bartholomew; but to my amazement, as I shook my eyes
+open the train crew were running forward, and there stood Bartholomew on
+the track above me, looking at the refrigerator. When I got to him, he
+explained how he was dragged under and had to tear the sleeve out of his
+blouse under water to get free.
+
+The surprise is how little fuss men make about such things when they are
+busy. It took only five minutes for the conductor to hunt up a coil of
+wire and a sounder for me, and by the time he got forward with it,
+Bartholomew was half-way up a telegraph pole to help me cut in on a live
+wire. Fast as I could, I rigged a pony, and began calling the McCloud
+despatcher. It was rocky sending, but after no end of pounding, I got
+him and gave orders for the wrecking gang, and for one more of
+Neighbor's rapidly decreasing supply of locomotives.
+
+Bartholomew, sitting on a strip of fence which still rose above water,
+looked forlorn. To lose in the Beaver the first engine he ever handled
+was tough, and he was evidently speculating on his chances of ever
+getting another. If there weren't tears in his eyes, there was
+storm-water certainly. But after the relief engine had pulled what was
+left of us back six miles to a siding, I made it my first business to
+explain to Neighbor, who was nearly beside himself, that Bartholomew not
+only was not at fault, but that by his nerve he had actually saved the
+train.
+
+"I'll tell you, Neighbor," I suggested, when we got straightened
+around. "Give us the 109 to go ahead as pilot, and run her around the
+river division with Foley and the 216."
+
+"What'll you do with Number Six?" growled Neighbor. Six was the local
+passenger west.
+
+"Annul it west of McCloud," said I instantly. "We've got this silk on
+our hands now, and I'd move it if it tied up every passenger train on
+the division. If we can get the stuff through, it will practically beat
+the strike. If we fail, it will beat the company."
+
+By the time we had backed to Newhall Junction, Neighbor had made up his
+mind my way. Mullen and I climbed into the 109, and Foley, with the 216,
+and none too good a grace, coupled on to the silk, and flying red
+signals, we started again for Zanesville over the river division.
+
+Foley was always full of mischief. He had a better engine than ours, and
+he took great satisfaction the rest of the afternoon in crowding us.
+Every mile of the way he was on our heels. I was throwing the coal, and
+have reason to remember. It was after dark when we reached the Beverly
+Hill, and we took it at a lively pace. The strikers were not on our
+minds then; it was Foley who bothered.
+
+When the long parallel steel lines of the upper yards spread before us,
+flashing under the arc lights, we were away above yard speed. Running a
+locomotive into one of those big yards is like shooting a rapid in a
+canoe. There is a bewildering maze of tracks, lighted by red and green
+lamps, which must be watched the closest to keep out of trouble. The
+hazards are multiplied the minute you pass the throat, and a yard wreck
+is a dreadful tangle; it makes everybody from road-master to flagman
+furious, and not even Bartholomew wanted to face an inquiry on a yard
+wreck. On the other hand, he couldn't afford to be caught by Foley, who
+was chasing him out of pure caprice.
+
+I saw the boy holding the throttle at a half and fingering the air
+anxiously as we jumped over the frogs; but the roughest riding on track
+so far beats the ties as a cushion, that when the 109 suddenly stuck her
+paws through an open switch we bounced against the roof of the cab like
+footballs. I grabbed a brace with one hand, and with the other reached
+instinctively across to Bartholomew's side to seize the throttle. But as
+I tried to shut him off, he jerked it wide open in spite of me, and
+turned with lightning in his eye. "No!" he cried, and his voice rang
+hard. The 109 took the tremendous shove at her back, and leaped like a
+frightened horse. Away we went across the yard, through the cinders, and
+over the ties; my teeth have never been the same since. I don't belong
+on an engine, anyway, and since then I have kept off. At the moment, I
+was convinced that the strain had been too much, that Bartholomew was
+stark crazy. He sat clinging like a lobster to his levers and bouncing
+clear to the roof.
+
+But his strategy was dawning on me; in fact, he was pounding it into me.
+Even the shock and scare of leaving the track and tearing up the yard
+had not driven from Bartholomew's noddle the most important feature of
+our situation, which was, above everything, to _keep out of the way of
+the silk train_.
+
+I felt every moment more mortified at my attempt to shut him off. I had
+done the trick of the woman who grabs the reins. It was even better to
+tear up the yard than to stop for Foley to smash into and scatter the
+silk over the coal chutes. Bartholomew's decision was one of the traits
+which make the runner: instant perception coupled to instant resolve.
+The ordinary dub thinks what he should have done to avoid disaster after
+it is all over; Bartholomew thought before.
+
+On we bumped, across frogs, through switches, over splits, and into
+target rods, when--and this is the miracle of it all--the 109 got her
+forefeet on a split switch, made a contact, and after a slew or two,
+like a bogged horse, she swung up sweet on the rails again, tender and
+all. Bartholomew shut off with an under cut that brought us up
+stuttering, and nailed her feet with the air right where she stood. We
+had left the track and plowed a hundred feet across the yards and jumped
+on to another track. It is the only time I ever heard of its happening
+anywhere, but I was on the engine with Bartholomew Mullen when it was
+done.
+
+Foley choked his train the instant he saw our hind lights bobbing. We
+climbed down, and ran back. He had stopped just where we should have
+stood if I had shut off.
+
+Bartholomew ran to the switch to examine it. The contact light (green)
+still burned like a false beacon; and lucky it did, for it showed that
+the switch had been tampered with and exonerated Bartholomew Mullen
+completely. The attempt of the strikers to spill the silk in the yards
+had only made the reputation of a new engineer. Thirty minutes later,
+the million-dollar train was turned over to the East End to wrestle
+with, and we breathed, all of us, a good bit easier.
+
+Bartholomew Mullen, now a passenger runner who ranks with Kennedy and
+Jack Moore and Foley and George Sinclair himself, got a personal letter
+from the General Manager complimenting him on his pretty wit; and he was
+good enough to say nothing whatever about mine.
+
+We registered that night and went to supper together: Foley, Jackson,
+Bartholomew, and I. Afterward we dropped into the despatcher's office.
+Something was coming from McCloud, but the operator to save his life
+couldn't catch it. I listened a minute; it was Neighbor. Now, Neighbor
+isn't great on despatching trains. He can make himself understood over
+the poles, but his sending is like a boy's sawing wood--sort of uneven.
+However, though I am not much on running yards, I claim to be able to
+take the wildest ball that ever was thrown along the wire, and the chair
+was tendered me at once to catch Neighbor's extraordinary passes at the
+McCloud key. They came something like this:
+
+"To Opr. Tell Massacree"--that was the word that stuck them all, and I
+could perceive that Neighbor was talking emphatically. He had apparently
+forgotten Bartholomew's last name, and was trying to connect with the
+one he had "disremembered" the night before. "Tell Massacree," repeated
+Neighbor, "that he is al-l-l right. Tell hi-m I give him double mileage
+for to-day all the way through. And to-morrow he gets the 109 to
+keep.--NEIGHB-B-OR."
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+THE BULLDOG BREED
+
+A Story of the Russo-Japanese War
+
+By AMBROSE PRATT
+
+
+"WHAT do you make of her, Maclean?" asked Captain Brandon anxiously.
+
+First mate Hugh Maclean did not reply at once. Embracing a stanchion of
+the S.S. _Saigon's_ bridge in order to steady himself against the
+vessel's pitching, he was peering with strained eyes through the
+captain's binoculars at two small brown needle-points, set very close
+together, that stabbed the northeastern horizon.
+
+At length, however, he lowered the glass, and resumed the perpendicular.
+
+"You were right, sir," he declared. "She has altered her course, and our
+paths now converge."
+
+"Which proves that she is one of those d----d Russian volunteer
+pirates."
+
+"Or else a Japanese cruiser, sir."
+
+"Nonsense! The Jap cruisers have only one mast."
+
+"So they have, sir. I was forgetting that."
+
+"What to do!" growled the captain, and he fell to frowning and cracking
+his long fingers--his habit when perplexed. He was a short, thick-set
+man, with a round, red face, keen blue eyes, and strong, square jaws: a
+typical specimen of the old-time British sailor. Hugh Maclean, on the
+other hand, was a lean and lank Australian, of evident Scottish
+ancestry. His long, aquiline nose and high cheek-bones were tightly
+covered with a parchment-like skin, bronzed almost to the hue of
+leather. He wore a close-cropped, pointed beard, and the deep-set gray
+eyes that looked out from under the peak of his seaman's cap twinkled
+with good health and humor.
+
+"We might alter our course, too, sir," he suggested.
+
+"Ay!" snapped the other, "and get pushed for our pains on to the
+Teraghlind Reef. We are skirting those rocks more closely than I like
+already."
+
+"You know best, sir, of course. But I meant that we might slip back
+toward Manila, and try the other channel after we have given that fellow
+the go-by."
+
+"What!" snorted the captain, his blue eyes flashing fire, "run from the
+Russian! I'll be ---- first. We haven't a stitch of contraband aboard,"
+he added more calmly a moment later. "He daren't do more than stop and
+search us."
+
+But Maclean shook his head. "One of them took and sunk the _Acandaga_
+last month, sir, and she carried no contraband either."
+
+"Russia will have to foot the bill for that."
+
+"May be, sir. But Captain Tollis--as fine a chap as ever breathed,
+sir--has lost his ship, and the Lord knows if he'll ever get another."
+
+"Are you trying to frighten me, Maclean?" asked Captain Brandon,
+stormily.
+
+The mate shrugged his shoulders. "No, sir; but I am interested in this
+venture, and if the _Saigon_ gets back all right to Liverpool I'm due to
+splice Mr. Keppel's niece, and the old gentleman, as you know, has
+promised me a ship."
+
+"And hasn't it entered your thick skull that to return as you suggest
+would cost fifty pounds' worth of coal? How do you suppose old Kep would
+like that?"
+
+"Better burn a few tons of coal than risk losing the _Saigon_, sir, and
+mark time till God knows when in a Russian prison."
+
+Captain Brandon shut his mouth with a snap, and muttered something about
+Scottish caution that was distinctly uncomplimentary to the Caledonian
+race. Then, to signify the end of the argument, he strode to the ladder,
+and prepared to descend. Maclean, however, was of an equally stubborn
+character. "About the course, sir?" he demanded, touching his cap with
+ironical deference.
+
+"Carry on!" snarled the captain, and he forthwith disappeared.
+
+Two hours afterward Hugh Maclean knocked at the door of the captain's
+cabin, and was hoarsely bidden enter. Captain Brandon was seated before
+a bottle of whisky, which was scarce half full.
+
+"Have a nip?" he hospitably inquired.
+
+Maclean nodded, and half filled a glass.
+
+"Thank you, sir. Queer thing's happened," he observed, as he wiped his
+lips. "The Russian----"
+
+"I know," interrupted the captain. "I've been watching her through the
+port. She's the _Saigon's_ twin-sister ship, that was the _Saragossa_
+which old Kep sold to Baron Dabchowski six months ago. Much good it
+would have done us to run. She has the heels of us. Old Kep had just put
+new triple-expansion engines into her before she changed hands. But
+they've killed the look of her, converting her into a cruiser. She's
+nothing but a floating scrap-heap now."
+
+"But she has six guns," observed Maclean. "Don't you think you'd better
+come up, sir? She is almost near enough to signal."
+
+"Well, well," said the captain, and putting away the whisky bottle, he
+led the way to the bridge.
+
+Some half-dozen miles away, steaming at an angle to meet the _Saigon_ at
+a destined point, there plowed through the sea a large iron steamer of
+about three thousand tons' burden. She exactly resembled the _Saigon_ in
+all main points of build, and except for the fact that two guns were
+mounted fore and aft on her main deck above the line of steel bulwarks,
+and that her masts were fitted with small fighting tops, she might very
+well have passed for an ordinary merchantman.
+
+For twenty minutes or thereabouts the two officers watched her in
+silence, taking turn about with the binoculars; then, quite suddenly,
+the vessel, now less than two miles distant, luffed and fell slightly
+away from her course.
+
+"She is going to speak," said Captain Brandon, who held the glasses.
+"Look out!"
+
+Maclean smiled at the caution; but next instant a bright flash quivered
+from the other vessel's side, and involuntarily he ducked his head, for
+something flew dipping and shrieking over the _Saigon_. In the following
+second there was heard the clap of the distant cannon and the splash of
+a shell striking the sea close at hand. Invisible hands unfolded and
+shook out three balls of bunting at the truck of the war-ship's signal
+boom. They fluttered for awhile, and then spread out to the breeze. The
+arms of Russia surmounted two lines of symbolic letters.
+
+"Quartermaster!" shouted Captain Brandon.
+
+"Ay, ay, sir!" rang out a sailor's voice, and the _Saigon's_ number
+raced a Union Jack to the mast-head.
+
+"Well, Mac?" cried the captain, with his hand on the engine-room
+signal-bell.
+
+Maclean looked up from the book. "His Imperial Majesty of Russia, by the
+commander of the converted cruiser _Nevski_, orders us to stop."
+
+Captain Brandon pressed the lever, and before ten might be counted the
+shuddering of the _Saigon's_ screw had ceased.
+
+"What next?" he muttered.
+
+As if in answer, another flag fluttered up the _Nevski's_ halliards.
+
+"He will send a boat," interpreted Maclean.
+
+A short period of fret and fume ensued, then a small steam launch
+rounded the _Nevski's_ bows, and sped like a gray-hound across the
+intervening space. The _Nevski_ now presented her broadside to the
+_Saigon_, and all of her six guns were trained upon the English
+steamer's decks. The launch was crammed with men. Captain Brandon
+ordered a gangway to be lowered, and although the tars sprang to the
+task with great alacrity, it was hardly completed before the launch
+touched the _Saigon's_ side. An officer, bedizened with gold lace, and
+accompanied by two glittering subordinates, climbed aboard, and Captain
+Brandon met him on the main deck. Hugh Maclean, from the bridge,
+watched them file into the captain's cabin. Ten minutes later they
+emerged, and without waiting a moment the Russians hurried back into the
+launch. Captain Brandon's face was purple. He hurriedly mounted to the
+bridge, and leaning over the rail cursed the departing launch at the top
+of his voice in five different languages.
+
+"What's the trouble, sir?" asked Maclean when his superior appeared at
+last to be exhausted.
+
+"They want our coal. C----t them to ---- for all eternity," gasped the
+frenzied captain. "And they'll blow us out of the water if we don't
+follow them to Tramoieu."
+
+"Where is that?"
+
+"It's a little island off the Cochin coast, a hundred miles from
+anywhere, with a harbor. By ---- they'll smart for this!"
+
+"Not they," said Maclean. "That is, if you obey. They'll gut and scuttle
+the _Saigon_, and then kill every mother's son of us. Dead men tell no
+tales. We'll be posted at Lloyds as a storm loss."
+
+"But what can we do?"
+
+"Full speed ahead, and ram her while she's picking up the launch! Chance
+the guns!"
+
+"By ----! I'll do it!" shrieked the captain, and he sprang to the
+signal-bell. But even as he grasped the lever with his hand, he paused.
+
+"What now?" demanded the mate, his face tense with passion. "Hurry's the
+word, sir. Hurry!"
+
+The captain, however, turned and looked him in the eye. "You've
+counseled me to murder--wholesale murder, Maclean. Avast there, man!
+Keep your mouth shut. This is my bridge, and I'll not hear another word
+from you."
+
+The mate bit his lips and shrugged his shoulders. His eyes were blazing
+with contempt and rage, but he kept his self-control, and was rewarded
+by a dozen sympathetic glances from those of the crew grouped upon the
+deck who had heard the controversy. From that moment he was their idol.
+The second mate, too, who was standing by the wheel, turned and nodded
+to him as he passed.
+
+The captain, who missed nothing of this by-play, felt himself to have
+been absolutely isolated. But he was a strong man, and he knew that he
+acted rightly. Five minutes later four thunderous reports rang out, and
+shells splashed the sea on all sides of the _Saigon_. Then the
+machine-guns began to speak, and a perfect storm of bullets tore through
+the vessel's rigging, some directed so low that they pierced the top rim
+of the funnel smoke-stack. The display lasted sixty seconds. When it was
+over, a very sheepish looking lot of men arose from the recumbent
+attitudes they had assumed. Of the whole ship's company on deck, Captain
+Brandon, Hugh Maclean, and the chief engineer had alone remained
+standing.
+
+There was a new flag at the _Nevski's_ truck. "Follow at full speed!" it
+commanded. The _Saigon_ instantly obeyed. Before night fell, the moon
+rose, three-quarters full. It lighted the procession into dawn. Sunrise
+brought them to a rock-bound coast, and so nicely had the _Nevski's_
+navigator steered, that the first headland circumvented made room for
+the revelation of a little bay. It was enclosed on three sides with gray
+hills, and across the mouth was stretched a broken line of
+hungry-looking surf-crowned reefs. The _Nevski_ steamed boldly through
+the first opening, and dropped her anchor in smooth water three-quarters
+of a mile beyond. The _Saigon_, currishly obedient to the Russian's
+signals, followed suit, bringing up within a biscuit cast of her consort
+and captor. An hour later Hugh Maclean, the engineer, and the lesser
+officers and thirty-two men of the _Saigon's_ company and some two score
+of Russian sailors were working like slaves transferring, under the
+supervision of a strong guard, the _Saigon's_ coal and cargo into the
+_Nevski's_ boats.
+
+Captain Brandon was not among the toilers. He would have been, perhaps,
+but for the circumstance that he had permitted himself the liberty of
+striking a Russian officer in the face. A marine having retorted with
+the butt end of a carbine, the Englishmen had helplessly watched their
+captain being carried off, bleeding and insensible, and dumped with a
+sickening thud into the Russian launch. The incident encouraged them so
+much that they worked without complaint throughout the day, and they did
+not even grumble at the rations which their taskmasters served out to
+them. Shortly before dusk the breeze that had been blowing died away,
+and the Russians took advantage of the calm to warp the vessels
+together. After that the business in hand proceeded at such a pace that
+by dawn the _Saigon_ was completely gutted, and she rode the water like
+a swan, the greater part of her bulk in air. The weary Englishmen were
+thereupon driven like sheep upon the _Nevski's_ deck, and forced to
+descend the small after-hold, which was almost empty. The hatches were
+then fastened over them for their greater security, and they were left
+in darkness. But they were too worn out to care. Within five minutes
+every man of them was sleeping dreamlessly, lying listlessly stretched
+out upon the ship's false bottom, excepting only Hugh Maclean. He was
+too tired to sleep. He was, therefore, the only one who heard an hour
+later the muffled boom of a distant explosion and a faint cheer on deck.
+
+"They have sunk the poor old _Saigon_," muttered Maclean. "There goes
+the last hope of my captaincy and Nellie Lane." He uttered a low groan,
+and covered his face with his grimy paws. Maclean was very much in love,
+but he was too young and of too strenuous a temperament to rest for long
+the victim of despair. Moreover, contempt for foreigners, particularly
+Russians, served him instead of a religion, when not ashore, and he soon
+fell to wondering just where was the weak spot in his captor's armor,
+and how he could find and put his finger on it. That there was a weak
+spot he did not doubt at all. He searched his pockets and found half a
+plug of tobacco, but not his meerschaum. A Russian sailor had
+confiscated that some hours before. Maclean consigned the thief to
+perdition, and with some trouble bit off a plug. Then he lay back to
+chew and think. "There's only one thing to do," was the result of his
+reflections. "We'll have to take this boat from the Russians somehow."
+
+But exhausted nature would not be denied, and before he knew it Maclean
+was in the land of dreams. He was awakened by the noisy removal of a
+portion of the hatch. He looked up and saw the moon, also a couple of
+bearded faces looking down at him.
+
+"Good Lord!" he groaned, "I've slept the day out."
+
+"You hingry--men--like--eat?" observed a hoarse voice. And Maclean saw
+an immense steaming pan descending toward him on a line. He caught it
+deftly. A can of water and a tin of biscuits followed. He was instantly
+surrounded by the _Saigon's_ company, who attacked the contents of the
+pan like wolves. He seized a lump of fat meat from the mess, also a
+couple of biscuits, and retired apart. The darkness renewed itself a
+second later, and for some time the hold buzzed with the noise of
+crunching jaws and guttural exclamations.
+
+Of a sudden someone near him struck a match, and Maclean looked over the
+flame into the eyes of Robert Sievers, the _Saigon's_ chief engineer.
+
+"Hello, Mac," said Sievers.
+
+"Good evening, Sievers," replied Maclean politely. "We're still at
+anchor."
+
+"I've remarked it. What do you suppose they intend to do with us?"
+
+"Maroon us, likely, if we let them, on the island yonder."
+
+"How can we prevent them? But I think not. It's my belief this meat is
+poisoned!"
+
+"Tastes vile enough," agreed Maclean, but he went on eating, and Robert
+Sievers, after a momentary hesitation, followed suit.
+
+"We're in the devil of a hole!" he muttered, his mouth full of biscuit.
+Then he swore horribly, for the match had burned his fingers.
+
+Maclean stood up. "Any of you men happen to have a bit of candle in your
+pockets?" he demanded.
+
+Silence for a minute, then a Norwegian fireman spoke up. "Bout dree
+inches," he said.
+
+"He eats 'em," cried another voice, and a roar of laughter greeted the
+announcement.
+
+"Pass it here," commanded Maclean.
+
+Sievers struck another match, and presently the steady flame of a candle
+stump showed Maclean a picture such as Gustave Doré would have loved to
+paint. He glanced at the begrimed faces of the _Saigon's_ wild and
+ghastly looking company, and beyond them for a moment, then stumbled
+over the coal, followed by Sievers, until he was brought up by the iron
+partition of the hold. He made, however, straight for the bulkhead, and
+stooping down, held the candle close to the line of bolts covering the
+propeller's tunnel.
+
+"By Jingo!" cried Sievers. "I see your game. Let me look, Maclean! This
+is my trade."
+
+He bent forward, wrenched at a shoot-bolt, and with a cry of
+satisfaction threw back a plate. The _Saigon's_ company crowded round
+the man-hole thus revealed, muttering with excitement.
+
+"One moment, Sievers!" cried Maclean, for the engineer had one leg
+already in the tunnel. Then he turned to the men. "My lads," he said,
+"it's a case of our lives or the Russians', for I firmly believe the
+accursed pirates mean to kill us. We must take this ship by hook or by
+crook, and I think I see the way to do it!" He concluded with some
+precise instructions, and a few savage sentences, in which he promised
+an unmentionable fate to the unfortunate who made a sound or failed to
+follow to the letter his instructions.
+
+A second later, in a silence that could be felt, he blew out the light,
+and followed Sievers into the tunnel. A few cave-black yards, crawled
+painfully on hands and knees, slipping and slithering along the
+propeller shaft, brought the leaders to the edge of a wider space.
+Sievers struck a match, and a well-like, vertical opening was revealed.
+High overhead towered and threatened an enormous steel crank. Before
+their feet lay a deep pool of slime. The heat was horrible.
+
+"It should be hereabouts," whispered Sievers, and his fingers searched
+the wall. For a moment nothing could be heard but the deep breathing of
+the _Saigon's_ company. Then came a slight but terrifying clang.
+
+"I've got it!" whispered Sievers. "Are you ready?"
+
+"Right!"
+
+Maclean's eyes were dazzled of a sudden with a hot flare of light, and
+the deafening thud of the condensers smote in his ears. He never quite
+coherently remembered that which immediately ensued, for something
+struck him on the head.
+
+When he came to his full senses again he was lying on a grating beside
+the body of the Russian cleaner he had strangled. The _Saigon's_ men
+were all around him. He arose, gasping for breath. Sievers thrust a bar
+into his hand and pointed to a line of ladders. Maclean nodded, crossed
+the grating, and began to climb. Sievers, armed with a hammer, followed
+at his heels.
+
+There were three men in the engine-room, an engineer and two cleaners.
+They took the climbers for stokers, and went on with their occupations.
+Maclean sidled to the door across the grating and closed it in the
+twinkling of an eye. The engineer, who was reading a newspaper, heard
+the noise and looked up. Sievers struck him with the hammer and flew at
+one of the cleaners. Maclean rushed at the other with his spade. It was
+all over in a moment, and without any noise that the thudding of the
+donkey-engine did not drown. Maclean changed coats and caps with the
+insensible Russian engineer, while Sievers called the _Saigon's_ men
+from below. He then strapped on the man's dirk, and put his revolver in
+his pocket.
+
+"What next?" asked Sievers.
+
+Maclean glanced at the engine-room clock. The hands pointed to
+seven-fifteen. "Captain and officers are just about half through their
+dinner," he reflected.
+
+"Wait here," he said aloud: "I'm going to reconnoitre. Just keep the
+door ajar when I leave. Let anyone come in that wants to, but crack him
+over the skull once he gets inside."
+
+"Ay, ay, sir!"
+
+Maclean opened the door and stepped out leisurely upon the deck. Before
+him rose the captain's cabin, the officers' quarters, and the bridge
+above. Beyond that stretched the main deck, with the forecastle far
+forward. An officer paced the bridge; some two score sailors were
+grouped about the forecastle door drinking tea, and the rattle of knives
+and forks, the clink of glasses, and sounds of talk and laughter
+proceeding from the saloon astern sufficiently located the leaders of
+his enemies. Maclean thought hard for a moment, then pulling his cap
+over his eyes walked underneath the bridge and looked up. As he had
+expected, and ardently hoped, he perceived the muzzle of a machine-gun
+protruding from the very centre of the iron rampart. Thanking Providence
+for two years spent in the service of the New South Wales Naval Brigade
+in his younger days, he returned to the engine-room door, and after a
+cautious whisper stepped inside.
+
+"Sievers," said he, "the officers are all at dinner astern. Take this
+revolver, and when you hear me knock three times on the railing of the
+bridge, sneak out with all the men and rush the cabin. Most of the crew
+are forward. I'll look after them; there's a Nordenfeldt on the bridge."
+
+"Ay, ay, sir!"
+
+"Give me your hammer!"
+
+"Good luck to you, sir!"
+
+Maclean took the hammer, slipped it under his jacket, and once more
+sought the deck. A steward passed him at a run, and two stokers
+proceeding toward the engine-house saluted his uniform. He pulled his
+cap over his eyes, and began to climb the ladder. The _Nevski_ was
+swinging softly at her anchor, her nose pointing to the land. On the
+distant beach a small fire was burning, and at this the officer of the
+watch was gazing through his telescope. He was quite alone, and standing
+in a shaded corner of the bridge. "What sort of a watch can one man
+keep?" muttered Maclean who had served on an Australian gunboat. He
+stepped to the officer's side, seized the telescope in his left hand,
+and as the startled man turned, he dealt him a terrible blow on the nape
+of his neck with the hammer. The officer fell into his arms sighing out
+his breath. Maclean laid him gently on the floor, and relieved him of
+his revolver. Then he slid softly to the machine-gun, and uttered a low,
+irrepressible cry of joy to find that it was stored with cartridges and
+prepared for action. A moment later its muzzle commanded the deck before
+the forecastle. One of the sailors had just commenced a song. He had a
+fine tenor voice, and the others listened entranced. Maclean, however,
+rapped three times very loudly on the railing with his hammer, and the
+song ceased.
+
+Someone called to him in Russian, but he would not have answered even if
+he understood. His every sense was strained to listen. He counted
+twenty, the song commenced again. Thirty, forty. Then a wild scream
+resounded through the vessel.
+
+"Sievers is dealing with the watch on the after-hold," muttered Maclean.
+"Hurry!" he whispered. "Hurry! Sievers, hurry!"
+
+The sailors forward were now afoot, exclaiming aloud and glancing
+questioningly at one another. A great many more, too, poured out every
+second from the forecastle, made curious by the noise. Maclean grasped
+the crank firmly and gave them every scrap of his attention. There woke
+an increasing buzz of shouts and cries astern. It culminated presently
+in the crack of a revolver, a shriek of pain, and a wild British cheer.
+Then all over the din a loud, insistent whistle shrilled. The sailors
+forward rushed for their stacked arms, and formed in ranks with the
+speed of magic. A petty officer shouted a command, and down the deck
+they started at the double.
+
+"Halt!" Maclean shouted, and he turned the crank of the Nordenfeldt. The
+effect was horrible. A dozen fell at the first discharge. The rest
+halted, and after one dazed instant's wavering, threw down their arms,
+broke and fled for the cover of the forecastle. The air was filled with
+the sound of groans. The deck was like a shambles. Maclean watched three
+or four poor wounded creatures crawl off on their hands and knees for
+shelter and he shuddered violently.
+
+He was already sick to death of war. But the fight was not yet over. He
+heard footsteps on the ladder behind him, and turned just in time to
+escape a sweeping sword stroke. Next instant he was locked in a deadly
+struggle with the captain of the _Nevski_, a brave man, who, it seems,
+had refused to surrender, and had cut his way through all Sievers's men
+in the desperate resolve to retrieve the consequences of his own
+carelessness. Maclean, however, was a practised wrestler, and although
+lean almost as a lath, the muscles he possessed were as strong as steel
+bands. Even as they fell he writhed uppermost, and baffling with an
+active elbow the captain's last effort to transfix him, he dashed his
+adversary's head upon the boards. A second later he arose, breathless,
+but quite uninjured.
+
+Sievers was calling to him: "Maclean! Maclean! I say!"
+
+"Hallo, there!" he gasped back, hoarsely.
+
+"Look out for the captain. He escaped us!"
+
+"I've got him!" croaked Maclean, with a grim glance at his unconscious
+foe. "How about the rest?"
+
+"All sigarnio! What shall I do?"
+
+"Drive them forward to the foc'sle."
+
+Sievers obeyed, and very soon five splendidly upholstered, but
+shamefaced-looking gentlemen, three stewards, and four sailors were
+standing underneath the beacon light before the forecastle companion.
+Maclean noted that already many of the _Saigon's_ men carried swords and
+carbines. He watched the rest arm themselves with the _Nevski_ sailors'
+discarded weapons as they marched their prisoners along the deck. His
+breast began to swell with pride.
+
+"Any casualties?" he demanded.
+
+"Two of ours have crossed over," replied Sievers, "and some of us are
+hurt a bit. But we can't grumble. There are four Russian corpses aft,
+and I see you've bagged seven."
+
+"Damned pirates!" commented Maclean. "I've a mind to shoot the rest of
+them out of hand."
+
+"Just give the word, sir."
+
+"No," said Maclean, "we'll maroon them instead. Lower away all the
+boats but one, Sievers, and bring them under the bows. I can look after
+these dogs!"
+
+"Ay, ay, sir. But first three cheers for Captain Maclean, lads!"
+
+The cheers were given with hearty good-will, and then the men tramped
+off to carry out their new task.
+
+Maclean, whose face was still flushed from the compliment that had been
+paid him, leaned over the machine-gun and surveyed the prisoners.
+
+"Can any of you pirate scum speak English?" he demanded truculently.
+
+"I have that privilege, sir," replied a swart-faced lieutenant.
+
+"Then kindly inform your friends that at the first sign of any monkey
+trick I'll send you all to kingdom come."
+
+The officer complied presumably with this command, and when he had
+finished, addressed Maclean:
+
+"You cannot intend to maroon us, sir?" he cried. "The island yonder is
+totally uninhabited."
+
+"You're a liar!" retorted Maclean. "Fires don't light themselves. Look
+yonder."
+
+The officer choked back an oath. "Have a care what you are doing, sir,"
+he muttered in a strangled voice. "This will lead to a war between your
+country and mine."
+
+"I guess not--not even if I hanged the lot of you--you dirty pirates.
+But if it did, what then?"
+
+"You should see, sir."
+
+"And so would you--see that Englishmen can fight a durned sight better
+than the Japs. I guess you know how _they_ fight by this."
+
+"I have always heard that the English are generous foes, sir----"
+
+"None of your blarney," interrupted Maclean. "Short shrift to pirates,
+is an English motto. You sank our ship: we take yours. Fair exchange is
+no robbery. You should be thankful to get off with your skins."
+
+"At least permit us to take with us our personal belongings."
+
+"Not a match."
+
+"Some provisions?"
+
+"Not a biscuit."
+
+"Some arms, then, to defend ourselves against the natives, if we are
+attacked?"
+
+"Not a penknife."
+
+"Sir, you condemn us to death!"
+
+"Sir, we have but forestalled your intention in regard to us!"
+
+"As God hears me, sir----"
+
+"Shut up!" cried Maclean, "your voice hurts my ears."
+
+Nevertheless, when all was ready, Maclean commanded Sievers to stock the
+boats with water and provisions, and to throw some fifty swords and
+bayonets aboard. Then began the debarkation. Using the officer who could
+speak English as his mouthpiece, Maclean commanded the crew of the
+_Nevski_ to file out one by one from the forecastle, and slide down a
+rope over the vessel's bows into the waiting boats. They numbered one
+hundred and thirty-three all told, but not a man offered to resist, and
+within an hour the last boat had sheered off, carrying with its hale
+company the still unconscious bodies of the Russian captain and the
+officer of the watch. Maclean's next business was to bury the dead,
+which done, he searched the ship. He made two discoveries: He found in
+the captain's cabin a chest containing no less than fifteen thousand
+golden rubles; and locked away in one of the disused bathrooms astern,
+inhumanly disposed of in a tub, the silent form of Captain Brandon. But
+the tough little bulldog of an Englishman was by no means dead, and when
+some three days later the ghost of what had been the _Nevski_ steamed
+out of the bay of Tramoieu, he was already so far recovered from the
+terrible blow that had laid him low, but which had, nevertheless, failed
+to shatter his hard skull, as to be engaged in a confused but constant
+effort to remember. On the following morning he insisted upon getting
+up, and was helped afterward by a steward to the bridge.
+
+Maclean greeted him with a genial smile.
+
+"Well done, sir," he cried heartily. "Glad to see you up again and
+looking so fit. The old _Saigon_ has been as dull as a coffin-ship
+without you."
+
+Captain Brandon nodded, frowned, and glanced around him. A carpenter
+close by was busily at work painting _S.S. Saigon_ upon a row of
+virgin-white life buoys. The captain wondered and glanced up at the
+masts. They were just ordinary masts in the sense that they had no
+fighting tops, but they gleamed with wet paint. He frowned again, and,
+wondering more and more, looked forward. There was not the slightest
+trace of a cannon to be seen--but the deck in one place had a canvas
+covering. He began to crack his fingers, his old habit, but a moment
+later he abruptly turned and faced the mate.
+
+"Maclean," said he.
+
+The eyes of the two men met.
+
+"This is not the _Saigon_, Maclean," said Captain Brandon.
+
+"You'll see it in iron letters on her bows, sir, if you look."
+
+"Come into the chart-room."
+
+Maclean obeyed, chuckling under his breath.
+
+"Tell me how you did it," commanded the captain as he took a chair.
+
+"It was as easy as rolling off a log, sir," replied the first mate. "The
+blighters clapped us into the small after-hold, but totally forgot there
+was such a thing there as a propeller tunnel. We got into the stoke-hole
+and collared the engine-room while the Russians were at dinner. Then,
+while I covered the sailors forward with the machine-gun on the bridge,
+Sievers took the gold-laced crowd aft with a rush. The rest is not worth
+telling, for you know it. All that is to say, barring the fact that
+we're the richer by 15,000 rubles and triple-expansion engines, and the
+poorer by two of our crew the Russian captain killed."
+
+Captain Brandon drew a deep breath.
+
+"What course are we steering," he demanded.
+
+"Straight for Kobe, sir, to carry out our charter. We've every stick of
+the old cargo aboard--the pirates saw to that--also our books and
+papers. The guns are all at the bottom of the sea. We'll be a bit late,
+but we can easily rig up a yarn to explain."
+
+"But the Russians will talk."
+
+"No fear, sir: they'd be too ashamed to own up the truth; ay, and afraid
+as well, for what they did was piracy on the high seas--nothing less.
+You take my tip for it, sir, one of these days we'll hear that the
+_Nevski_ struck a reef."
+
+"We'll have to tell the owners, though--what will they say?"
+
+Maclean closed one eye. "The new _Saigon_ has triple-expansion engines,
+sir. If I know anything of Mr. Keppel, he'll be better pleased with a
+ship in the hand than a cause of action against the Russian Government."
+
+"But our own men?"
+
+"Why, sir, we have 7,000 rubles to share among them. They'll be made for
+life."
+
+"But I thought you said just now there were 15,000?"
+
+"So I did, sir; but there's only you and Sievers and myself know how
+much there is exactly: there was no call to shout it all over the ship.
+And I've figured it out this way: You, as captain, are entitled to the
+most, and you'll want all of four thousand to heal up the memory of that
+crack you got on your skull properly. That'll leave two for Sievers to
+do with as he likes, and two for me to buy Nellie--that's Mrs. Maclean
+that is to be--just the sort of house she's set her heart on these ages
+back. What do you say, sir?"
+
+"What do I say, Maclean?" cried Captain Brandon, his eyes big with
+excitement and surprise, too, perhaps. "Why, I say this: You are that
+rare thing, a sensible, honest man! Tip us your flipper!"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+ICE IN JUNE
+
+A Playwright's Story
+
+By FRED M. WHITE
+
+
+"THAT," said Ethel Marsh judicially, "is the least stupid remark you
+have made during our five weeks' acquaintance."
+
+"Which means that I am improving," John Chesney murmured. "There is hope
+even for me. You cannot possibly understand how greatly I
+appreciate----"
+
+The sentence trailed off incoherently as if the effort had been all too
+much. It was hard to live up to the mental brilliance of Ethel Marsh.
+She had had the advantage, too, of a couple of seasons in town, whilst
+Chesney was of the country palpably. She also had the advantage of being
+distractingly pretty.
+
+Really, she had hoped to make something of Chesney. It seemed to her
+that he was fitted for better things than tennis-playing and riding and
+the like. It seemed strange that he should prefer his little cottage to
+the broader delights of surveying mankind from China to Peru.
+
+The man had possibilities, too. For instance, he knew how to dress.
+There was an air about his flannels, a suggestion in his Norfolk suits.
+He had the knack of the tie so that it sat just right, and his boots....
+A clean-cut face, very tanned; deep, clear gray eyes, very steady. He
+was like a dog attached very much to a careless master. The thing had
+been going on for five weeks.
+
+Ethel was staying with the Frodshams. They were poor for their position,
+albeit given to hospitality--at a price. Most people call this kind of
+thing taking in paying guests. It was a subject delicately veiled.
+Ethel had come down for a fortnight, and she had stayed five weeks.
+Verily the education of John Chesney was a slow process. Chesney was a
+visitor in the neighborhood, too; he had a little furnished cottage just
+by the Goldney Park lodge gates, where a house-keeper did for him. As
+for the rest he was silent. He was a very silent man.
+
+It was too hot for tennis, so the two had wandered into the woods. A
+tiny trout stream bubbled by, the oak and beech ferns were wet with the
+spray of it. Between the trees lances of light fell, shafts of sunshine
+on Ethel's hair and face. It was at this point that Chesney made the
+original remark. It slipped from him as naturally as if he had been
+accustomed to that kind of thing.
+
+"I am afraid you got that from Mr. John Kennedy," Ethel said. "I am sure
+that you have seen Mr. Kennedy's comedy 'Flies in Ointment.' Confess
+now!"
+
+"Well, I have," Chesney confessed accordingly. "I--I saw it the night it
+was produced. On the whole it struck me as rather a feeble thing."
+
+"Oh, really? We are getting on, Mr. Chesney. Let me tell you that I
+think it is the cleverest modern comedy I have ever seen."
+
+"Yes! In that case you like the part of 'Dorothy Kent?'"
+
+Ethel's dainty color deepened slightly. She glanced suspiciously at the
+speaker. But he was gazing solidly, stolidly, into space--like a man who
+had just dined on beef. The idea was too preposterous. The idea of John
+Chesney chaffing her, chaffing anybody.
+
+"I thought perhaps you did," Chesney went on. "Mr. Kent is a bit of a
+butterfly, a good sort at the bottom, but decidedly of the species
+lepidopteræ----"
+
+"Stop!" Ethel cried. "Where did you get that word from? Whence comes it
+in the vocabulary of a youth--a youth? Oh, you know what I mean."
+
+"I believe it is a general name for insects," Chesney said humbly. "Mrs.
+Kent is a good sort, but a little conceited. Apt to fancy herself, you
+know. Young widows of her type often do. She is tired of the artificial
+existence of town, and goes off into the country, where she leads the
+simple life. She meets a young man there, who, well, 'pon my word, is
+rather like me. He was a bit of an ass----"
+
+"He was nothing of the kind," Ethel cried indignantly. "He was splendid.
+And he made that woman love him, he made her acknowledge that she had
+met her match at last. And he turned out to be one of the most
+brilliant----"
+
+"My dear Miss Ethel, after all it was only a play. You remind me of
+'Mrs. Kent,' and you say that I remind you of the hero of the play
+who----"
+
+"I didn't, Mr. Chesney. I said nothing of the kind. It is unfair of
+you----"
+
+"When the likeness is plain enough," Chesney said stubbornly. "You are
+'Mrs. Kent,' and I am the hero of the comedy. Do you think that there is
+any possibility that some day you and--of course not yet, but----"
+
+Miss Marsh sat there questioning the evidence of her coral-pink ears.
+She knew that she was furiously angry because she felt so cool about it.
+She knew that the more furious one was, the more calm and self-contained
+the senses become. The man meant nothing, either--one could see that by
+the respectful expression of his eye. Still----
+
+"You are quite wrong," Ethel said. "You have altogether misunderstood
+the _motif_ of the play. I presume you know what a _motif_ is?"
+
+"I think so," Chesney said humbly. "It is a word they apply in music
+when you don't happen to understand what the composer--especially the
+modern composer--is driving at."
+
+"Oh, let it pass," Ethel said hopelessly. "You have misunderstood the
+gist of the play, then! 'Walter Severn' in the comedy is a man of
+singular points. He is a great author. Instead of being that woman's
+plaything, he is her merciless analyst. The great scene in the play
+comes when she finds this out. Now, you do not for a moment presume to
+put yourself on a level with 'Walter Severn,' do you?"
+
+Chesney was bound to admit the height of his audacity. His eyes were
+fixed humbly on his Minerva; he was Telemachus seated at the feet of the
+goddess. And even yet he did not seem really cognizant of the enormity
+of his offence. He saw the sunlight on that sweetly serious face, he saw
+the beams playing with the golden meshes of her hair. No doubt he was
+fully conscious of his own inferiority, for he did not speak again. It
+was for him to wait. The silence deepened; in the heart of the wood a
+blackbird was piping madly on a blackthorn.
+
+"Before you go away," Chesney hazarded, "I should very much like----"
+
+"But I am not going away, at least not yet. Besides, I have a purpose to
+serve. I am waiting until those impossible people leave Goldney Park. I
+understand that they have already gone, but on that head I am not sure.
+I want to go over the house. The late owner, Mr. Mainbrace, was a great
+friend of my family. Before he died he was so good as to express a wish
+that the heir to the property should come and see us and--but that part
+is altogether too ridiculous. And as an only daughter----"
+
+"I see," Chesney said reflectively. "The heir and yourself. It sounds
+ridiculous. Now, if you had been in the least like the romantic type of
+young woman, perhaps----"
+
+"How do you know that I am not? Am I like Byron's woman: 'Seek roses in
+December, ice in June'? Well, perhaps you are right. After all, one
+doesn't find ice in June. However, the heir to the Goldney Park estate
+and myself never met. He let the place to those awful Gosway people for
+three years and went abroad. There was not even the suspicion of a
+romance. But I am curious to see the house, all the same."
+
+"Nothing easier, Miss Marsh. Let us go and see it after luncheon. The
+Gosways have gone, you may take my word for that, and only a caretaker
+is in possession. Will you come with me this afternoon?"
+
+The prospect was not displeasing. Miss Marsh poised it in her mind for a
+few moments. There was Chesney's education to be thought of as well. On
+the whole, she decided that there might be less pleasant ways of
+spending a hot August afternoon.
+
+"I think I'll come," she said. "I want to see the old furniture and the
+pictures. I love old furniture. Perhaps if the heir to the property had
+gone on his knees whilst I was seated on a priceless Chippendale settee,
+I might----"
+
+"You might, but I don't think you would," Chesney interrupted. "Whatever
+your faults may be I am sure you are not mercenary."
+
+"Really! How good of you! The thing that we are apt to call
+depravity----"
+
+"Is often another name for the promptings of poor human nature."
+
+Miss Marsh turned and stared at the speaker. Really, his education was
+progressing at a most amazing rate. Without the least sign of mental
+distress he had delivered himself of an epigram. There was quite a
+flavor of Piccadilly about it. And Chesney did not appear in the least
+conscious of his achievement. Ethel rose and shook out the folds of her
+dainty muslin dress.
+
+"Isn't it getting late?" she asked. "I'm sure it is lunch time. You can
+walk as far as the gate with me, and I will meet you here at three
+o'clock."
+
+She passed thoughtfully across the lawn to the house, her pretty brows
+knitted in a thoughtful frown. Was she giving her pupil too much
+latitude? Certainly he had begun to show symptoms of an audacious
+presumption, which in the earlier days had been conspicuous by its
+absence. Whereupon Miss Marsh sighed three times without being in the
+least aware of the painful fact.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"This," said Chesney, "is the Norman Tower, built by John Mainbrace, who
+was the original founder of the family. The first two trees in the
+avenue of oaks that leads up to the house were planted by Queen
+Elizabeth. She also slept on several occasions in the house; indeed, the
+bedroom she occupied is intact to this day. The Virgin Queen seemed to
+pass most of her time, apart from affairs of state, in occupying
+bedrooms, so that the descendants of her courtiers might be able to
+boast about it afterward. Those who could not give the royal lady a
+shakedown had special bedrooms fitted up and lied about them. It was an
+innocent deception."
+
+Miss Marsh eyed her pupil distrustfully. The educational progress was
+flattering, and at the same time a little disturbing. She had never seen
+Chesney in this gay and frivolous, not to say excited, mood before. The
+man was positively glib. There were distinct flashes of wit in his
+discourse, too. And where did he get so close and intimate a knowledge
+of the old house from?
+
+He knew every nook and corner. He took her through the grand old park
+where the herd of fallow deer were grazing; he showed her the Dutch and
+Italian gardens; he knew even the history of the sundial on the terrace.
+And yet they had not been within the house, though the great hall door
+stood hospitably open. They moved at length out of the glare of the
+sunshine into the grateful shadows. Glint of armor and gleam of canvas
+were all there. Ethel walked along in an ecstasy of quiet enjoyment.
+Rumor had not lied as to the artistic beauties of Goldney Park. The
+Mainbraces must have been a tasteful family. They had it all here, from
+the oaken carvings of the wandering monks down through Grinling Gibbons
+and Pugin, and away to Chippendale and Adam, and other masters of the
+Georgian era. They came at length to the chamber sacred to the Virgin
+Queen; they contemplated the glorious view from the window in silent
+appreciation tinged with rapture.
+
+"It's exquisite," Ethel said in a low voice. "If this were my house I
+should be very much tempted to commit an act of sacrilege. I should want
+this for my own room. I'm afraid I could not resist such an
+opportunity."
+
+"Easily done," said Chesney. "No trouble to discover from the family
+archives that a mistake had been made, and that Elizabeth of blessed
+memory had not slept in this room. Being strong-minded she preferred a
+north aspect, and this is due south. You would get a reputation for
+sound historical knowledge as well."
+
+Certainly the education was progressing. But Ethel let it pass. She was
+leaning out of the latticed windows with the creamy roses about her
+hair; she was falling unconsciously under the glamour of the place.
+
+"It is exquisite," she sighed. "If this were only mine!"
+
+"Well, it is not too late. The heir will be here before long, probably.
+You have only to introduce the name of Mr. Mainbrace and say who you
+are, and then----"
+
+"Oh, no. If I happened to be in love with a man--what am I saying? Of
+course, no girl who respects herself could possibly marry a man for the
+sake of his position. Even 'Mrs. Dorothy Kent,' to whom you compared me
+this morning, was above that kind of thing. She married the man she
+loved after all, you know. But I forget--you did not think much of the
+comedy."
+
+"I didn't. I thought it was vague and incomplete. I am certain of it
+now. This is the real thing; the other was merely artificial. And when
+the hero brought 'Dorothy Kent' to the home of his ancestors he already
+knew that she loved him. And I am glad to know that you would never
+marry a man like that because it gives me courage----"
+
+"Gives you courage! Whatever for?"
+
+"Why, to make a confession. You laughed at me just now when I presumed
+to criticize your favorite modern comedy. As a matter of fact, I have
+every right to criticize it. You see, I happen to be the author. I am
+'John Kennedy'! I have been writing for the stage, or trying to write
+for the stage, for years. I got my new idea from that old wish of my
+uncle's that you and I should come together. It struck me as a pretty
+suggestion for a comedy."
+
+"Stop, stop," Ethel cried. "One thing at a time, if you please.
+Positively you overwhelm me with surprise. In one breath you tell me you
+are 'John Kennedy,' and then, without giving a poor girl a chance, you
+say you are the owner of Goldney Park."
+
+"But I didn't," Chesney protested. "I never said anything of the kind."
+
+"No, but you inferred it. You say you got the idea from your uncle--I
+mean the suggestion that you and I--oh, I really cannot say it."
+
+"I'm afraid I'm but a poor dramatist after all," Chesney said lamely. "I
+intended to keep that confession till after I had--but no matter. At any
+rate, there is no getting away from the fact that my pen name is 'John
+Kennedy.'"
+
+"And you wrote 'Flies in Ointment'? And you have been laughing at me all
+this time? You were amused because I took you for a simple countryman,
+you whom men call the Sheridan of to-day! After all the pains I took
+with your education."
+
+Ethel's voice rose hysterically. Points of flame stood out from the
+level of her memory of the past five weeks and scorched her. How this
+man must have been amused, how consumedly he must have laughed at her!
+And she had never guessed it, never once had she had an inkling of the
+truth.
+
+"You have behaved disgracefully, cruelly," she said unsteadily.
+
+"I don't think so," Chesney said coolly. "After all is said and done, we
+were both posing, you know. You were playing 'Mrs. Kent' to my hero. It
+seemed a pity to disturb so pleasant a pastoral. And no harm has been
+done."
+
+Ethel was not quite so sure of that. But then for the nonce she was
+regarding the matter from a strictly personal point of view.
+
+"I hardly think you were playing the game," she said.
+
+"Why not? I come down here where nobody knows me. It is my whim to keep
+quiet the fact that Goldney Park belongs to me. As to my dramatic
+tastes, they don't concern anybody but myself. I take a cottage down
+here until those tenants of mine are ready to go. They are such utter
+bounders that I have no desire to disclose my identity to them. And so
+it falls about that I meet you. Then I recollect all that my uncle has
+said about you. I cultivate your acquaintance. It wasn't my fault that
+you took me for a countryman with no idea beyond riding a horse and
+shooting a pheasant. Your patronage was very pretty and pleasing, and I
+am one of those men who always laugh or cry inside. It is perhaps a
+misfortune that I can always joke with a grave face. But don't forget
+that the man who laughs inside is also the man who bleeds inside, and
+these feel the worst. Come, Ethel, you are not going to be angry because
+you have lost the game playing with your own weapons."
+
+The education was finished, the schoolmaster was abroad--very much
+abroad. In his cool, masterful way Chesney had taken matters into his
+own hands. He was none the less handsome because he looked so stern, so
+sure of his ground.
+
+"You are a man and I am a woman," she faltered.
+
+"Of course. How could the comedy proceed otherwise? Now where shall we
+move these Elizabethan relics? After what you said just now they could
+not possibly remain here. Among the family archives I dare say----"
+
+Chesney paused; he was conscious of the fact that two large diamond
+drops were stealing down Ethel's cheeks. It seemed the most natural
+thing in the world for him to cross over and take her hands in his.
+
+"My dear child, what have I said to pain you," he said. "I am truly
+sorry."
+
+"You--you take too much for granted," Ethel sobbed. "You make me feel so
+small and silly. And you have no right to assume that I--I could care
+for anybody simply because he happens to possess a p--p--place like
+Goldney Park."
+
+"But, my darling, I didn't. I was delighted when you said just now that
+you would never marry a man you did not care for, even if he could give
+you Chippendale for breakfast, so to speak. I watched your face then. I
+am sure that you were speaking from the bottom of your heart. I have
+been watching you for the last five weeks, my sweetheart. And they have
+been the happiest weeks in my life.
+
+"Laughing at me, I suppose! It's all the same if you do laugh inside."
+
+"No, I don't think I laughed," Chesney said thoughtfully. "I only know
+that I have been very much charmed. And besides, see how useful it has
+been to me to be in a position to hear all the weak points in my
+literary armor. When I come to write my next comedy, it will be far in
+advance of 'Flies in Ointment.' I have learned so much of human nature,
+you see."
+
+Ethel winked the tears from her lids; her eyes were all the brighter for
+the passing shower, like a sky in April, Chesney thought. A smile was on
+her face, her lips were parted. As a lover Chesney was charming. She
+wondered how she was playing her part. But she need not have had any
+anxiety. There was nothing wanting in the eyes of the man opposite, and
+his face said so.
+
+"You are going to put me into it?" she asked.
+
+"Why, of course. There is no other woman so far as I can see. Why are
+you pulling my roses to pieces like that? Do you know that that rose
+tree was planted a hundred years ago by Thomas à Becket after the battle
+of Agincourt? My dear, I am so happy that I could talk nonsense all day.
+And I say, Ethel----"
+
+The girl broke off one of the creamy roses and handed it shyly to
+Chesney.
+
+"_Væ victis_," she said with a flushing smile. "It is yours. You have
+conquered."
+
+"Yes, but I want all the fruits of victory. I ask for a hand and you
+give me--a rose. Am I not going to have the hand as well as the rose,
+dear?"
+
+He had the hand and the rose and the slender waist; he drew her toward
+him in his strong, masterful way, and his lips lay on hers in a
+lingering pressure. It was a long time before the girl looked up; then
+her eyes were full of shy happiness.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+THE DITTY-BOX
+
+A Pawnbroker's Story
+
+By OWEN OLIVER
+
+
+IN THE course of our dealings over the curiosities that my brother sent
+home from Burma, Mr. Levy and I became very good friends. When we had
+finished one of our deals we generally had a chat in the quaint little
+room behind his queer little shop in the old-world alley frequented by
+sailormen. On one of these occasions he mentioned that the cigar which
+he had given me was the brand which he always smoked; and the quality of
+the cigar suggested opulence.
+
+"If you can afford cigars like this," I remarked, "you must make some
+pretty good bargains with your curiosities!"
+
+"Good and bad," he said. "That's the way in business--in life, if you
+come to that!" He was a bit of a philosopher.
+
+"You make more good bargains than bad ones, I'll be bound," I asserted.
+
+"Yes," he agreed; "but it isn't so much that. The bad aren't very bad,
+as a rule; and some of the good are very good. That's where I get my
+profit."
+
+"What was the best bargain you ever made?" I asked.
+
+He filled his glass and pushed the decanter toward me.
+
+"The best bargain I ever made," he said, "was over a ditty-box."
+
+I helped myself to a little whiskey.
+
+"A ditty-box? I thought they were ordinary sailors' chests that they
+keep their clothes in?"
+
+"Not exactly chests," he corrected. "They're smallish boxes that they
+keep their needles and thread in, and their money, and anything else
+that they set store by--their letters or their sweethearts' photos, or
+their wives'--or other people's! There's no profit in them, and I don't
+deal in them in a general way. I got my gain out of this one in a
+roundabout fashion; but it was handsome. If you've got half an hour to
+spare I'll tell you about it."
+
+This was his story:
+
+It was eight years ago, and I'd had Isaac for seven years, and concluded
+that he was to be trusted. So I took it into my head to have a
+fortnight's holiday and leave him in charge of the shop. Everything was
+in order when I came back, and the books balanced to a penny. Business
+had been pretty good, he told me, but nothing out of the ordinary.
+
+"Unless," he said, "I've stumbled on a good thing by accident. It's a
+ditty-box; rather a superior one, and a good bit bigger than usual;
+almost a chest; brass bound and a nice bit of poker-work on it; a girl's
+head. I've put it in your bedroom."
+
+"Ah!" I said. "Ah-h!" He wouldn't make this fuss over a bit of
+poker-work, I knew.
+
+"The mate of the _Saucy Jane_ brought it here," he went on. "It belonged
+to the captain. George Markby, the name was; and that's poker-work on
+it, too. He sickened of a fever over at Rotterdam and died at sea; and
+they sold off his things to send the money to his widow. I gave a
+sovereign for it. There's a tray inside with a lock-up till. Keys all
+complete. Ought to fetch thirty-five shillings."
+
+"As much as that?" I said. I knew there must be a good deal more in it
+than appeared, but it's no use hurrying Isaac. He likes to tell things
+his own way.
+
+"I thought it might suit you to lock up your books and papers. That was
+all--till the day before yesterday. Then a ginger-haired sailor came in.
+North countryman. Wanted a ditty-box, he said. I told him we weren't
+marine outfitters, and he'd better try Barnard's, round the corner. He
+said he didn't want the ordinary sort, but something out of the common;
+extra large size; brass-bound; tray with a lock-up till. 'Mind if it
+was a trifle old?' I asked. 'Carved or cut about a bit? You know how
+some chaps use their knives on them, just to pass the time.' He said he
+didn't care for things that were hacked about, but he wouldn't object to
+a bit of poker-work on it. I told him I'd look through the warehouse and
+let him know in the morning, and he went. Byles, the dock policeman, was
+standing outside. I went and asked him who the chap was. He said he was
+cook on the _Anne Traylor_, just come in, and he believed he'd done
+time. If he hadn't I'll swear he ought to have, from the look of him.
+
+"About half an hour afterward in walks an oldish chap with a stoop and a
+gray goat's beard. He wanted a ditty-box, too; something extra large and
+old, and strong, and a tray with a lock-up till in it. He was a fireman
+on the _Anne Traylor_, I found; a shifty sort of chap that couldn't look
+you in the face. He offered to go to a couple of pounds for the right
+thing. I told him I'd look through our stuff and let him know if we had
+one of the sort.
+
+"Just as I was closing, a smart young fellow swaggered in. He was second
+mate of the _Anne Traylor_, and he'd heard of the death of her old
+captain on the _Saucy Jane_, and that we'd bought some of his effects,
+and he'd like to have a memento; just a matter of sentiment, he
+explained. I asked him what form the sentiment took, and he said a
+ditty-box; and if we had the one that belonged to the old man he'd give
+two pounds five for it. I put him off like the others.
+
+"Two Swedish sailors came in after the shutters were up, while the door
+was still open. They wanted a ditty-box of the identical description. I
+told them I'd look for it, same as I told the rest. You always brought
+me up not to close too soon with a customer who was keen on a thing."
+
+"Very good, Isaac," I said. "Very good! Go on!"
+
+"In the evening I made inquiries at the 'Duke of Wellington,' where the
+dock policemen go, and the two-penny-halfpenny money lenders and such;
+and old Mrs. Higgins, the landlady, knows more about the crews that come
+here than anyone. Lots of them knew old Markby, it seemed; a very
+respectable old chap and a favorite with his men, but a bit of a miser,
+and a trifle queer in his ways. He boasted that he didn't believe in
+banks and such things, and he'd got his money hidden where even his wife
+didn't know. And the conclusion I've come to is that those chaps believe
+it's in the ditty-box, and they mean to have it."
+
+"Ah!" I said. "We'll have something to say to that, Isaac! You told them
+we hadn't got it, of course."
+
+"Of course," he said; "and of course they didn't believe me! I had a
+rare bother with the ginger-haired man yesterday morning, and had to
+send the boy for a policeman before he'd go. And in the afternoon the
+Swedes tried to sneak through the shop into the warehouse, but I jumped
+out of the shop parlor and hustled them off. I've put longer screws in
+the bars to the windows; but I'd be easier if you'd let me sleep here."
+
+Isaac always thought that he could look after me better than I could
+look after myself!
+
+"I'm all right, Isaac," I said; "but we'll have a look at the box before
+you go. It might be worth a bit more if it had a secret drawer, eh?"
+
+When the shop was closed we went upstairs and laid the box on my bed,
+and turned it over and tapped it, and put a lamp inside, and examined
+every inch. We couldn't find a trace of a secret drawer, or anything
+scratched on it to say where the old captain had hidden his long
+stocking. So I concluded that the talk was the usual nonsense, and I
+daresay I'd have sold it and thought no more about it, if the
+goat's-beard man hadn't come in the first thing the next morning. He
+didn't beat about the bush, but said he wanted Captain Markby's ditty-box
+that we'd bought, and he'd give two pounds ten for it. I told him I
+wished I'd got it to sell, since he was so generous, but ditty-boxes
+weren't in my line.
+
+The others that Isaac had spoken of came in too. I was tempted to sell
+it to the mate for three pounds, but I couldn't quite make up my mind,
+and told him to come again the next morning. That very night the two
+Swedes broke into the shop. The police caught them. They're always on
+the look-out round my place, knowing that it's a fiver to them on the
+quiet if they catch anyone breaking in. The Swedes got three months
+apiece.
+
+That made up my mind. I showed the mate an ordinary box when he called,
+and he went off grumbling that it was nothing like the one he'd asked
+about, and I'd played the fool with him. I never saw him again, or the
+Swedes either; but the old man and the ginger-headed chap were always
+looking in the window. They seemed to have chummed up. I had an
+anonymous letter that I put down to them--written in red ink that I
+suppose they meant me to take for blood. It warned me against keeping "a
+ditty-box that others have a better claim to, and is like to cost you
+dear." D-e-r-e they spelt it, and one t in ditty.
+
+Two days later they called to ask if the box had come my way yet. "Yes,"
+I said, "and I'm going to keep it. It's got two blackguards three
+months, and it will get two others a good hiding if they don't mind.
+Clear out, and don't come here again." They didn't, but we often saw
+them hanging round, and when I went out one of them generally followed
+me. I didn't worry about that, for I could have settled the two of them
+easily if I wasn't taken unaware. I was always a bit obstinate, and I'd
+sooner have chopped the chest up for firewood than have been bullied
+into letting them have it; but I was sorry that I hadn't taken the
+mate's offer, for Isaac and I had measured it all over inside and out,
+and calculated that there wasn't space anywhere for a secret drawer.
+
+I'd had it about three months; and then a young girl, about twenty, came
+into the shop one afternoon, when Isaac was at tea. She was a pale slip
+of a young thing, and her clothes looked as if they'd been worn all
+through the summer, and it was autumn then; and she hesitated as if she
+was half afraid of me.
+
+"Well, little missie," I said. "What is it?" I spoke to her with the
+smooth side of my tongue uppermost, as a big, rough chap generally does
+to a girl of that sort, if there's anything decent about him.
+
+"My father was Captain Markby," she said, and I liked the way she spoke.
+"He died at sea, and they sold his things here. I want to find something
+of his, and I thought that perhaps you might have bought it?"
+
+I knew directly what she meant, but I looked very innocent.
+
+"If it was anything in the curiosity line, I might have," I answered.
+"You see the sort of things I deal in." I waved my hand round the place.
+
+"No," she said. "It wasn't a curiosity. It was an oak chest with brass
+corners. I think they call it a ditty-box."
+
+"A ditty-box," I said. "They're too common to be curious. Was there
+anything special about it?"
+
+"It had a tray in it, and he'd drawn a head on it with a red-hot iron; a
+girl's head. He meant it for me; but I don't expect you'd recognize me
+by it. I hope not!" She smiled faintly.
+
+"I hope not," I agreed, "judging from what I've seen of such figures." I
+laughed, and she laughed a little, too. "And you want to buy it, if you
+can find it?"
+
+"Ye-es," she said. "At least--I haven't very much money; but I would pay
+you as soon as I could, if--I suppose you wouldn't be so kind--so very
+kind--as to agree to that?"
+
+"Umph!" I said. "I don't generally give credit; but as it was your
+father's, I might stretch a point for once if I should find that I have
+it."
+
+"Oh, _thank_ you!" she said with a flush. "It is a kindness that I have
+no right to expect. _Thank_ you!"
+
+"I'll have a look round among my things," I promised. "I haven't bought
+such a box myself; but my assistant might have; or I might be able to
+find it for you in some of the shops round here. I'll see what I can
+do." I meant to let her have it, but I wanted to find out more about it
+first.
+
+"How kind you are!" she cried. "I--you see I want it very particularly,
+Mr. Levy."
+
+"Being associated with your father," I said, "naturally you would.
+Perhaps if I don't come across the ditty-box, I might find something
+else of his that would do, eh?"
+
+"No-o," she said. "It wouldn't. You see we--my mother and I--aren't well
+off. We knew that father had some money, but we couldn't find it, or
+learn anything about it; and we think it must be in the box, or a paper
+telling us about it."
+
+I shook my head.
+
+"There's no paper in any box that I have," I assured her. "We always go
+through the things that we buy very carefully."
+
+"You wouldn't find it," she explained eagerly. "There was a secret
+place. He showed it to me when I was a little girl. I don't expect he
+thought I would remember, but I did. You take off the brass corners on
+top, and then the lower part of the lid drops out. The lid's in two
+pieces and you could put papers--or bank notes--in between."
+
+I couldn't help smiling.
+
+"Aren't you rather foolish to tell me?" I suggested.
+
+She looked at me appealingly.
+
+"Am I?" she asked.
+
+"No," I said. "As it happens, you aren't; but I wouldn't tell anyone
+else, if I were you. They _might_ think they'd like those bank notes for
+themselves. _I_ might if--well, if you weren't a good deal younger and
+more in need of them than I am."
+
+"I think you are a very good and kind man, Mr. Levy," she said solemnly.
+
+"I'm afraid not, little missie," I told her; "but there are some a good
+deal worse; and some of them have an inkling of what may be in that box,
+if I'm not mistaken. They've been inquiring after it."
+
+"Oh!" She started. "There were two horrid men who seemed to be watching
+me when I came in here. I half thought I remembered one of them: an old
+man with a stoop. I believe I must have seen him aboard my father's
+ship. I felt rather nervous--because it's such a dark alley." She looked
+anxiously at the door.
+
+"It is a bit dark," I agreed. "Would you feel safer if I saw you to a
+main thoroughfare?"
+
+"I should feel _quite_ safe then," she declared, and she smiled like a
+child does. "I really don't know _how_ to thank you enough for your
+goodness to me."
+
+I called Isaac to look after the shop, and put on my hat and walked off
+with her. She was a bright little creature to talk to, and when she was
+excited she looked very pretty. I found that she was going to walk all
+the way, so I said that I would see her right to her road. She seemed
+pleased to have my company, and jabbered nineteen to the dozen. It was
+such a change to have someone to talk to, she said, because they had
+moved and knew nobody here. She told me that she tried to earn money by
+teaching music and by painting. I said that I was badly in want of a few
+little sketches, and she promised to bring some for me to look at.
+
+"I would ask you to accept them," she said, with a flush, "if we weren't
+so poor."
+
+"If it weren't for that," I said, "I should ask you to have some tea
+before I leave you, without fear that you would be too proud to accept.
+It would be a pleasure to me. Will you?" We were just outside a good
+place, and I stopped.
+
+"It is very kind of you," she said, "but I don't think--I suppose I _am_
+foolishly proud." She laughed an uneasy laugh.
+
+"You mustn't let your pride spoil my pleasure," I told her, and grinned
+at myself for talking like a book. "You can repay me when you find your
+fortune, if you insist; but I hope you won't."
+
+She looked up at me quickly.
+
+"No," she said. "I couldn't treat your kindness like that. Thank you,
+Mr. Levy."
+
+So we went in, and I ordered tea and chicken and cakes. The poor little
+thing was positively hungry, I could see; and when she mentioned her
+mother the tears came into her eyes. I understood what she was thinking,
+and I had some meat patties put up in a package. When I left her at the
+corner of her road I put the package into her hands, and boarded a 'bus
+with a run before she had time to object. She shook her head at me when
+I was on top of the 'bus; but when I took off my hat she waved her hand,
+and laughed as if she was a great mind to cry. It's hard for an old
+woman and a young girl when they're left like that.
+
+I had the corners of that ditty-box off as soon as Isaac had gone for
+the night. The lid was double, as she had said. Between the two boards I
+found a portrait of an elderly woman--her mother, no doubt--and three
+photos of herself; two in short frocks and one with her hair in a plait
+when she was about seventeen. She looked stouter and jollier then, poor
+girl. There was one other thing: a half sheet of note-paper. "Memo in
+case of accident. Money up chimney in best bedroom. Geo. Markby, sixth
+of April, 1897."
+
+I started to change my clothes to go there and tell them; but just as I
+had taken off my waistcoat I altered my mind. The money wouldn't be in
+the rooms where they lived then, but in their old house; and that was
+probably occupied by someone else now, and even if the money was still
+there she would not be able to get it. It was no use raising her hopes,
+just to disappoint her. I would try to get the money before I spoke, I
+decided.
+
+She came at eleven the next morning, and timidly produced a few little
+sketches, mostly copies of things. I'd like to say that they were good,
+but I can't. It was just schoolgirl painting, nothing else. She wanted
+to give me some, but I wouldn't hear of that. She had sold a few for
+eighteenpence apiece, she said. I said that I wanted four to frame for
+ships' cabins, and I'd give twelve-and-six for them, and that would
+leave me a fair margin. I was afraid to offer more, for fear she would
+suspect me; and as it was she was dubious.
+
+"You're sure you _will_ get a profit?" she asked.
+
+"You ask anyone round here about me," I said. "They'll soon tell you
+that I look out sharp for that. They'll look very nice when they're
+framed; and I make a good bit out of the frames, you see. Now about this
+ditty-box. I've got on the track of one that might turn out right; but
+there's a difficulty that I'd like to put to you. Suppose that there's
+no money in it, only a clue to where your father hid it. Wouldn't that
+be likely to be somewhere where you can't get at it? On board his ship,
+for example? Or in your old house?
+
+"If it's in the house," she said, "I could get in. At least it was empty
+a week ago. Mother heard from an old neighbor. But perhaps it would be
+better to get someone else to go, and say that they wanted to look at
+the house?" She glanced at me doubtfully.
+
+"You mean me?" She nodded slowly. "You are afraid that I might keep some
+of it?"
+
+She stared at me in sheer amazement.
+
+"Why, of course not!" she cried. "I was only thinking that it was a long
+way to ask you to go; and that I must not impose on your kindness."
+
+"Give me the address," I said, "in case I should want it any time."
+
+She gave me an address in Andeville. Then I changed the subject. I
+walked part of the way home with her. Then I had my dinner and went off
+to Andeville.
+
+It was about an hour by train. By the time that I had found the agent
+and got the key it was growing dusk. I was some time arguing with him,
+because he wanted to send a man with me to lock up afterward. "We've had
+tramps get in several times," he explained, "and they've done a lot of
+damage; torn up the flooring and such senseless mischief." It occurred
+to me directly that the tramps were some of the men who had come after
+the ditty-box.
+
+I persuaded him at last that I'd lock up all right and he let me go
+alone. I soon spotted what would be the best bedroom. I fumbled up the
+chimney and lit a match or two, and found a heavy canvas bag and a
+smaller one that rustled like notes. I was just looking for the last
+time when I heard soft steps behind me. I glanced round and saw two men
+before the match flickered out. The light caught the face of the
+foremost. It was the old man with the goat's beard. Then I was struck on
+the head and knocked senseless.
+
+It was about six when I came to and lit another match and looked at my
+watch. The bags were gone, of course. I never saw them again or the two
+men. It was as well for them I didn't!
+
+It was no use telling the agent or anybody. I never thought about that,
+only what I was to do about the girl and her mother. I didn't think very
+much about the mother, if you come to that. It seemed to me that I'd
+made a mess of it and lost their money, and I couldn't bear to think of
+the girl's disappointment. What upset me most was that I knew she'd
+believe every word of my story, and never dream that I'd taken the money
+myself, as some people would. She was such a trusting little thing,
+and--well, I may as well own up that I liked her. If I hadn't been
+fifteen years older than she was, and felt sure that she'd never look at
+a Jew--and a much rougher chap then than I am now--I should have had
+serious thoughts of courting her. And so--well, I knew that a hundred
+pounds was what they hoped for; and it didn't make very much odds to me.
+I took out the paper that night and put in twenty five-pound notes, and
+did it up again. A bit of folly that you wouldn't have suspected me of,
+eh? Then you think me a bigger fool than most people do! At the same
+time, it was only fair and honest. I'd had her money and lost it, you
+see.
+
+I was going to take the chest to their lodgings in a cab the next
+morning, but she called in early to ask if I had found it. I had an
+unhappy sort of feeling when I saw her come smiling into the shop,
+thinking that she wouldn't need to come any more. It's queer how a man
+feels over a little slip of a girl when he's knocked about all over the
+world and known hundreds of women and thought nothing of them!
+
+I'd carried it down into this room, and I took her in and showed it.
+Her delight was pretty to see. She fidgeted about at my elbow like a
+child while I was taking the corners off; and when she saw the notes she
+danced and clapped her hands; and when I gave them to her she sat down
+and hugged them and laughed and cried.
+
+"If you knew how poor we've been!" she said, wiping her eyes. "How
+lonely and worried and miserable! Your kindness has been the only nice
+thing ever since father died. Twenty times five! That's a hundred.
+They're real notes aren't they? I haven't seen one for ages."
+
+"They're real enough," I told her. "I'll give you gold for them, if you
+like."
+
+"I'd rather have their very selves," she said with a laugh. She studied
+one carefully; and suddenly she dropped them with a cry and sprang to
+her feet. Her face had gone white.
+
+"Mr. Levy!" she cried. "Oh, Mr. Levy! _You put them there!_"
+
+I told her a lie right out; and I'm not ashamed of it. I was a hard man
+of business, I said; and a Jew; and she was a silly sentimental child,
+or she'd never take such an idea into her head; and she needn't suppose
+I kept my shop for charity, and she'd know better when she was older.
+She heard me out. Then she put her hand on my shoulder.
+
+"Dear kind friend," she said, "father died in May this year. The note
+that I looked at was dated in June!" And I stood and stared at her like
+a fool. I suppose I looked a bit cut up, for she stroked my arm gently.
+
+"You dear, good fellow!" she said. She seemed to have grown from a child
+into a woman in a few minutes. "I can't take them, but it will help me
+to be a better girl, to have known someone like you!"
+
+"Like me!" I said, and laughed. "I'm just--just a rough, money-grubbing
+Jew. That's all I am."
+
+She shook her head like mad.
+
+"You may say what you like," she told me; "but you can't alter what I
+think. You're good--good--good!"
+
+Then I told her just what had happened.
+
+"So, you see, you owe me nothing," I wound up.
+
+She wiped her eyes and took hold of me by the sleeve.
+
+"I will tell you what I owe you," she said. "Food when I was hungry;
+kindness when I was wretched; your time, your care--yes, and the risk of
+your life. If you had had your way you would have given me all that
+money. You--Mr. Levy, you say that it is just a matter of business. What
+profit did you expect to make?"
+
+"I expected--to make you happy," I said; and she looked up at me
+suddenly; and I saw what I saw. "Little girl!" I cried. "May I try? In
+another way."
+
+I held out my arms, and she dropped into them.
+
+"My profits!" I said.
+
+"Oh!" she cried. "I hope so. I will try--try--try!"
+
+Mr. Levy offered me a fresh cigar and took another himself.
+
+"It's a class of profit that's difficult to estimate," he remarked. "I
+had a difficulty with Isaac over the matter. You see he has 5 per cent.
+over the business that he introduces, but that was only meant for small
+transactions, I argued. He argued that there were no profits at all; not
+meaning any disrespect to her, but holding that there was no money in
+it; or, if there was, it was a loss because I'd have to keep her, and
+nobody knew how a wife would turn out. She held much the same, except
+that she was sure she was going to turn out good; but she thought I
+ought to find some plan of doing something for Isaac. We settled it that
+way. He wanted to get married, so I gave him a rise and let them have
+the rooms over the shop to live in; and there they are now."
+
+"And how do you reckon the profits yourself?" I asked.
+
+"Well," he said "in these last eight years I've cleared forty thousand
+pounds, though you wouldn't think it in this little shop. I reckon that
+I cleared a good bit more over that ditty-box. Come round to my house
+one evening, and I'll introduce you to her."
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+THE YELLOW CAT
+
+An Idyll of the Summer
+
+By ANNIE E.P. SEARING
+
+
+THE minister of Blue Mountain Church, and the minister's wife, were
+enjoying their first autumn fire, and the presence of the cat on the
+hearth between them.
+
+"He came home this afternoon," the minister's wife was saying, "while I
+was picking those last peppers in the garden, and he jumped on my
+shoulder and purred against my ear as unconcernedly as if he'd only been
+for a stroll in the lower pasture, instead of gone for three months--the
+little wretch!"
+
+"It does seem extraordinary"--the minister unbent his long legs and
+recrossed them carefully, in order to remove his foot from the way of
+the tawny back where it stretched out in blissful elongation--"very
+extraordinary, that an animal could lead that sort of double life,
+disappearing completely when summer comes and returning promptly with
+the fall. I daresay it's a reversion to the old hunting instinct. No
+doubt we could find him if we knew how to trail him on the mountains."
+
+"The strangest thing about it is that this year and last he came back
+fat and sleek--always before, you know, he has been so gaunt and starved
+looking in the fall." She leaned over and stroked the cat under his
+chin; he purred deeply in response, and looked up into her eyes, his own
+like wells of unfathomed speech. "I have an eerie feeling," she said,
+"that if he could talk he'd have great things to tell."
+
+The minister laughed, and puffed away at his corncob pipe. "Tales of the
+chase, my dear, of hecatombs of field-mice and squirrels!"
+
+But she shook her head. "Not this summer--that cat has spent these last
+two summers with human beings who have treated him as a kind of
+fetich--just as we do!" As she rubbed his ear she murmured regretfully:
+"To think of all you've heard and seen and done, and you can't tell us
+one thing!"
+
+The Yellow Cat's eyes narrowed to mere slits of black across two amber
+agates; then he shook his ears free, yawned, and gave himself up to
+closed lids and dreams. If he could have told it all, just as it
+happened, not one word of it could those good souls have
+comprehended--and this was the way of it.
+
+It was near the close of a June day when the cat made his entrance into
+that hidden life of the summers from which his exits had been as sudden,
+though less dramatic. In the heart of the hills, where a mountain
+torrent has fretted its way for miles through a rocky gorge, there is a
+place where the cleft widens into a miniature valley, and the stream
+slips along quietly between banks of moss before it plunges again on its
+riotous path down the mountain. Here the charcoal-burners, half a
+century ago, had made a clearing, and left their dome-shaped stone kiln
+to cover itself with the green velvet and lace of lichen and vine. The
+man who was stooping over the water, cleaning trout for his supper, had
+found it so and made it his own one time in his wandering quest for
+solitude. The kiln now boasted a chimney, a door, and one wide window
+that looked away over the stream's next plunge, over other mountains and
+valleys to far horizons of the world of men. This was the hermitage to
+which he brought his fagged-out nerves from the cormorant city that
+feeds on the blood and brains of humans. Here through the brief truce of
+summer he found time to fish and hunt enough for his daily wants, time
+to read, to write, time to dream and to smoke his evening pipe, to think
+long thoughts, and more blessed than all--to sleep! When autumn came he
+would go back with renewed life and a pile of manuscript to feed to his
+hungry cormorant. He was chewing the cud of contentment as he bent to
+his fish cleaning, when, glancing to one side where the fire, between
+stones, was awaiting his frying-pan, he caught sight among the bushes of
+two gleaming eyes, and then the sleek back and lashing tail of the
+Yellow Cat. The man, being a cat lover was versed in their ways, so for
+a time he paid no attention, then began to talk softly.
+
+"If you'd come out of that," he said, as he scraped the scales, "and not
+sit there watching me like a Comanche Indian, I'd invite you to supper!"
+
+Whether it was the tone of his voice or the smell of the fish that
+conquered, the tawny creature was suddenly across the open with a rush
+and on the stooping shoulders. That was the beginning of the
+companionship that lasted until fall. The next season brought the animal
+as unexpectedly, and they took up the old relation where it had left off
+the previous summer. They trudged together through miles of forest,
+sometimes the cat on the man's shoulder, but often making side
+excursions on his own account and coming back with the proud burden of
+bird or tiny beast. Together they watched the days decline in red and
+gold glory from the ledge where the stream drops over the next height,
+or when it rained, companioned each other by the hearth in the hut.
+There was between them that satisfying and intimate communion of
+inarticulate speech only possible between man and beast.
+
+There came a day when the man sat hour after hour over his writing,
+letting the hills call in vain. The cat slept himself out, and when paws
+in the ink and tracks over the paper proved of no avail, he jumped down
+and marched himself haughtily off through the door and across the
+clearing to the forest, tail in air. Late that afternoon the man was
+arrested midway of a thought rounding into phrase by the sudden
+darkness. There was a fierce rush of wind, as if some giant had sighed
+and roused himself. The door of the hut slammed shut and the blast from
+the window scattered the papers about the floor. As he went to pull down
+the sash the cat sprang in, shaking from his feet the drops of rain
+already slanting in a white sheet across the little valley. At the same
+moment there was a "halloo" outside, and a woman burst open the door,
+turning quickly to shut out behind her the onrush of the shower and the
+biting cold of the wind. She stood shaking the drops from her hair, and
+then she looked into the astonished face of the man and laughed.
+
+She was as slim and straight as a young poplar, clad in white
+shirt-waist and khaki Turkish trousers with gaiters laced to the knee.
+Her hair was blown about in a red-gold snarl, and her eyes looked out as
+unabashed as a boy's. The two stared at each other for a time in
+silence, and finally it was the woman who spoke first.
+
+"This isn't exactly what I call a warm welcome--not just what the cat
+led me to expect! It was really the cat who brought me--I met him over
+on Slide Mountain--he fled and I pursued, and now here we are!"
+
+She made a hasty survey of the hut, and then of its owner, putting her
+head on one side as she looked about her with a quick, bird-like
+movement, he still staring in stupefaction.
+
+"Of course you detest having me here, but you won't put me out in the
+rain, again, will you?"
+
+At once he was his courteous self. With the same motion he dumped the
+astonished cat from the cushioned chair by the writing table, and drew
+it forward to the fire. Then he threw on a fresh stick of pine that
+flared up in a bright blaze, and with deferring gentleness took the
+sweater that hung from her shoulders and hung it to dry over a section
+of tree-trunk that served as a chimney seat.
+
+"You are as welcome to my hut as any princess to her palace," he smiled
+on her, "indeed, it is yours while you choose to stay in it!"
+
+"Don't you think," she made reply, as he drew another chair up opposite
+to her, "that under the circumstances we might dispense with fine
+speeches? It is hardly, I suppose, what one would call a usual
+situation, is it?"
+
+He looked at her as she stretched her small feet comfortably to the
+blaze, her face quite unconcerned.
+
+"No," he acquiesced, "it certainly is not usual--or I should hate
+it--the 'usual' is what I fly from!"
+
+She threw back her head, clasping her hands behind it as she laughed.
+She seemed to luxuriate as frankly in the heat and the dryness as the
+cat between them.
+
+"And I"--she turned the comprehension of her eyes upon him--"I cross the
+ocean every year in the same flight!"
+
+The storm drove leaves and flying branches against the window, while
+they sat, for what seemed a long time, in contented silence. He found
+himself as openly absorbing her charm as if she had been a tree or a
+mountain sunset, while she was making further tours of inspection with
+her eyes about the room.
+
+"It is entirely adorable," she smiled at him, "but it piques my
+curiosity!'
+
+"Ask all the questions you wish--no secrets here."
+
+"Then what, if you please, is the object I see swung aloft there in the
+dome?"
+
+"My canvas hammock which I lower at night to climb into and go to bed,
+and pull up in the daytime to clear the decks."
+
+"And the big earthen pot in the fireplace--it has gruesome suggestions
+of the 'Forty Thieves!'"
+
+"Only a sort of perpetual hot-water tank. The fire never quite goes out
+on this domestic hearth, and proves a very acceptable companion at this
+high altitude. There is always the kettle on the crane, as you see it
+there, but limitless hot water is the fine art of housekeeping--but,
+perhaps you don't know the joy there is to be found in the fine art of
+housekeeping?"
+
+"No, I do not," her eyes took on a whimsical expression, "but I'd like
+to learn--anything in the way of a new joy! In the way of small joys I
+am already quite a connoisseur, indeed I might call myself a collector
+in that line--of _bibelot_ editions, you understand, for thus far I seem
+to have been unable to acquire any of the larger specimens! Would you be
+willing to take me on as a pupil in housekeeping?"
+
+"It would add to my employment a crowning joy--not a _bibelot_!"
+
+"Pinchbeck fine speeches again," she shrugged. "Do you stop here all the
+long summer quite alone?"
+
+"All the 'short summer,'" he corrected, "save for the society of the
+cat, who dropped down last year from nowhere. He must have approved of
+the accommodations, for he has chosen me, you see, a second time for a
+summer resort."
+
+"Yes--I think he was trying to protest about you being his exclusive
+find, when I invited myself to follow him down the mountain--leading and
+eluding are so much alike, one is often mistaken, is it not so?"
+
+She was sitting forward now, chin in hands, elbows on her knees, gazing
+into the flames where a red banner waved above the back log. When she
+turned to him again the westering sun had broken through the clouds and
+was sending a flare of rosy light in at the window. Studying her face
+more fully, he saw that she was years--fully ten years--older than he
+had supposed. The boyish grace that sat so lightly was after all the
+audacious ease of a woman of the world, sure of herself.
+
+"I, too, am living the hermit life for the summer. I am the happy
+possessor of a throat that demands an annual mountain-cure. Switzerland
+with its perpetual spectacular note gets on my nerves, so last year we
+found this region--I and my two faithful old servitors. Do you know the
+abandoned tannery in the West Branch Clove? That has been fitted up for
+our use, and there we live the simple life as I am able to attain
+it--but you have so far outdone me that you have filled my soul with
+discontent!"
+
+"Alas," said the man, "you have served me the very same trick! I could
+almost wish--"
+
+"That I had not come!"
+
+"Say, rather, that you would come again!"
+
+She stood up and reached for her sweater, waiting for him to open the
+door. The round of the little valley was a glittering green bowl filled
+with pink cloud scuds. They stepped out into a jubilant world washed
+clean and freshly smiling. She put out her hand in good-bye.
+
+"I almost think I shall come again! If you were a person with whom one
+could be solitary--who knows!"
+
+When she appeared the next time she found him by the noise of his
+chopping. They climbed to the top of the moss-covered boulder that hangs
+poised over the ledge where the stream leaps into the abyss. Below them
+the hills rolled in an infinite recession of leaf-clad peaks to the sky
+line, where they melted to a blur of bluish-green mist.
+
+"Oh, these mountains of America!" she cried, "their greenness is a thing
+of dreams to us who know only bare icy and alps!"
+
+"Far lovelier," he said, "to look down upon than to look up to, I think.
+To be a part of the height comes pretty near to being happy, for the
+moment."
+
+She turned from the view to study her companion. The lines in the
+corners of his kind, tired eyes, the lean, strong figure, hair graying
+about the temples. He grew a little impatient under it before she spoke.
+
+"Do you know," she said slowly, "I am going to like you! To like you
+immensely--and to trust you!"
+
+"Thank you, I shall try to be worthy"--even his derision was gentle--"I
+seem to remember having been trusted before by members of your sex--even
+liked a little, though not perhaps 'immensely'! At any rate this
+certainly promises to be an experience quite by itself!"
+
+"Quite by itself," she echoed.
+
+"Wouldn't it be as well for you to know my name, say, as a beginning?"
+
+"No," she nodded, "that's just what I don't want! I only want to know
+you. Names are extraneous things--tags, labels--let us waive them. If I
+tell you how I feel about this meeting of ours will you try to
+understand me?"
+
+The answer was less in words than in the assent of his honest gray eyes.
+
+"I have been surfeited all my life," she went on, "with love--I want no
+more of it! The one thing I do want, more than anything else, is a man
+friend. I have thought a great deal about such a friendship--the give
+and take on equal terms, the sexless companionship of mind--what it
+could be like!"
+
+He brushed the twigs from the lichens between them and made no answer.
+
+"Fate--call the power what you will"--she met the disclaimer that
+puckered the corners of his mouth--"fate brought us together. It was the
+response to my longing for such a friendship!"
+
+"It was the Yellow Cat!"
+
+"The Yellow Cat plus fate! While I sat there by your fire I recognized
+you for that friend!"
+
+Far below over the tree tops cloud shadows and sunlight were playing
+some wonderful game of follow-my-leader; a hawk hung poised on tilting
+wings; and on the veil of mist that was the spirit of the brook where it
+cast itself from the ledge curved the arch of a rainbow. The man pointed
+to the augury.
+
+"You might try me," he said, and they shook hands on the compact,
+laughing half shamefacedly at their own solemnity.
+
+"As woman to woman," he offered.
+
+"Let it be rather as man to man," she shrugged.
+
+"As you like--as women we should have to begin by explaining ourselves."
+
+"Precisely, and men companion each other on impersonal grounds."
+
+"Then it is a man's friendship?"
+
+"Better still," she mused, "we'll pattern it after the ideals of the
+disembodied! We'll make this summer, you and I together, a gem from the
+heart of life--I will have it so!"
+
+So it came about that like two children they played together, worked,
+walked, or read and talked by the open fire when cold storms came. Every
+morning she came over the wood-road that led by winding ways from her
+valley, and at sunset she went back over the trail alone. He might go as
+far as the outlook half way over the mountain where the path begins to
+go down, but no farther; as for any fear, she seemed to know nothing of
+its workings, and the revolver she wore in a case that hung from her
+belt was a mere convention.
+
+One morning she came with eyes dancing--it was to be an especial day--a
+fête--and the gods had smiled on her planning and given them perfect
+weather. Never such sunshine, such crystal air, such high-hung clouds!
+Breakfast over, they hurried about the miniature housework, and packed
+the kit for a long day's tramp. Then they started forth, the cat
+following, tail aloft. Beyond a dim peak, where the clove opens
+southward, by the side of a tiny lake they lunched and took their
+noonday rest. She watched the smoke curl up from his pipe where he lay
+at peace with the scheme of things.
+
+"Do you know, Man, dear," she said, "I am glad I don't in the least
+guess who you are! I have no doubt you write the most delightful stories
+in the world--but never put me in one, please!"
+
+He took the pipe out of his mouth and looked at her long before he
+replied.
+
+"Woman, dear," he said, "I have put you in a place--your own place--and
+it is not in my novels!"
+
+She scrambled to her feet laughing.
+
+"It's very well to make stories, but it is really more diverting to live
+them! Come, I must lead you now with your eyes shut tight to my
+surprise!"
+
+So hand in hand they went along a smooth green wood-road until she
+stopped him.
+
+"Look," she cried, "now look!"
+
+Straight away till the road narrowed to a point of light against the sky
+where the mountain dipped down, banks of mountain laurel rose on either
+side in giant hedges of rose and white, while high above them waved the
+elms and beeches of the forest.
+
+"It is the gardening of the gods!"
+
+"It is my own treasure-trove! I found it last year and I have been
+waiting to bring you to it on my fête--what you call birthday! And now
+wish me some beautiful thing--it may come true! There is a superstition
+in my country--but I shall not tell you--unless the wish comes true!"
+
+He broke off a spray of the waxen buds and crowned her solemnly where
+she stood.
+
+"I have already wished for you--the most beautiful thing in the world!"
+
+She shook her head, sorrowful. "Man, dear, the only thing in all the
+world I still want is the impossible!"
+
+"Only the impossible is worth while--and I have wished!"
+
+She shook her head again, laughing a little ruefully. "It could not
+arrive--my impossible--and yet you almost tempt me to hope!"
+
+"Anything--everything may arrive! You once thought that such a
+friendship as this of ours could not, and lo, we have achieved it!"
+
+"I wonder"--her eyes seemed fixed on some far prospect, a world beyond
+the flowery way--"I wonder if we have! And I wonder why you have never
+made a guess about my world when you have at least let me get a peep now
+and then into yours?"
+
+"I don't care a rap about your 'world,'" he smiled into her eyes, "while
+I have you!"
+
+"No curiosity about my--my profession?"
+
+"Not a bit--though it was clear enough from the first that it was the
+stage!"
+
+She made an odd little outcry at his powers of divination.
+
+"Then I must look it--before the footlights from my birth! Since you are
+so clever, Mr. Man, will you also be merciful when you come to weigh me
+in those scales you try to hide beneath the garment of your kindness?
+Think, when you judge me, what it is for a woman never to be
+herself--always to have to play a part!"
+
+He reached and took her hand suddenly, drawing her to him with a
+movement that was almost rough.
+
+"This is no play acting--this is real! No footlights--no audience--only
+you and me in all this world!"
+
+But she drew away, insistently aloof. She would have none of his
+caresses.
+
+"This, too," she said, as she moved apart and stood waiting for him to
+follow, "is a part of the play--I do not deceive myself! When I go back
+to my world--my trade, I shall remember this little time that you and I
+have snatched from the grudging grasp of life as an act--a scene only!
+It's a perfect pastoral, Man, dear, but unreal--absurdly unreal--and we
+know it ourselves while we play the game!"
+
+Down through the flower-bordered vista the cat went stalking his prey,
+his sinuous body a tawny streak winding along the green path. These
+trivial humans, with their subtle attractions and compunctions, were as
+though they never had been when the chase was on--the real business and
+purpose of life!
+
+For the rest of the time they were together they avoided the personal.
+Each felt the threat in the air and tacitly averted it. For that one
+perfect day there should be no past, no future, nothing but the golden
+present.
+
+Swinging in his breeze-rocked hammock between door and window the man
+lay awake through the long watches of the night, thinking, thinking,
+while his heart sang. Toward dawn he fell into a deep sleep from which
+he was only awakened by the cat springing up to lick his face in
+reminder of breakfast.
+
+It was when he came back from his plunge in the pool that he first
+noticed a paper pinned to his door-post. Within its folds his doom was
+penned!
+
+"Even you, dear Man, could not wish me the impossible! That superstition
+of my country is that to come true it must be the first wish of your
+fête day--and by one who loves you! Alas, my old servant had already
+wished--that he might get me started for home to-day! Clever
+Friedrich--for he had also packed! When you read this I shall be far on
+my way. You could never find me though you searched the earth--but you
+will never try! It is well as it is, for you see--it was not friendship
+after all!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And yet there was a sequel. During the following year there dropped to
+the man in his hard-pressed literary life, one of those errant plums
+from the political tree that now and then find their way to the right
+basket. He was named for an excellent diplomatic post. His friends
+congratulated him and talked a good deal about "material" and
+opportunities for "unique local color;" his wife chattered unceasingly
+about gowns and social details, while he armed himself, with the
+listless reticence that was become habit, to face new responsibilities
+and rather flavorless experiences. He had so withdrawn himself of late
+to the inner creative life that he moved in a kind of phantasmagoria of
+outer unrealities. It was the nearest to a comfortable adjustment for
+the mis-mating of such a marriage as his, but it was not the best of
+preparations for the discharge of public duties, and he walked toward
+his new future with reluctant feet, abstractedly. In some such mood as
+this, his mind bent on a problem of arrangement of fiction puppets,
+seeing "men as trees walking," he found himself one day making his bows
+at a court function. Along the line of royal highnesses and grand
+duchesses with his wife he moved, himself a string-pulled puppet,
+until--but who, in heaven's name is this?
+
+For one mad moment, as he looked into her eyes, he thought the tightened
+cord he sometimes felt tugging at his tired brain had snapped, and the
+images of sight and memory gone hopelessly confused. She stood near the
+end of the line with the princesses of secondary rank, and the jewels in
+her hair were not more scintillant than her eyes as he bent over her
+hand. She went a little pale, but she greeted him bravely, and when they
+found themselves unobserved for a moment she spoke to him in her soft,
+careful English:
+
+"You recognized me, you remember, for a play actor, and now you are come
+from the world's end to see me perform on my tiny stage! Alas, dear
+critic, since my last excursion, I am no longer letter perfect in my
+part!"
+
+They met but once again. It was in the crush of guests in the great hall
+where her old Prince, in the splendor of his decoration-covered coat,
+was waiting to hand her to her carriage. There was a brief time in which
+to snatch the doubtful sweetness of a few hurried words. She was leaving
+in the early morning for the petty Balkan province where her husband
+held a miniature sway, over a handful of half-savage subjects. Hardly
+more than a renewal of greeting and a farewell, and she was gone!
+
+As the old Prince wrapped her more carefully in her furs, and the
+carriage rolled away in the darkness, he spoke to her, somewhat puzzled:
+
+"I should be sorry to think the American Ambassador has been taking too
+much wine--as you well know, my knowledge of the barbarous English
+tongue is but limited, and yet--I thought, as I joined you, he was
+talking some farrago of nonsense about a _Yellow Cat_!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That year the Yellow Cat came home lean and gaunt, a chastened, humble
+creature, as one who has failed in a long quest, and is glad to stretch
+his weary length before the hearth and reap the neglected benefits of
+the domestic life.
+
+"It is really very odd" said the minister, quite as if he were saying
+something he had never thought of saying before, "where that cat goes in
+the summer!"
+
+"Isn't it?" responded the minister's wife--just as she always did. "It
+fires the imagination! He walks off some fine morning and completely
+shuts the door on our life here--as if he gave us notice not to pry into
+his movements. But this time"--she was leaning to stroke the tawny sides
+with a pitying touch--"this time you may be sure something very sad and
+disappointing happened to him--something in that other life went quite
+wrong! How I wish we could understand what it was!"
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+A COCK AND POLICEMAN
+
+A Tale of Rural England
+
+By RALPH KAYE ASSHETON
+
+
+IT HAPPENED up in Lancashire, and the truth can be vouched for by at
+least half a hundred spectators. It fell in this wise: Bob O' Tims owned
+a game-cock which was the envy of the whole street for lustre of
+coloring and soundness of wind. Its owner was almost unduly proud of his
+possession, and would watch it admiringly as it stalked majestically
+about among its family of hens.
+
+"There's a cock for you!" he would say, with a little wave of his pipe.
+"There's not many cocks like that one. The king himself has got nothing
+like it down at Windsor Castle."
+
+Now, Jimmy Taylor had always been a rival of Bob O' Tims's. Jimmy's
+grandfather had fought at the Battle of Waterloo. This gave him great
+prestige, and it was almost universally believed, in Chellowdene, that
+the preëminence of the British Empire was mainly due to the battle-zeal
+of Jimmy's ancestry. But whenever Jimmy talked about his grandfather,
+Bob skilfully turned the conversation to his game-cock. This made Jimmy
+testy, and one day he told Bob, in contemptuous tones, that "he'd be
+even wi' him yet, in the matter o' game-cocks, as well as everything
+else."
+
+That was one Monday evening, and the following Wednesday Bob O' Tims's
+cock disappeared. When Bob discovered his loss, his face went quite pale
+with anger. Without a word, he flung on his cap and set off for Jimmy
+Taylor's cottage.
+
+When he reached it, he went still whiter. For Jimmy was sitting at the
+door, and up and down the yard in front of him strutted a magnificent
+game-cock.
+
+Bob O' Tims stretched out his forefinger, pointed at the cock, and with
+a stubborn look forming about his mouth and jaw, observed:
+
+"Yon's mine."
+
+"It isn't," responded Jimmy. "It's mine."
+
+"I tell thee, yon's mine. Yo've prigged it."
+
+"It's mine! I bought it at th' fair."
+
+"Thee never bought yon cock at any fair. It's mine, I tell thee."
+
+Words grew high between the disputants, as the cock, in all its bronze
+and golden splendor, marched up and down the yard, until the argument
+between the two men terminated in a quarrel so violent that half-a-dozen
+neighbors came in to see what was the matter. It ended in Bob O' Tims
+insisting that he would take the matter into court. He was as good as
+his word, and the next time that the bench met, Bob O' Tims summoned
+Jimmy Taylor on a charge of having stolen his game-cock.
+
+The magistrates listened to the witnesses on either side. Half-a-dozen
+people were ready to swear that the cock belonged to Bob. But Jimmy
+brought up a couple of witnesses to testify that they had seen him buy a
+similar animal at Turton Fair. The cock was then brought into court. It
+clucked and choked indignantly, and the partisans of Bob and Jimmy swore
+against each other as hard as ever they could. The bench appeared
+perplexed; and it was owing to their inability to come to any decision
+that the magistrate's clerk made his famous suggestion.
+
+"The case appears to me impossible to prove as it stands, your
+worships," he said to the bench. "I would suggest, if I may be allowed,
+that you direct an officer of the court to take the cock to some spot at
+an equal distance between the houses of the plaintiff and of the
+defendant. If he is there placed upon the ground, and left to his own
+devices, he is pretty sure to make his way straight home."
+
+The magistrates accepted the suggestion of the clerk, and gave judgment
+accordingly. A policeman was ordered to carry out their instructions.
+Now, this officer was young and raw, and had only recently been enrolled
+in the constabulary. He was a fat, rosy man, with an air of
+self-importance. He set out from the court with the cock under his arm.
+An excited crowd streamed after the policeman, who stalked on with no
+little pomposity. When he reached the common, which lay between the
+houses of the rival claimants, he stood still for a minute or two,
+grasping the cock and looking judiciously from one side of the broken
+land to the other.
+
+The crowd eagerly commenced to give information.
+
+"You're a bit nearer Bob O' Tims's than you are to Jimmy's!" cried one.
+
+"Nay! Nay!" interposed another spectator, who was a partisan of Bob O'
+Tims. "There's a corner to turn afore you get to Bob's. It's not fair,
+not to make allowance for that."
+
+"Stand back!" cried the policeman majestically--"Stand back, every man
+of you. The critter will be too much put about to go anywhere if you
+don't keep still tongues in your heads."
+
+The officer still stood, with his legs wide apart, turning his head
+slowly from side to side. Once he made a pace in the direction of Jimmy
+Taylor's; then, changing his mind, he took a couple of steps toward Bob
+O' Tims's. Finally, he decided that he had fixed upon the exact locality
+commanded by the law, and with a magisterial air, he again waved back
+the crowd and deposited the cock upon the ground in front of him.
+
+Everybody held their breath. The first thing that the cock did was to
+shake himself until he resembled nothing so much as a living mop. Then
+he began to smooth his feathers down again. Then he stretched his neck,
+flapped his wings and crowed. Finally, with a blink of his bright eyes,
+which almost appeared like a wink to the hushed and expectant crowd, he
+made two solemn steps with his slender legs in the direction of Jimmy
+Taylor's cottage.
+
+"He's going to Jimmy's!" exclaimed the crowd with one voice.
+
+"Can't you all be quiet for a moment or two," interposed the policeman,
+indignantly. "I tell you, if you don't keep still, you'll upset the
+critter's mind, and make the magistrates' decision just good for
+nothing."
+
+The crowd appeared ashamed and relapsed once more into silence.
+
+The policeman stood erect and tall, a few paces in front of them,
+watching the cock with great solemnity. It was standing still now,
+jerking its neck a little. Then it looked round, and, retracing its
+paces, began stepping slowly off in the opposite direction.
+
+"It's going to Bob's!" cried the crowd.
+
+But the cock was doing no such thing; it paused again, scratching in an
+imaginary dust-heap, and then, with a loud crow, stretched its wings and
+flew up into a small tree.
+
+This was disconcerting. The policeman turned with anger upon the crowd.
+
+"I told you you were not giving the critter a chance!" he exclaimed.
+"You'd best be off home. Come, move on! Move on!"
+
+The crowd retreated, but it had no intention of going home. Some of
+those less interested strolled away, but the partisans of Bob and Jimmy
+remained at a little distance, eagerly watching to see what would happen
+next.
+
+The cock, after jerking his head round several times, settled down
+comfortably among his feathers, and went to sleep in the tree.
+
+This was altogether beyond the expectancy of the policeman. Not knowing
+what else to do, he sat down on a broken bit of fence under the tree and
+waited.
+
+The day advanced. The cock slept on and the policeman began to doze. Now
+and then he awoke with a start, and looked up at the obstinate biped
+above his head. Presently the man got down from the fence and shook
+himself.
+
+The partisans of Bob and Jimmy still remained at a discreet distance,
+watching the progress of events. The policeman stood still for a few
+moments, staring at the cock; then he approached the small, stumpy tree
+and clapped his hands vigorously.
+
+The cock woke up, gurgled, and went to sleep again.
+
+The policeman clapped his hands a second time, and then with shrill
+indignation the creature flew down from the tree, and set off in the
+direction of the distant moors.
+
+The proceedings promptly assumed the aspect of a hunt. The cock ran
+along with outstretched wings and neck, and the policeman and the crowd
+ran after it. At last it reached a small cottage, belonging to a widow
+of the name of Gammer. Exerting a final effort, it flew up toward her
+open window and ensconced itself on the top of the good woman's
+tester-bed.
+
+Now Mrs. Gammer was a woman of character. She heard the noise outside;
+and when the breathless policeman arrived at the door of her kitchen,
+she was wiping the soapsuds off her plump red arms, ready for any
+dispute or fray. She stood with her arms held akimbo, as the man in blue
+explained his errand. When he had finished his recital she looked at him
+defiantly.
+
+"And I should like to know what you call yourself, policeman or no
+policeman, to be chasing a poor harmless critter across 'em blazing
+commons on a day like this! You want to go and poke him down from my
+tester-bed, do you? Well, you can just go back and tell the magistrates
+as Mrs. Gammer's got him, and if they want him they must come for him
+themselves."
+
+This was direct defiance of the law, and the policeman commenced a
+remonstrance. His remarks were, however, cut short by Mrs. Gammer.
+
+"I have always said as magistrates was as ignorant as babies, and I only
+wish that they was as harmless," she persisted, in open contempt of the
+government of her country. "You can go back, and tell 'em as Mrs. Gammer
+says so. My house is my house, magistrate or no magistrate, and I won't
+have any policeman messing about on the top of my tester-bed."
+
+The policeman was not certain whether the authority which had been
+entrusted to him in the matter would justify his making a deliberate
+prisoner of Mrs. Gammer. And, as she showed every sign of resorting to
+violence, should he attempt to pass the door, which she barred with her
+stout figure, he decided upon beating a retreat. He went outside again
+and reasserted his shattered dignity by once more driving away the
+crowd; then, not knowing what else to do, he returned to the police
+station and reported the matter to the chief constable.
+
+The chief laughed, and so did everybody else who heard the story. The
+policeman was directed to return to Mrs. Gammer's cottage later in the
+day, and serve her with an order requiring her to give up the cock
+immediately. But when he handed Mrs. Gammer the official paper, she
+laughed in his face.
+
+"You can look round the house for the cock now if you like," she said
+contemptuously, slapping down the order upon the table, "and you can see
+if you can find him."
+
+"Is he still on the top of your tester-bed?" demanded the policeman.
+
+"Go and look," responded Mrs. Gammer, with a snort. "You can take the
+turk's-head brush and brush him down!"
+
+So, armed with the turk's-head brush, the policeman ascended Mrs.
+Gammer's small, steep staircase. When he reached her bedroom, he poked
+into every cranny and corner with the handle of his brush. But no cock
+was to be found.
+
+He descended the stairs, and stood again in the little kitchen. A savory
+smell of cooking arose from a stew-pan on the fire.
+
+"Where's the critter gone to?" he demanded.
+
+"How should I know?" replied Mrs. Gammer testily.
+
+The policeman, still standing in the kitchen, wished that Mrs. Gammer
+would give him an invitation to supper. The widow glanced up sharply at
+him and saw what was in his mind.
+
+"You'd like some supper, I make no doubt, after your wild-goose chase,"
+she said. "Sit down at t' table and take a bit o' stew."
+
+The policeman seated himself with alacrity. The stew which Mrs. Gammer
+placed before him consisted of a mixture of barley, onions and some
+white meat. He ate a hearty supper, and when he stood up he drew his
+hands across his mouth.
+
+"Thank you kindly," he said. "I must be off now, and see where that cock
+has gone to."
+
+Then it was that Mrs. Gammer gave a short and derisive laugh. She began
+to pile up the empty plates and to put the spoons and forks in the basin
+by the sink.
+
+"If you go a-chasing of that cock until you are black and blue in the
+face," she said, "you'll never find him. And the reason why, is that you
+have just helped to eat him up."
+
+"I have eat him up!" he gasped.
+
+"Aye," responded Mrs. Gammer, with brevity. "I made him into soup!"
+
+The policeman remained open-mouthed, staring at the impenitent widow.
+
+"You'd no business ever to do such a thing," he said. "The cock belonged
+to the Law."
+
+"I care nowt for your Law," retorted Mrs. Gammer. "Anyway you've helped
+to eat him!"
+
+A vague sense of cannibalism was haunting the policeman's mind; he felt
+almost as dismayed as if he had made a hearty supper off the
+magistrate's clerk himself.
+
+"You're a very wicked woman," he said to Mrs. Gammer. "And--and----"
+
+He broke off, entirely nonplussed by the situation in which he found
+himself. Mrs. Gammer continued to wash up the spoons and forks with
+utter indifference to his consternation.
+
+"The cock's eat up, and there's an end of it," she said. "You'd best go
+and tell the magistrates all about it."
+
+Sheepish and disconcerted, the policeman slunk home. The next morning
+the chief asked him if he had served the order on Mrs. Gammer.
+
+"I--served it," said he, scratching his head.
+
+"And did you get the bird given up?" demanded his superior officer.
+
+"No, I can't say as I did," replied the policeman.
+
+"Was it still on the top of the tester-bed?" pursued his awkward
+questioner.
+
+"No. It was not on the tester-bed," replied the policeman.
+
+"Then where was it?" insisted the chief.
+
+For several seconds the policeman was silent, then he told a lie.
+
+"I canna say," he answered, "it war gone."
+
+The chief shrugged his shoulders, and sent the man about the business of
+the day. The next time that the magistrates met, the question of Bob O'
+Tims's cock was again brought into court. The magistrate's clerk
+demanded if the case were settled.
+
+To the great relief of the policeman, who was waiting in attendance, Bob
+O' Tims spoke up from the spot where he stood.
+
+"Jim hadna stolen my cock after all, sir," he said, "for it came home
+the next morning."
+
+"Then what happened to the cock that was brought into court on Tuesday?"
+demanded the magistrate's clerk. But nobody seemed to know.
+
+Only, people used to wonder why Widow Gammer almost always gave a
+peculiar kind of snort when she spoke of Police Constable X, and why
+that worthy officer avoided her cottage ever after, and invariably
+turned down a side street if he saw the widow within speaking distance
+of him.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+PRISONERS IN THE TOWER
+
+An Episode of Travel
+
+By LUCY COPINGER
+
+
+"IN THE words of Macaulay this, ladies and gentleman, is the saddest
+spot on earth." The white-haired old Tower guard in charge of the little
+chapel of Saint Peter waved his hand impressively toward the open door.
+"Through that door"--the heads of the American tourists who were doing
+the Tower all turned in unison--"you may see the block upon which many a
+royal head has rested, and beneath these very stones lie buried two
+dukes between two queens--Dukes of Northumberland and of Somerset, with
+the Queens Anne Boleyn and Katherine Howard--all beheaded."
+
+The chapel was a crypt-like place, windowless, dark, and musty, and at
+this mournful climax one of the tourists who was nervous moved suddenly
+off that particular stone upon which she had been standing; the school
+teachers out for self-improvement began to write it all in their
+note-books, while a stout matron evidently of good old Dutch stock
+looked sadly down at the flat, gray stones. "Poor things!" she murmured,
+"and there ain't one of them got a respectable white tombstone with a
+wreath carved on it." Then, in their usual two-by-two line, the party
+moved down the aisle wearily, but triumphant in the fact that they had
+succeeded in doing the Tower, the Abbey, and the Museum all in one day.
+Peggy Wynne, in demurely severe blue suit and jaunty panama, lagged at
+the end of the line while she looked critically at her compatriots.
+
+ "The animals went out two by two,
+ The elephant and the kangaroo,"
+
+she murmured to herself, "and I'm so tired of playing Noah's Ark or a
+Christian Association out for a lark," she continued in unconscious
+poetical despair. Then, warned by the attitude of the guard, that
+wonderful attitude of the haughty Briton in hopes of a tip, she opened
+her ridiculously tiny gold-linked purse and gave herself up to the
+absorbing question as to which of the pieces therein was a shilling.
+Having at last decided this, she presented it to the guard with a
+dazzling smile. It had been so long since Peggy had had an opportunity
+to smile at anything masculine that the smile was unusually bright.
+
+She had already passed through the little door when she suddenly turned
+back. The other tourists, noses in Baedekers, were hurrying on before,
+the guard was busily counting his sixpences, and she slipped back into
+the dim chapel unperceived.
+
+"They'll think I've gone back to those dingy lodgings," she reflected,
+as she groped her way between the benches into an even more shadowy
+corner--a little recess, with a tiny niche in the wall, that had
+probably been the sanctuary of some pious king. She seated herself
+comfortably behind the pillar in the corner and gazed pensively at the
+stones.
+
+"Tombs and tombs and tombs!" she murmured mournfully, "even in Paris,
+instead of Maxim's and the cafes, nothing but tombs! The next time I want
+to see where anybody is buried I will just go out to the cemetery instead
+of coming across that dreadful ocean. Oh, just to have one adventure
+before I go home!" she continued with a long sigh, "a real adventure with
+a real man in it--not a horrid, womanish Frenchman or a stolid, conceited
+Britisher, but a nice, safe American--like--like--like--my American."
+
+Then the dimple in her right cheek that was probably responsible for the
+calling her Peggy, in spite of her many protests for her rightful
+dignity of "Margaret," came out suddenly as it always did when she
+thought of her American. She had called him that from the time when, in
+the midst of the perplexities of the English luggage system, she had
+looked up and found him watching her. The cut of his gray suit and his
+shoes had told her his nationality at once, and they had looked for a
+moment at each other with that peculiar friendliness that compatriots in
+a strange land always feel. She had forgotten him until, leaning from a
+taxi-cab in the Rue de la Paix, she had met the same eyes, this time so
+unrefrainedly joyful in their recognition that she had suddenly blushed.
+When, a week later at Calais, as she stood by the rail of the departing
+Channel steamer she caught a glimpse of him on the dock, he had seemed
+like an old friend, and before she had thought she had smiled in answer
+to his lifted hat. She had grown so sure of seeing him that now when
+they had been in London a week and he had not appeared she found herself
+suddenly sick of tombs and tourists.
+
+Peggy's day had been a strenuous one of trams, motor-busses, abbeys, and
+galleries, and though she realized an adventure might probably await her
+outside, it was pleasant to sit for awhile in the dimness of the quiet
+chapel. From her recess she could look out through the open doors upon
+the tragic Tower Green, where in the sunlight two sparrows were
+frivolously flirting. Even as she watched, the sparrows grew dim, her
+ridiculously tiny purse slipped from her hand, her head with its thick
+dark hair dropped against the pillar, and her lashes touched her cheek.
+After awhile a cautious footfall sounded in the chapel, then somewhere a
+heavy door closed, and all was still.
+
+When Peggy sat up indignantly with the queer sensation that she had been
+violently shaken, darkness surrounded her, a darkness so deep that she
+could not see her hand as she ran it along the bench in front of her.
+With the movement came remembrance of her surroundings, and also a
+realization in strained and aching muscles that a stone pillar is not a
+wise choice for a head-rest.
+
+"Oh!" she gasped painfully.
+
+"Don't be frightened," entreated a voice quite near to her, and out of
+the lesser darkness a tall black figure rose suddenly.
+
+"I am not at all frightened," said Peggy at once. In spite of the
+bigness of the figure there was something reassuring in the voice with
+its crisp, humorous note and its intonation that Peggy at once
+recognized as American.
+
+"What are you doing here?" she continued, inhospitably addressing the
+darkness before her.
+
+"I went to sleep" the voice explained, "on the other side of the
+pillar."
+
+"How silly!" said Peggy, severely, "didn't you see me here?"
+
+"It was a little dim," the voice apologized and, Peggy's silence still
+condemning, "you should have snored," it continued extenuatingly.
+
+Peggy arose with a dignity that she hoped penetrated the darkness. Then
+she groped along the bench.
+
+"My purse," she explained anxiously, "and it had a sixpence for tea and
+two shillings for tips," she continued with an unconscious epitome of
+the joys of traveling. As she groped along bench and floor she was
+conscious of assistance from her companion, and just as she grasped the
+discovered purse she felt purse and hand caught and retained in a firm
+grip.
+
+"I apologize," he said at once, still however, holding on to her hand,
+"I thought it was the purse."
+
+Peggy jerked her hand loose indignantly, and speechless with wrath she
+hurried toward the door only to find that she had mistaken her
+direction. In her effort to recover her bearings she become hopelessly
+confused, stumbled noisily over a bench, and fell headlong into the arms
+of her companion.
+
+"You had better sit down again," he remarked coolly as he returned her
+to her seat and sat down calmly beside her. As he did so Peggy noted
+curiously the dim attractive silhouette of his head and the remarkably
+good line from ear to shoulder.
+
+"I am going at once," she said haughtily, but without moving.
+
+"You can't," the man beside her replied, "and if you promise not to cry
+or fall over any more benches I will tell you why--although I myself do
+not object to the latter," he continued judicially, "but for the sake of
+your own bones, merely."
+
+Peggy ignored the last.
+
+"Why can't I go?" she said defiantly.
+
+"Because the door is locked," he explained succinctly.
+
+"We can both scream or you can throw a bench through the window," said
+Peggy triumphantly.
+
+The unseen laughed a nice laugh that Peggy liked.
+
+"In that latter case, beside the fact that there is no window, we would
+surely be had up before the head-warden of this old jail. Besides, do
+you know what time it is?"
+
+"About tea time," said Peggy who had lunched frugally at one of the
+tea-shops on a cup of tea and a jam roll.
+
+"Just before you woke up," said her companion, "I used my last match--it
+always is the last in a case like this--to look at my watch. It was
+half-past twelve. Remember, you promised----" at a warning gurgle from
+Peggy.
+
+Then suddenly a laugh rang out sweet and clear in the darkness of the
+musty chapel, a laugh that echoed into the recesses of the old
+tombs--perhaps in its musical cadences stirring pleasantly the haughty
+slumber of their noble occupants.
+
+"What are you laughing at?" said the voice suspiciously.
+
+"An adventure at last!" Peggy cried, clapping her hands applaudingly.
+
+"I am glad you take it so cheerfully," returned her companion. "There is
+only one thing to do," he continued practically, "I thought it out for
+myself before you woke up and complicated matters by your appearance. Of
+course with sufficient yelling we can arouse the barrack sentry, and for
+our pains we'd probably have the whole barrack out to arrest us. There
+is no way in which you can offend the noble and independent Briton more
+deeply than by treating lightly his worship of royalty, dead or alive,
+and we would probably be held for committing _lese majeste_ by getting
+ourselves locked up with the numerous relicts of Henry the Eighth. But
+if we wait until morning we can run good chances of slipping out
+unperceived with the first crowd of tourists."
+
+"I feel just like the little princes in the Tower, or Queen Mary or
+Charlotte Corday," murmured Peggy in ecstatic historical confusion, "or
+somebody noble and romantic and beheaded. I think I shall play at being
+Queen Mary. I once learned a piece about her. It was very sad, but I
+always stuck at the fifth line and had to sit down. Since we have to
+stay here till morning we might as well amuse ourselves and you may be
+Rizzio."
+
+"Who was he?" asked her companion sceptically, "sounds like one of those
+Italian fellows."
+
+"He was Queen Mary's chaperon," Peggy explained vaguely, "and he sang
+her love songs."
+
+"Good," said the voice agreeably.
+
+"Can't you think of something else for me?" said the unseen, gloomily
+appalled by the prospect of having doughnut recipes pronounced over his
+remains.
+
+"How would you like to be Darnley?" said Peggy. "He was her husband."
+"I'll be Darnley," came from the darkness so decidedly that Peggy
+jumped.
+
+"You have to get blown-up right off," she hastened to add. "Darnley
+did."
+
+"Oh he did, did he?" the voice spoke with deeper gloom.
+
+"Queen Mary did it," added Peggy.
+
+"Well, even in the Dark Ages matrimony seems to have given your sex the
+same privileges," philosophized her companion cynically.
+
+"How mean!" said Peggy coldly, "I shall play at being Elizabeth all
+alone."
+
+"It wouldn't suit you," said her discarded leading man, "not with your
+voice."
+
+"Why not?" said Peggy.
+
+"Because it's not hard and cold and metallic enough. Because it has too
+much womanly sweetness in it and not enough harsh masculinity."
+
+"What a good dramatic critic you would make!" said Peggy a little
+spitefully, "and since you are reading voices I can tell quite well by
+yours that you are fat and red faced."
+
+The man laughed.
+
+"And by the same token you are all sweetness and blue eyes and dearness
+and dimples," he punished her. Then the banter in his tones died
+suddenly out.
+
+"There's something I want to tell you," he said abruptly, with a
+movement that seemed in the darkness like a sudden squaring of his
+shoulders. "But first I want you to tell me your name."
+
+"What a sudden descent from romance and poetry to mere stupid facts,"
+hedged Peggy. "Think, in this atmosphere of royalties if it should be
+Bridget, or, still more horrible, Mamie."
+
+"Please," the voice persisted in its gravity, "we have been
+fellow-prisoners, you know, and you should be kind."
+
+Peggy told him with the full three-syllabled dignity of the "Margaret."
+
+"Mine," he continued, "is John Barrett."
+
+"Now," cried Peggy, "if this were a proper adventure we have reached the
+place when I should be able to say, 'Why! not the Jack Barrett that
+Brother Billy knew at Harvard?' Then you would cry, 'And this is my old
+chum William's little sister Peggy that used to send him fudge!' and
+then everything would be all right. But I haven't any brother at all,"
+she finished regretfully.
+
+"And Harvard wasn't my college," said her companion. "However," he went
+on, "it would take more than the conventional backing of many brother
+Billies to put me right with you after I've told you what I have to tell
+you."
+
+"Then don't do it," said Peggy softly.
+
+"If I didn't know you'd find it out in a very few minutes I wouldn't,"
+he confessed shamelessly. "But before I tell you I want you to know what
+finding you here meant to me. You've got to realize the temptation
+before you can understand the fall. You always got away from me, from
+that first time in Liverpool----"
+
+"Oh!" said Peggy with a gasp.
+
+"And at Paris and at Calais when you smiled adorably at me----"
+
+"I didn't" said Peggy, blushing in the darkness.
+
+"When you didn't smile adorably at me, then," pursued the voice
+relentlessly. "It was always the same. I found you and you were
+gone--snatched away by an unkind fate in the form of your man from
+Cook's. When you sailed away from me at Calais I was booked to leave
+that same day from Antwerp, but I came on here after you instead. London
+is small--the American tourist London, that is--the Abbey, the Museum,
+the galleries, and the Tower, but I seemed to miss you everywhere. It
+was fate again that sent me here to find you asleep in the corner."
+
+"Now I know you are going to tell something very foolish," said Peggy
+reflectively, "when people begin to talk about fate like that you always
+find they are just trying to shift the responsibility."
+
+"I want you to know it wasn't premeditated, however," pursued the voice.
+"It wasn't till the guard shut the door that I thought of it. You will
+believe that, won't you?" he pleaded.
+
+The dimple appeared suddenly in Peggy's cheek. There came an echo from
+without of many footsteps.
+
+"And so," she took up the tale quickly, "having nicely planned it all
+out you shook me rudely to wake me up, told me the door was locked, and
+that it was midnight when it was only four in the afternoon. And it
+wasn't at all necessary to shake me so hard," she continued, "because I
+woke up when you came in."
+
+"Peggy you knew!" the voice cried with a sudden realization, "you knew
+and you stayed!" He caught her hand, and in the darkness she could feel
+his nearness. Then suddenly the door opened letting into the chapel a
+flood of bright sunlight. "Ladies and gentlemen," the sonorous voice of
+the old guard came to them, "this, in the words of Macaulay, is the
+saddest spot on earth," continued the mournful recital, even as, in
+happy contradiction, Peggy and her American, secure in their little
+recess, looked blissfully into each other's eyes.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+SANKEY'S DOUBLE-HEADER
+
+A Winter's Tale
+
+By FRANK H. SPEARMAN
+
+
+THE oldest man in the train service didn't pretend to say how long
+Sankey had worked for the company. Pat Francis was a very old conductor;
+but old man Sankey was a veteran when Pat Francis began braking. Sankey
+ran a passenger train when Jimmie Brady was running--and Jimmie
+afterward enlisted and was killed in the Custer fight.
+
+There was an odd tradition about Sankey's name. He was a tall, swarthy
+fellow, and carried the blood of a Sioux chief in his veins. It was in
+the time of the Black Hills excitement, when railroad men, struck by the
+gold fever, were abandoning their trains even at way-stations and
+striking across the divide for Clark's Crossing. Men to run the trains
+were hard to get, and Tom Porter, trainmaster, was putting in every man
+he could pick up without reference to age or color. Porter (he died at
+Julesburg afterward) was a great "jollier," and he wasn't afraid of
+anybody on earth. One day a war party of Sioux clattered into town and
+tore around like a storm. They threatened to scalp everything, even to
+the local tickets. They dashed in on Tom Porter, sitting in the
+despatcher's office upstairs, while the despatcher was hiding below,
+under a loose plank in the baggage-room floor. Tom, being bald as a
+sand-hill, considered himself exempt from scalping parties anyway. He
+was working a game of solitaire when they bore down on him, and got them
+interested in it. That led to a parley, which ended by Porter's hiring
+the whole band to brake on freight trains. Old man Sankey was said to
+have been one of that original war party.
+
+Now this is merely a caboose story, told on winter nights when trainmen
+get stalled in the snow that drifts down from the Sioux country. But
+what follows is better attested.
+
+Sankey, to start with, had a peculiar name--an unpronounceable,
+unspellable, unmanageable name. I never heard it, so I can't give it to
+you; but it was as hard to catch as an Indian pony, and that name made
+more trouble on the payrolls than all the other names put together.
+Nobody at headquarters could handle it; it was never turned in twice
+alike, and they were always writing Tom Porter about the thing. Tom
+explained several times that it was Sitting Bull's ambassador who was
+drawing that money, and that he usually signed the pay-roll with a
+tomahawk. But nobody at Omaha ever knew how to take a joke. The first
+time Tom went down, he was called in very solemnly to explain again
+about the name, and being in a hurry and very tired of the whole
+business, Tom spluttered: "Hang it, don't bother me any more about that
+name! If you can't read it make it Sankey, and be done with it."
+
+They took Tom at his word. They actually did make it Sankey; and that's
+how our oldest conductor came to bear the name of the famous singer. And
+more I may tell you: good name as it was--and is--the Sioux never
+disgraced it.
+
+I suppose every old traveler on the system knew Sankey. He was not only
+always ready to answer questions; but, what is more, ready to answer the
+same question twice. It is that which makes conductors gray-headed and
+spoils their chances for heaven--answering the same questions over and
+over again. Children were apt to be startled a bit at first sight of
+Sankey, he was so dark. But Sankey had a very quiet smile that always
+made them friends after the first trip through the sleepers, and they
+sometimes ran about asking for him after he had left the train. Of late
+years--and this hurts a bit--these very same children, grown ever so
+much bigger, and riding again to or from California or Japan or
+Australia, will ask, when they reach the West End, about the Indian
+conductor. But the conductors who now run the overland trains pause at
+the question, checking over the date limits on the margins of the coupon
+tickets, and handing the envelopes back, look at the children, and say
+quietly: "He isn't running any more."
+
+If you have ever gone over our line to the mountains or to the coast,
+you may remember at McCloud, where they change engines and set the diner
+in or out, the pretty little green park to the east of the depot, with a
+row of catalpa trees along the platform line. It looks like a glass of
+spring water. If it happened to be Sankey's run and a regular West End
+day, sunny and delightful, you would be sure to see standing under the
+catalpas a shy, dark-skinned girl of fourteen or fifteen years, silently
+watching the preparations for the departure of the Overland. And after
+the new engine had been backed champing down, and harnessed to its long
+string of vestibuled sleepers; after the air-hose had been connected and
+examined; after the engineer had swung out of his cab, filled his cups,
+and swung in again; after the fireman and his helper had disposed of
+their slice-bar and shovel and given the tender a final sprinkle, and
+after the conductor had walked leisurely forward, compared time with the
+engineer, and cried, "All Abo-o-o-ard!" then, as your coach moved slowly
+ahead, you might notice, under the receding catalpas, the little girl
+waving a parasol or a handkerchief at the outgoing train. That is, at
+Conductor Sankey; for she was his daughter, Neeta Sankey. Her mother was
+Spanish, and died when Neeta was a wee bit. Neeta and the Limited were
+Sankey's whole world.
+
+When Georgie Sinclair began pulling the Limited, running west opposite
+Foley, he struck up a great friendship with Sankey. Sankey, though he
+was hard to start, was full of early-day stories. Georgie, it seemed,
+had the faculty of getting him to talk; perhaps because when he was
+pulling Sankey's train he made extraordinary efforts to keep on time;
+time was a hobby with Sankey. Foley said he was so careful of it that he
+let his watch stop when he was off duty just to save time. Sankey loved
+to breast the winds and the floods and the snows, and if he could get
+home pretty near on schedule, with everybody else late, he was happy;
+and in respect of that, as Sankey used to say, Georgie Sinclair could
+come nearer gratifying Sankey's ambition than any engine-runner we had.
+Even the firemen used to observe that the young engineer, always neat,
+looked still neater on the days when he took out Sankey's train.
+
+By and by there was an introduction under the catalpas. After that it
+was noticed that Georgie began wearing gloves on the engine--not kid
+gloves, but yellow dogskin; and black silk shirts--he bought them in
+Denver. Then--such an odd way engineers have of paying compliments--when
+Georgie pulled into town on Number Two, if it was Sankey's train, the
+big sky-scraper would give a short, hoarse scream, a most peculiar note,
+just as it drew past Sankey's house, which stood on the brow of the hill
+west of the yards. Thus Neeta would know that Number Two and her father,
+and naturally Mr. Sinclair, were in again, and all safe and sound.
+
+When the railway trainmen held their division fair at McCloud there was
+a lantern to be voted to the most popular conductor--a gold-plated
+lantern with a green curtain in the globe. Cal Stewart and Ben Doton,
+who were very swell conductors and great rivals, were the favorites, and
+had the town divided over their chances for winning it. But at the last
+moment Georgie Sinclair stepped up to the booth and cast a storm of
+votes for old man Sankey. Doton's friends and Stewart's laughed at
+first; but Sankey's votes kept pouring in amazingly. The two favorites
+got frightened; they pooled their issues by throwing Stewart's vote to
+Doton. But it wouldn't do. Georgie Sinclair, with a crowd of
+engineers--Cameron, Kennedy, Foley, Bat Mullen, and Burns--came back at
+them with such a swing that in the final five minutes they fairly
+swamped Doton. Sankey took the lantern by a thousand votes. But I
+understood it cost Georgie and his friends a pot of money.
+
+Sankey said all the time that he didn't want the lantern, but just the
+same he always carried that particular lantern, with his full name,
+Sylvester Sankey, ground into the glass just below the green mantle.
+Pretty soon, Neeta being then eighteen, it was rumored that Sinclair was
+engaged to Miss Sankey, and was going to marry her. And marry her he
+did; though that was not until after the wreck in the Blackwood gorge
+after the Big Snow.
+
+It goes by just that name on the West End yet; for never were such a
+winter and such a snow known on the plains and in the mountains. One
+train on the northern division was stalled six weeks that winter, and
+one whole coach was chopped up for kindling wood. The great and
+desperate effort of the company was to hold open the main line, the
+artery which connected the two coasts. It was a hard winter on trainmen.
+Week after week the snow kept falling and blowing. The trick was not to
+clear the line; it was to keep it clear. Every day we sent out trains
+with the fear that we should not see them again for a week. Freight we
+didn't pretend to move; local passenger business had to be abandoned.
+Coal, to keep our engines and our towns supplied, we had to carry; and
+after that all the brains and muscle and motive power were centered on
+keeping One and Two, our through passenger trains, running.
+
+Our trainmen worked like Americans; there were no cowards on our rolls.
+But after too long a strain men become exhausted, benumbed, indifferent;
+reckless, even. The nerves give out, and will-power seems to halt on
+indecision; but decision is the life of the fast train. None of our
+conductors stood the hopeless fight like Sankey. He was patient,
+taciturn, untiring; and in a conflict with the elements, ferocious. All
+the fighting blood of his ancestors seemed to course again in that
+struggle with the winter king. I can see him yet, on bitter days,
+standing alongside the track in a heavy pea-jacket and Napoleon boots, a
+sealskin cap drawn snugly over his straight black hair, watching,
+ordering, signaling, while Number One, with its frost-bitten sleepers
+behind a rotary, tried to buck through ten and twenty-foot cuts which
+lay bank-full of snow west of McCloud.
+
+Not until April did it begin to look as if we should win out. A dozen
+times the line was all but choked on us. And then, when snow-plows were
+disabled and train crews desperate, there came a storm that discounted
+the worst blizzard of the winter. As the reports rolled in on the
+morning of the 5th, growing worse as they grew thicker, Neighbor,
+dragged out, played out, mentally and physically, threw up his hands. It
+snowed all day the 6th, and on Saturday morning the section men reported
+thirty feet in the Blackwood cañon. It was six o'clock when we got the
+word, and daylight before we got the rotary against it. They bucked away
+till noon without much headway, and came in with their gear smashed and
+a driving-rod fractured. It looked as if we were at last beaten. Number
+One pulled into McCloud that day eighteen hours late; it was Sankey's
+and Sinclair's run west.
+
+There was a long council in the round-house. The rotary was knocked out;
+coal was running low in the chutes. If the line wasn't kept open for the
+coal from the mountains, it was plain we should be tied until we could
+ship it from Iowa or Missouri. West of Medicine Pole there was another
+big rotary working east, with plenty of coal behind her; but she was
+reported stuck fast in the Cheyenne Hills. Foley made suggestions, and
+Dad Sinclair made suggestions. Everybody had a suggestion left. The
+trouble was, Neighbor said, they didn't amount to anything, or were
+impossible. "It's a dead block, boys," announced Neighbor sullenly after
+everybody had done. "We are beaten unless we can get Number One through
+to-day. Look there: by the holy poker, it's snowing again."
+
+The air was dark in a minute with whirling clouds. Men turned to the
+windows and quit talking. Every fellow felt the same--hopeless; at
+least, all but one. Sankey, sitting back of the stove, was making
+tracings with a piece of chalk. "You might as well unload your
+passengers, Sankey," said Neighbor. "You'll never get 'em through this
+winter."
+
+And it was then that Sankey proposed his double-header.
+
+He devised a snow-plow which combined in one monster ram about all the
+good material we had left, and submitted the scheme to Neighbor.
+Neighbor studied it, and hacked at it all he could, and brought it over
+to the office. It was like staking everything on the last cast of the
+dice, but we were in the state of mind which precedes a desperate
+venture. It was talked over an hour, and orders were finally given by
+the superintendent to rig up the double-header and get against the snow
+with it.
+
+All that day and most of the night Neighbor worked twenty men on
+Sankey's device. By Sunday morning it was in such shape that we began to
+take heart. "If she don't get through, she'll sure get back again, and
+that's what most of 'em don't do," growled Neighbor, as he and Sankey
+showed the new ram to the engineers.
+
+They had taken the 566, George Sinclair's engine, for one head, and
+Burns's, the 497, for the other. Behind these were Kennedy, with the
+314, and Cameron, with the 296. The engines were set in pairs, headed
+each way, and buckled up like pack mules. Over the pilots and stacks of
+the head engines rose the tremendous plows, which were to tackle the
+worst drifts ever recorded, before or since, on the West End. The ram
+was designed to work both ways. Under the coal, each tender was loaded
+with pig-iron.
+
+The beleaguered passengers on Number One, side-tracked in the yards,
+eagerly watched the preparations Sankey was making to clear the line.
+Every amateur on the train had his camera out taking pictures of the
+ram. The town, gathered in a single great mob, looked silently on, and
+listened to the frosty notes of the sky-scrapers as they went through
+their preliminary manoeuvers. Just as the final word was given by
+Sankey, conductor in charge, the sun burst through the fleecy clouds,
+and a wild cheer followed the ram out of the western yard; it was looked
+on as a sign of good luck to see the sun again.
+
+Little Neeta, up on the hill, must have seen them as they pulled out.
+Surely she heard the choppy ice-bitten screech of the 566; for that was
+never forgotten, whether the service was special or regular. Besides,
+the head cab of the ram carried this time not only Georgie Sinclair, but
+her father as well. Sankey could handle a slice-bar as well as a punch,
+and rode on the head engine, where, if anywhere, the big chances would
+come. What Sankey was not capable of in the train-service we never knew,
+because he rose superior to every emergency that ever confronted him.
+
+Bucking snow is principally brute force; there is very little coaxing.
+West of the bluffs there was a volley of sharp tooting, like code
+signals between a fleet of cruisers, and in just a minute the four
+ponderous engines, two of them in the back motion, fires white and
+throats bursting, steamed wildly into the cañon. Six hundred feet from
+the first cut, Sinclair's whistle signaled again. Burns and Cameron and
+Kennedy answered; and then, literally turning the monster ram loose
+against the dazzling mountain, the crews settled themselves for the
+shock.
+
+At such a moment there is nothing to be done. If anything goes wrong,
+eternity is too close to consider. There came a muffled drumming on the
+steam-chests; a stagger and a terrific impact; and then the recoil, like
+the stroke of a trip-hammer. The snow shot into the air fifty feet, and
+the wind carried a cloud of fleecy confusion over the ram and out of the
+cut. The cabs were buried in white, and the great steel frames of the
+engines sprung like knitting-needles under the frightful force of the
+blow. Pausing for hardly a breath, they began the signaling again; then
+backed up and up and up the line; and again the massive machines were
+hurled screaming into the cut. "We're getting there, Georgie," cried
+Sankey when the rolling and lurching had stopped.
+
+No one else could tell a thing about it, for it was snow and snow and
+snow; above and behind and ahead and beneath. Sinclair coughed the
+flakes out of his eyes and nose and mouth like a baffled collie. He
+looked doubtful of the claim until the mist had blown clear and the
+quivering monsters were again recalled for a dash. Then it was plain
+that Sankey's instinct was right; they were gaining.
+
+Again they went in, lifting a very avalanche over the stacks, packing
+the banks of the cut with walls hard as ice. Again, as the drivers
+stuck, they raced in a frenzy, and into the shriek of the wind went the
+unearthly scrape of the overloaded safeties. Slowly and sullenly the
+machines were backed again. "She's doing the work, Georgie," cried
+Sankey. "For that kind of a cut she's as good as a rotary. Look
+everything over now while I go back and see how the boys are standing
+it. Then we'll give her one more, and give it the hardest kind."
+
+And they did give her one more; and another. Men at Santiago put up no
+stouter fight than these men made that Sunday morning in the cañon of
+the Blackwood. Once they went in, and twice. And the second time the
+bumping drummed more deeply; the drivers held, pushed, panted, and
+gained against the white wall; heaved and stumbled ahead; and with a
+yell from Sinclair and Sankey and the fireman, the double-header shot
+her nose into the clear over the Blackwood gorge. As engine after engine
+flew past the divided walls each cab took up the cry; it was the wildest
+crowd that ever danced to victory. Through they went and half-way across
+the bridge before they could check their monster catapult. Then, at a
+half full, they shot it back again at the cut, for it worked as well one
+way as the other.
+
+"The thing is done," declared Sankey, when they got into position up the
+line for a final shoot to clean out the eastern cut and get head for a
+dash across the bridge and into the west end of the cañon, where there
+lay another mountain of snow to split. "Look the machines over pretty
+close, boys," said he to the engineers. "If nothing's sprung, we'll take
+a full head across the gorge--the bridge will carry anything--and buck
+the west cut. Then after we get Number One through this afternoon,
+Neighbor can put his baby cabs in here and keep 'em chasing all night.
+But it's done snowing," he added, looking at the leaden sky.
+
+He had the plans all figured out for the master mechanic, the shrewd,
+kindly old man. I think, myself, there's no man on earth like a good
+Indian; and, for that matter, none like a bad one. Sankey knew by a
+military instinct just what had to be done and how to do it. If he had
+lived, he was to have been assistant superintendent. That was the word
+that leaked from headquarters afterward. And with a volley of jokes
+between the cabs and a laughing and yelling between toots, down went
+Sankey's double-header again into the Blackwood gorge.
+
+At the same moment, by an awful misunderstanding of orders, down came
+the big rotary from the west end with a dozen cars of coal behind. Mile
+after mile it had wormed east toward Sankey's ram, and it now burrowed
+through the western cut of the Blackwood, crashed through the drift
+Sankey was aiming for, and whirled out into the open, dead against him,
+at forty miles an hour. Each train, in order to make the grade and the
+blockade against it, was straining the cylinders.
+
+Through the swirling snow that half hid the bridge and interposed
+between the rushing plows Sinclair saw them coming. He yelled. Sankey
+saw them a fraction of a second later, and while Sinclair struggled with
+the throttle and the air, Sankey gave the alarm through the whistle to
+the poor fellows in the blind pockets behind. But the track was at the
+worst. Where there was no snow there were "whiskers"; oil itself
+couldn't have been worse to stop on. It was the old and deadly peril of
+fighting blockades from both ends on a single track. The great rams of
+steel and fire had done their work, and with their common enemy
+overcome, they dashed at each other like madmen across the Blackwood
+gorge.
+
+The fireman at the first cry shot out the side. Sankey yelled at
+Sinclair to jump. But Georgie shook his head: he never would jump.
+Without hesitating, Sankey picked him from the levers in his arms,
+planted a sure foot, and hurled him like a coal shovel through the
+gangway far out into the gorge. The other cabs were already empty. But
+the instant's delay in front cost Sankey his life. Before he himself
+could jump the rotary crashed into the 566. They reared like mountain
+lions, pitched sideways and fell headlong into the creek, fifty feet.
+Sankey went under them. He could have saved himself; he chose to save
+George. There wasn't time to do both; he had to choose, and to choose
+instantly. Did he, maybe, think in that flash of Neeta and of whom she
+needed most--of a young and a stalwart protector rather than an old and
+failing one? I do not know; I know only what he did. Every one who
+jumped got clear. Sinclair lit in ten feet of snow, and they pulled him
+out with a rope: he wasn't scratched. Even the bridge was not badly
+strained. Number One pulled over it next day.
+
+Sankey was right; there was no more snow; not even enough to cover the
+dead engines that lay on the rocks. But the line was open: the fight was
+won.
+
+There never was a funeral in McCloud like Sankey's. George Sinclair and
+Neeta followed first, and of the mourners there were as many as there
+were spectators. Every engine on the division carried black for thirty
+days.
+
+Sankey's contrivance for fighting snow has never yet been beaten on the
+high line. It is perilous to go against a drift behind it: something has
+to give. But it gets there, as Sankey got there--always; and in time of
+blockade and desperation on the West End they still send out Sankey's
+double-header; though Sankey, as the conductors tell the children,
+traveling east or traveling west--Sankey isn't running any more.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+AUNT MARY TELEGRAPHS
+
+A Comedy of Everyday Life
+
+By LLOYD E. LONERGAN
+
+
+ "AUNTIE left on the six-o'clock train last night. Meet her at the
+ depot.--CLARA."
+
+This telegram, dated New York, greeted Frank Carey when he reached his
+pleasant little home on Indiana Avenue, Chicago.
+
+"Aunt Mary will be here to-night," he said to his wife, "my rich aunt
+from New York, you know. I am to meet her at the depot."
+
+"When does she arrive?" fluttered pretty little Mrs. Carey, a bride of a
+few months. "Cannot I go with you to the depot?"
+
+Mr. Carey said she could, then he thought for a moment, then he put his
+doubts into words after a second reading of the telegram.
+
+"I wonder what road she is coming in on?" he said.
+
+"'Twas stupid of her," replied his wife, "but call up the railroads and
+find out which one has a six-o'clock train from New York. Silly!"
+
+Mr. Carey kissed his wife and remarked that she was the brightest little
+girl in the world, after which he gaily telephoned, listened intently to
+someone on the other end of the line, made numerous notes, and turned to
+his wife in despair.
+
+"Bless Clara!" he said devoutly.
+
+His wife looked surprised, so he hastily explained.
+
+"There is a six o'clock train from New York on the Pennsylvania, also on
+the Lake Shore, likewise on the Michigan Central, and the Lehigh
+Valley, and the Grand Trunk, and the West Shore, and the B. &. O.!"
+
+"Which one is auntie coming on?" inquired Mrs. Carey with interest.
+
+"All of them," replied her husband wrathfully. "She is sitting on the
+cow-catcher of each and every train, and if I'm not there to meet her
+she'll disinherit me. Haven't you any sense?"
+
+Whereupon there were tears, apologies, and finally a council of war. It
+was Mrs. Carey who solved the problem.
+
+"All we have to do," she cried, "is to meet all the trains. Won't it be
+cute?"
+
+Carey didn't think so, but was afraid to express himself. He simply
+tried to look impressed and listened.
+
+"There are only seven trains," she continued. "Now you," counting on her
+fingers, "are one, and I am two and Mr. and Mrs. Haines next door, who
+belong to my whist club, are four; and Ella Haines is five; and I just
+saw Mr. What's-his-name go in to call on Ella--and he'll be six; and
+that horrid man on the next block who is in your lodge will have to be
+seven."
+
+The "train meeters" were gathered together inside of an hour. Mrs. Carey
+overruled all objections and laughed away all difficulties. She told
+them it would be a lark, and they believed it--at the time! As none of
+them had met Mrs. Smith (Aunt Mary), Carey was called upon for a
+description.
+
+"Aunt Mary," he said, "is of medium height, dark complexion and usually
+dresses in black. She is fifty-eight years old, but tells people she is
+under fifty. You cannot miss her." And with this they were compelled to
+be satisfied.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ella Haines was assigned to the Pennsylvania depot and arrived late. All
+the New York passengers had disembarked, but an old woman was standing
+at the entrance and looking anxiously at the passers-by.
+
+"Mrs. Smith?" said Ella, inquiringly.
+
+"Thank heaven, you have come," was the joyous reply.
+
+"Here," and she stepped to one side and revealed a little girl who was
+gazing out at the tracks. "I've had such a time with that brat and I'll
+never travel with another again. I've just got time to catch my train
+for St. Paul. Good-bye!" Whereupon, disregarding Ella's cries and her
+protestations, the woman rushed madly to the other end of the depot and
+disappeared through a gate which closed behind her with a slam. It was
+the last call for the St. Paul train.
+
+Naturally, Ella did not know what to do. She hung around the depot for
+half an hour, hoping someone would claim the child. Then she put the
+little one in a cab and gave the Careys' address in Indiana Avenue.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Walter Haines went to the Lake Shore depot. One of the first passengers
+to emerge from the New York train was a female, who seemed to answer the
+general description furnished by Carey. She was breathless as if from
+running faster than an old woman should run. As she reached Haines, she
+stopped and glared at him.
+
+"Mrs. Smith?" he inquired, lifting his hat.
+
+The woman grabbed him by the arm. "I knew you would be here, but hurry,
+that man is after me!"
+
+"What man?" asked Haines in surprise.
+
+"Hush, we cannot talk now," was the reply. "Get a carriage and drive
+fast, fast; we must escape him."
+
+"George couldn't come, he sent me. My name is Haines," said the puzzled
+escort.
+
+"I don't care if your name is Beelzebub" was the impatient retort. "You
+get that carriage or I'll write to Roosevelt." And Mr. Haines, very much
+astonished, complied.
+
+He thought as he drove away that he heard someone shouting, but was not
+sure; in fact, he paid no attention, for he was too busy thinking what a
+queer old aunt his friend Carey had.
+
+The "horrid man who belonged to the lodge" was named Perkins. He reached
+the B. & O. depot half an hour ahead of time, so he went across the
+street and had a drink. When he returned he discovered that No. 7 was
+late, and so had another. Also, several more. By the time the train did
+arrive he was in such a mellow state that he couldn't tell a parlor car
+from a lake steamer--and he didn't care! He had likewise forgotten what
+George's aunt looked like, but that, too, was a trivial matter. So he
+stood at the gate, beaming blandly at every person that appeared.
+
+"Are you Georsh's saunt?" he inquired of a tall man with white
+side-whiskers and garbed in ministerial black. His answer was a look of
+horror, but it had no effect on Perkins, who repeated his question at
+intervals without result. His lack of success finally drove him to
+tears.
+
+"Poor Georsh!" he sobbed. "Dear old Georsh! Must have an naunt! Break
+hish heart if he don't have an naunt! Can't fine his naunt! Get him one
+myself!"
+
+A gang of immigrants were passing at the time. Perkins grabbed one of
+them by the arm.
+
+"Be nish fellow," he said persuasively, "be Georsh's aunt."
+
+The immigrant was obdurate, but Perkins was persistent. He drew a roll
+of bills from his pocket and peeled off a five. This he pressed upon his
+new-found friend.
+
+"Be a good aunt," he said, "be a nish aunt, and I'll give you two more
+like thish!"
+
+The Italian, overcome by the sight of so much wealth, fell captive to
+the eloquence of Perkins. The latter was delighted. He escorted his
+victim to a saloon across the street and hurled six drinks into him in
+rapid succession. The immigrant beamed and forgot all his troubles. He
+lit a fifteen-cent cigar and puffed away as if he were used to it.
+
+"Be your-a aunt," he said, "be-a anybody's aunt. You good-a feller."
+
+This sentiment led to another round of drinks, and then the pair tumbled
+into a cab, singing discordantly in two languages. Perkins fortunately
+remembered the address of Haines, and was able to mumble it so that the
+hackman could understand. Therefore there was no bar to his enjoyment.
+
+Of course they stopped en route, for Perkins was brimming over with
+gratitude and the cabman was included in their rejoicing. Long before
+they reached Indiana Avenue, everybody was drunk except the horse.
+
+In the meantime there was all sorts of trouble in the modest residence
+of George Carey. The head of the household had fumed and fretted about
+the Michigan Central depot, and finally started home, auntless. There he
+met his wife, Mrs. Haines and Ella's young man with similar stories.
+Five minutes later a carriage drove up and Ella and her charge alighted.
+
+"Isn't she a dear little girl?" gurgled Miss Haines, who, being petite
+and worried, didn't know anything else to do under the circumstances
+except to gurgle.
+
+Carey gazed at the young woman with distinct disapproval for the first
+time in his life.
+
+"I know the popular impression is that old ladies shrink," he said, "but
+Aunt Mary could never have shrunk to that size. Where did you get her
+and why?"
+
+Falteringly, Miss Haines explained. Then she cried. The child, who had
+regarded them gravely up to this point, took it for a signal. She
+screamed, then she roared. Nobody could comfort her or find out who she
+was.
+
+The arrival of another cab distracted their attention. The bell rang
+loudly. As Carey opened the door, an old woman bounded in. Her hat was
+on one side of her head and her eyes gleamed madly.
+
+"Safe at last!" she cried. Then she ran upstairs, entered Mrs. Haines's
+room, and locked the door. Through the panels came the sound of
+hysterical laughter.
+
+Walter Haines entered the house at this moment. His attitude was
+distinctly apologetic.
+
+"Remarkable old lady, isn't she?" he ventured.
+
+"Who?" asked Mr. Carey.
+
+"Why your aunt, of course; didn't you see her come in?"
+
+Carey choked down his wrath out of respect to the ladies, but it was
+hard work.
+
+"I never saw that woman before," he remarked; "you brought her here
+uninvited, now you take her away."
+
+Naturally this provoked argument. Mrs. Haines sided with her husband,
+Mrs. Carey flew to the aid of her worser half, Miss Haines wept, and the
+little girl screamed. Upstairs, the bogus Aunt Mary was still laughing.
+
+None of the interested parties could tell afterward how long the talk
+continued. A louder noise outside drew them all to the front porch. In
+front of the house was a hansom cab drawn by a disgusted-looking horse.
+He looked and acted like one who had been compelled against his will to
+mingle with disreputable associates.
+
+The driver descended from his seat and fell full length upon the
+pavement. He didn't try to get up, but chanted in a husky tone, "Hail!
+hail! the gang's all here!!!"
+
+Then the door of the cab opened and Mr. Perkins appeared. Nobody could
+deny that he was very much the worse for wear. But Mr. Perkins bore
+himself like a conqueror. He advanced hastily and embraced Carey with
+enthusiasm. Carey recoiled.
+
+"Dear Georsh," said Perkins. "Got you an naunt!"
+
+Apprehensively, Carey ran to the carriage. Huddled upon the floor was an
+object that moved faintly. From the atmosphere Sherlock Holmes would
+have deduced that a whisky refinery had exploded in that cab a few hours
+before. The onlooker gingerly touched the object. It rolled over, then
+it rolled out of the cab and lay on the sidewalk beside the driver.
+
+Perkins kept on smiling. "Your naunt," he remarked, blandly. "Couldn't
+get you what you wanted. Got you thish one!"
+
+At this moment, Carey remembered that he had a telephone. He spurned his
+"aunt" with his foot and passed into the house. He called up Police
+Headquarters. His friend, Sergeant Bob O'Rourke, was on duty, which made
+it easier for him.
+
+"Bob," he said, after greetings had been exchanged, "have you an alarm
+out for a little girl kidnapped from the Pennsylvania station?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And does anybody want a crazy woman, last seen on a Lake Shore train?"
+
+"Yes; her keeper was here half an hour ago," was the reply. "He was
+taking her to Kankakee and she made a get-away. What do you know about
+her?"
+
+"They are both here," was the reply. "Send the wagon, and just for good
+measure I'll throw in an Italian immigrant who came in over the B. & O.
+and a cab-driver. They are both drunk, very drunk, and please take the
+cab away too."
+
+The next half hour gave Indiana Avenue residents plenty to talk about
+for a month. But finally the combat was over, and Carey and his friends
+sat down exhausted.
+
+"But what I would like to know," remarked the head of the house, "where,
+oh where is Aunt Mary?"
+
+It was a messenger-boy who brought the answer--a telegram dated Niagara
+Falls, current date and reading:
+
+ "Stopped over here. Isn't the view from Goat Island wonderful? Leave
+ for Chicago on the first train. Meet me."
+
+There was a sudden painful silence.
+
+"Does anybody know how many trains there are from Niagara Falls?"
+inquired Mrs. Carey, speaking to the company generally. She didn't dare
+to address her husband.
+
+"Just about as many as there are from New York," replied Haines, with a
+woebegone look. "But--"
+
+"Don't finish it," returned Carey, "I am not going to ask you to try
+again, and I am not going to do so myself. Aunt Mary can leave her money
+to anybody she pleases. If I had another night like this the executors
+would be compelled to mail me my cheque to an asylum."
+
+And the next evening Aunt Mary, unattended, reached her nephew's house
+without any trouble at all. She didn't disinherit him; in fact, she felt
+so sorry because of his troubles that she bought Mrs. Carey a complete
+spring outfit regardless of cost.
+
+It's a good thing to have an Aunt Mary, even if she is indefinite in her
+telegrams.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+THE VENGEANCE OF THE WOLF
+
+A Drama in Wales
+
+By J. AQUILA KEMPSTER
+
+
+IN THE great stone hall of Llangarth, Daurn-ap-Tavis, the old Welsh Wolf
+lay dying. Outside was the night and a sullen gale whose winds came
+moaning down the hills and clung about the house with little bodeful
+whispers that grew to long-drawn eerie wails, while pettish rain-squalls
+spent their spite in futile gusts on door and casement.
+
+And through the night from time to time a horseman came, spurring hard
+and spitting out strange Welsh oaths at the winds that harried him. Five
+had passed the door since sun-down, four worthy sons and a nephew of the
+Wolf. They stood now booted and spurred about the old man's couch, a
+rough-looking crew with the mud caking them from head to foot, while the
+leaping flames from the log fire flung their shadows black and distorted
+far up among the rafters.
+
+They hung around him sullenly, but as he looked them up and down the
+sick man's eyes took on a new keenness and a low, throaty laugh that was
+half a growl escaped him.
+
+"Well, Cedric, man, what devil's game have you been playing of late?
+and, Tad, you black rascal--ah, 'twas a pity you were born to Gruffydd
+instead of me. Well, well, boys, the old Wolf's cornered at last,
+cornered at last, and Garm, Levin, Rhys--the Cadwallader's going to live
+and laugh, aye, he's going to live and laugh while a Tavis roasts in
+hell."
+
+Garm started with a low growl, while Cedric kicked savagely at a hound
+that lay beside the logs.
+
+"Aye, Ced, kick the old dog, but it won't stop the Cadwallader's laugh."
+
+Cedric clenched his fists at the taunt and his face grew purple in the
+fire glow, but old Daurn went on remorselessly: "Twenty years he's
+laughed at the Wolf and his whelps, an' think you he'll stop now? He was
+always too lucky for me. I thought when my lads grew strong---- But
+there, he laid me low, the only man that ever did, curse him! There's
+the mark, boys; see the shamed blood rise to it?"
+
+He loosened his shirt with a fretful jerk and they bent over and
+glowered at the red scar which ran across his chest. They had all seen
+it times before, knew the dark quarrel and the darker fight, had tingled
+with shame again and again, but to-night it seemed to hold an added
+sting, for the Wolf was going out with his debt unpaid.
+
+Cedric, the elder, gaped and shuddered, then fell to cursing again, but
+Daurn drew back the quilt and went on talking: "I swore by the body of
+God to get even, and day and night I've watched my chance. I tried at
+Tredegar, and that night ye all mind at Ebbu Vale. Yes, I tell you a
+dozen times, but he's a fox, curse him! a sly old fox, and now the
+Wolf's teeth are broken. What's that, Ced? Look to him, Tad--aye, look
+to all thy cousins. Fine grown lads, big, brave, and fierce, but the
+Cadwallader still lives and laughs; yes, laughs at old Daurn and his
+boys. My God! to think of it."
+
+"Curse me! choke me!" Cedric stormed out in spluttering fury, gripping
+his sword with one hand while he dragged at his coat with the other.
+"I'll cut--cut his bl-black gizzard, blast him. I'm a c-c-coward, eh!
+Right in my t-teeth! Well, wait till th'-th' dawn an' see."
+
+He had crammed his hat over his eyes and with coat buttoned all awry was
+half way to the door before Tad caught and held him, whispering in his
+ear: "Steady, Ced, steady. He's got some plan or I'm a fool. Come back
+an' wait a bit, an' if I'm mistaken I'll surely ride along with ye."
+
+Cedric yielded, doubtful and sullen, but Daurn greeted him bravely:
+"God's truth, lad, you've the spirit of the Wolf at least, but you've
+got no brains to plan. Come close an' listen, an' if ye truly want a
+fight thy father'll never balk thee."
+
+Then with faltering breath but gleaming eyes he unfolded the plan he had
+conceived to make his dying a thing of greater infamy than all his
+bloody days.
+
+The beginnings of the feud between the House of the Wolf and that of
+Llyn Gethin, the Cadwallader, were so remote that probably both had
+forgotten, if they ever knew them, for the old Welsh chieftains passed
+their quarrels on from generation to generation and their hot blood
+rarely cooled in the passing. Llyn was about the only man in the country
+who had been able to hold his own against "the Tavis," but hold it he
+had with perhaps a trifle to spare. Indeed, of late years he had let
+slip many an opportunity for reprisals, and thrice had made overtures of
+peace which had been violently rejected. Llyn had fought fair at least,
+even if he had struck hard, but the life of the Wolf had been as
+treacherous as it was bloody. And day by day and year by year, as
+Daurn's strength began to fail and brooding took the place of action,
+the bitterness of his hatred grew, and out of this at last the plan. It
+was simple.
+
+Daurn was old, dying, and weary of the strife. He would pass at peace
+with the world and particularly with his ancient foe. A messenger should
+be sent inviting Llyn and his sons to Llangarth. They would suspect
+nothing, for all Wales knew the Wolf lay low--would probably come
+unarmed and needs must, as time was short, travel by night. Well, there
+was a convenient and lonely spot some three miles from Llangarth--did
+the lads understand? Aye, they understood, but their breath came heavily
+and they glanced furtively each at the other, while the youngest, Rhys,
+shivered and drew closer to Tad.
+
+Daurn's burning eyes questioned them one by one, and one by one they
+bowed their heads but spake never a word.
+
+"Ye'll swear to it, lads," he whispered hoarsely, and drew a long dagger
+from beneath his pillow. For answer there came the rattle of loosened
+steel, and as he again bared his breast they drew closer in a half
+circle, laying their blades flat above his heart, his own dagger adding
+to the ring of steel.
+
+And then they swore by things unknown to modern men to wipe out the
+shame that had lain so long upon their house, and that before their
+father died.
+
+As their voices ceased the wind outside seemed to take up the burden of
+their bloody oath as if possessed, for it shrieked and wailed down the
+great chimney like some living thing in pain. And then, in a little lull
+following on the sobbing cry, there came a curious straining push that
+shook the closed oak door.
+
+They stood transfixed, for a moment daunted, with their swords half in
+and half out their scabbards, till with a warning gesture to his
+cousins, Black Tad stole softly across the floor and, lifting the heavy
+bar cautiously, opened the door.
+
+He paused an instant on the lintel, motionless and rigid to the point of
+his sword, his eyes fixed on the white face of a girl who was cowered
+back against the further wall. For a fraction of time he hesitated, but
+the awful anguish of the face and the mute, desperate appeal of the
+whole pose settled him. With a rough clatter he sprang into the dim
+passage, rattling his sword and stamping his feet, at the same time
+giving vent with his lips to the yelp of a hound in pain, and following
+it with rough curses and vituperation. Then, without another glance at
+the girl, he re-entered the hall and slammed to the door, grumbling at
+Rhys for not keeping his dogs tied up.
+
+By one o'clock the great hall was still. The men were lying scattered
+about the house, for the most part sleeping as heavily as many jorums of
+rum made possible.
+
+But the firelight flickering in the hall caught ever an answering gleam
+from the old Wolf's eyes as he lay there gray, shaggy, and watchful.
+From time to time his bony fingers plucked restlessly at his beard, and
+now and again his lips stretched back over yellow teeth in an evil smile
+as he gloated over the details of his coming vengeance.
+
+And out in a chill upper hall Gwenith, the fair daughter of a black
+house, sat in a deep embrasure, her arms clinging to the heavy oak bars
+desperately. The wind moaned and sighed about her while her white
+terrified lips echoed the agony of her heart. And the burden of her
+whispered cry was ever, "Davy!--Davy!" and then: "For the Christ's sake!
+Davy!--Davy!--Davy!"
+
+So the night drew on with the men and dogs sleeping torpidly; with the
+old Wolf chuckling grimly as the shadows closed about him, and with the
+child in the cold above sobbing out pitiful prayers for her lover, for
+only yesterday she had plighted her troth to Davy Gethin, the
+Cadwallader's youngest son.
+
+These two had met in the early days when she wandered free over the
+rolling hills, a wild young kilted sprite, fearful of nothing save her
+father and his grim sons. And Davy had wooed her ardently, though in
+secret from the first. It had been charming enough in the past despite
+the fear that ever made her say him nay. Then yesterday he had won her
+from her tears and fears, won her by his brave and tender front, and she
+had placed her little hands on his breast and sworn to follow him
+despite all else when once her father had passed away. And now, twelve
+short hours after her fingers had touched him, her fear had caught her
+by the throat, for they would kill him surely, her prince, the only joy
+she had ever known.
+
+So went the night, with desperate distracted plans, and the dumb agony
+of cold despair. And in the very early dawn, when men and things cling
+close to sleep, she heard a gentle stirring--a muffled footfall on the
+stairs, and Black Tad stood at her side, a great shadow, questioning
+her.
+
+"Mistress, what heard you?"
+
+And she answered quick with loathing: "All! all the vile, shameful
+thing!"
+
+"They are our foes" he muttered moodily.
+
+"Foes! Foes! Nay, none of you are worthy any foe--save the hangman! Ah,
+God will curse you! Cruel! Cruel!"
+
+She leaned out of her seat toward him, her panting breath and fierce
+words lashing him so that he stepped back a pace, dazed--she was ever
+such a gentle child.
+
+"What would you, Gwen?"
+
+"What would I! My God!--a fair fight at least. Oh, Tad, and I thought
+you were a brave man."
+
+"I--I--damme, I, what can I do?--and what does it matter?"
+
+"Matter?--a foul blot!--matter to you and Ced and father--nothing!
+Murderers! I hate you all! What has the Cadwallader done? All Wales
+knows 'twas ever father set on him, not he on father--Always!--always, I
+say! Aye, I remember that bloody night at Ebbu Vale. Shame! Shame! And
+the harrying and burning at Rhyll, when the mother and her babes
+perished. No, you weren't there, Tad, but you know and I know who was.
+Ah, Tad, she's crying to God--that mother, and holding the little dead
+things in her hands, close up to his face. And now you'd murder Llyn,
+for all he's ever been for peace."
+
+"Hush-s-sh! not so loud, Gwen."
+
+"Not so loud! not so loud!" she jibed bitterly. "If you fear my poor
+voice now, what will it be when all Wales is ringing with this last foul
+deed?"
+
+Tad breathed hard, then caught her wrists suddenly, crushing them in his
+fierceness: "Listen, Gwenith. After all I'm no Tavis--I'm Gruffydd, and
+I love you."
+
+She shrank away with wide, fearful eyes, her breath coming in little
+painful gasps.
+
+"What--what do you mean, Tad?"
+
+"I love you, Gwen."
+
+"And----?"
+
+"Well, I'm no Tavis--I'm Gruffydd."
+
+Slowly the meaning which he himself hardly understood dawned on her.
+
+"You'll save them, Tad?"
+
+"Na, na. A fair fight is what you said. 'Tis all I can do."
+
+"And you will?"
+
+"I love you," he persisted stubbornly.
+
+She closed her eyes tightly and leaned back against the wooden shutter,
+her hands still held close in his grasp. And she strove to see clearly
+through the mist of horror and pain. It was a chance, at least a
+fighting chance, to save Davy, her prince; the only chance, the only
+way, and outside that what else mattered?
+
+Her eyes opened and her lips trembled; then she got her strength back
+and faced him in the dim dawn.
+
+"My life for theirs, Tad,--is that it?"
+
+Her eyes and her question shamed him, but he clung to his text doggedly,
+for he had loved her long and hopelessly in his wild, stubborn way, and
+this was his first and only desperate chance.
+
+"I love ye, Gwenith, I love ye!"
+
+There came a stir in the far hall, a long-drawn yawn; and at the sound
+the girl whispered fiercely: "Well, it's a bargain; give them fair
+warning and I'll--I'll do--give you your will. Yes, I swear it by the
+dear Saint David. Quick! let me go--no, not now!--Tad, I command you,
+I--I--Quick! that's Garm's voice; let me go."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Llyn Gethin! a word in your ear before we ride on."
+
+It was Tad who spoke to the old Cadwallader out in the moonlight. Llyn
+had answered Daurn's urgent message for peace, and a few miles north of
+Llangarth had met Tad. At the words the old man looked at him curiously,
+but reined his horse in, while his sons watched the pair suspiciously,
+for they were young, their blood and their hate still ran hotly, and
+save for their father would have had none of this death-bed
+reconciliation.
+
+"Well, lad, what is it?" asked Llyn, when they were out of earshot.
+
+"A word of warning, sir--from one who hates you."
+
+"Ah! You were ever a good hater, boy. What is it?"
+
+"'Tis a trick o 'mine, sir--this visit--and you'd better ride back."
+
+"I think not, Tad."
+
+"Well, have your way, but if you ride with me you ride to hell."
+
+"We ride with you, Tad."
+
+"Your blood be on you and your sons, then, Llyn Gethin. You're safe to
+the stone bridge; after that fend for yourself. I--I'm a cursed traitor,
+but, by David, I strike with my house. There, I've warned you, and God
+forgive me."
+
+"Amen, lad! Will you shake hands before we ride?"
+
+"No, choke me! I'd sooner ding my dagger in your neck."
+
+So they rejoined the waiting group and rode forward, Tad moodily in
+advance, Llyn and his sons in a whispering bunch some yards behind. It
+had been Tad's own suggestion that he ride forward and meet the Gethins
+so they might be lured the more easily to the turn beyond the bridge.
+Now they followed on till they saw the white masonry gleaming in the
+moonlight, and then the dark form of Tad's horse crossing it, when there
+was a halt and a grim tightening of belts and loosening of swords. And
+as the man on the bridge threw up his arm, Llyn answered the sign
+hoarsely: "God keep thee, son of Gruffydd!" he cried. Then as his sons
+closed in he turned on them sternly: "Remember, lads! who touches him
+touches me. Ah! steady now! Forward!"
+
+Even as they clattered on the bridge Tad's challenge and signal to his
+kinsmen rang out furiously:
+
+"The Wolf! The Wolf and Saint David!"
+
+Then came a rush of horse and steel and wild-eyed men, which but for
+their preparation would have swept the Gethins down. As it was they met
+it fiercely as it came. They had not come unarmed--perhaps wise old Llyn
+distrusted such late penitence even as did his sons. Be that as it may,
+the cry of "Cadwallader!" rose against "The Wolf!" and bore it back, for
+even in the first wild rush, Cedric fell away before a long, swift
+thrust, and a moment later Rhys, the youngest of the house went down and
+died beneath the stamping iron hoofs.
+
+When Llyn saw this he called to stop the fight, but Tad, in a frenzy of
+horror and remorse, flung on again with Garth and Levin striking wild
+beside him. 'Twas a wicked rush, but now the fight stood five to three,
+and in the crash Levin slipped and got a dagger in his throat, while Tad
+spurred through an open way. Then as he reined and turned, the end was
+come, for Garm's shrill death-cry tore the air, and he was left alone.
+
+Thrice he charged like a wounded boar, shouting hoarsely for the house
+he had betrayed. "The Wolf! The Wolf! Saint David and the Wolf!"
+
+And ever he found that open way and ever their steel avoided him.
+
+At last he reined in his sweating mare and fell to cursing, his face
+distraught with agony and wet with blood and sweat and tears. So he
+stood, desperate--at bay, and taunted them with every vileness his
+furious tongue could frame. Then faltered at last with a great
+heartbroken sob, for they sat silent and still and would not give him
+fight.
+
+On the road at his horse's feet Cedric lay and Rhys, and over yonder in
+the grass the other two. He swayed weakly as he looked, then slid from
+his saddle and stooping, kissed his cousins one by one, with those grim,
+silent figures looking on. He broke his sword across his knee--his
+father, Gruffydd's sword--and flung the pieces with an oath at Llyn.
+Then, ere they could guess his meaning, his dagger flashed, and with a
+last weak cry for "the Wolf," he fell with the men of his House.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Back at Llangarth the great hall was aglow and Daurn chuckled and waited
+and plucked at his beard, till, just past midnight, there came a sudden
+commotion and the heavy tramp of horses in the outer court. Then Gwenith
+ran in white and wild, and kneeling, buried her sobs in the drapery of
+the couch. And ere her father could question her a group of sombre
+figures filled the doorway.
+
+'Twas a dream--surely 'twas a fearful dream! Or were they ghosts? Yes,
+that was it; see the blood on them! He was either dreaming or these were
+the very dead.
+
+They drew up to the couch, Llyn and his tall, stern sons. Daurn knew
+them well and strove to curse them, but the Cadwallader's grave voice
+hushed him to a sudden fear.
+
+"Peace be with thee, Daurn-ap-Tavis, we come--to bid thee farewell."
+
+Daurn gasped and stuttered, his fingers clawing fearfully while a cold
+sweat broke out over his forehead. But ere he found his voice two of
+Llyn's sons, David and Sion, drew away to the door, and later, Llewellen
+and Pen. They came back heavily and laid their burdens gently by the
+fire logs and returned, then came again and went. Five times in all. And
+an awful fear was in Daurn's eyes as he glared at those still, muffled
+shapes lying close beside him in the firelight.
+
+Then Llyn spoke, slow and sorrowfully, as he stooped and one by one drew
+the face-cloths from the dead.
+
+"Peace be with thee, Daurn-ap-Tavis; thy son Cedric--bids thee farewell.
+
+"Rhys--bids thee farewell.
+
+"Also Tad, thy brother's son--bids thee farewell."
+
+But the end was come, for Daurn, with a little childish cry, had gone to
+seek his sons. Llyn stooped and gently closed the old Wolf's eyes, then
+with bent head and weary step passed from the room.
+
+But young Davy stole back softly and knelt near the stricken girl at the
+foot of the couch.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+THE WOOING OF BETTINA
+
+A Story of Finance
+
+By W.Y. SHEPPARD
+
+
+MR. PAUL STRUMLEY stood on the veranda of Mr. Richard Stokes's sumptuous
+home in the fashionable suburb of Lawrenceville and faced the daughter
+of the house indignantly. The daughter of the house was also plainly
+perturbed. Their mutual agitation was sharply accentuated by the fresh
+calmness of the spring morning, which seemed to hover like a north-bound
+bird over the wide, velvety lawn.
+
+"Bettina," announced Mr. Strumley suddenly, "your father is--is----"
+
+"An old goose."
+
+"No, a brute!"
+
+This explosion appeared momentarily to relieve his state of mind. But in
+his breast there was still left a sufficiency of outraged dignity to
+warm his cheeks hotly, and not by any means without an abundance of
+cause. Scarcely an hour before he had nervously, yet exultantly,
+alighted from his big touring car in front of the Commercial Bank, to
+seek the president of that institution in the sanctity of his private
+office. There, briefly but eloquently, he announced the engagement of
+Miss Bettina Stokes to Mr. Paul Strumley, and naïvely requested for the
+happy young people a full share of the parental sanction and blessing.
+And his callow confidence can hardly be condemned on recalling that he
+was one of the wealthiest and most popular young swains in the city. Mr.
+Stokes, however, did not seem to take this into consideration. On the
+contrary, he rose to the occasion with an outburst of disapprobation too
+inflammatory to be set on paper, and quickly followed it with a
+picturesque and uncompromising ultimatum. In the confused distress of
+the unexpected Mr. Strumley found himself unable to marshal a single
+specimen of logical refutation. He could only retreat in haste, to
+recover, if possible, at leisure.
+
+But this leisure, the time it had taken him to hurl the machine across
+town to Bettina, had proven sadly insufficient. When he rushed up the
+steps to the veranda, where sat the object of his affections rocking in
+beautiful serenity, he was still choking from indignation, and had found
+it hard to tell her in coherent sentences that her father had
+energetically refused the honor of an alliance with the highly
+respectable Strumley family.
+
+The grounds, however, on which had been based this unreasonable
+objection were of all things under the sun the most preposterous. Mr.
+Stokes had emphatically declared that his daughter's happiness was too
+dear to him to be foolishly entrusted to one who could not even manage
+his own affairs, let alone the affairs of a wife, and, presumably later,
+of a family. Mr. Strumley was rich at present, so much was readily
+conceded; but he was not capable himself of taking care of what a
+thrifty parent had laid by for him. He in his weak-mindedness was
+compelled to hire the brains of a mere substitute, a manager, if you
+prefer. Should anything happen, and such things happen every day, where
+would Mr. Strumley be? And where, pray, would be his wife and family? In
+the poorhouse!
+
+"My daughter is too good for a man who cannot manage his own concerns,"
+the irate father had summed up. "When you have shown yourself capable,
+my lad, of competing in the world with grown-up intellects, then there
+will be time enough for you to contemplate matrimony--and not until
+then. Good morning to you, Mr. Strumley."
+
+"And he snapped his jaws together like a vise," recalled Paul, coming
+out from his gloomy retrospection.
+
+"If he shut them so," and Bettina worked her pretty chin out to its
+farthest extension, "well, that means he is like the man from Missouri;
+you've got to show him before he changes his mind one iota."
+
+"I ought to have been humping over a desk from the start," regretted Mr.
+Strumley, feeling his bulging biceps dolefully. "It's all right stroking
+a crew, and heaps of fun, too, but it doesn't win you a wife. Now
+there's your dad, he couldn't pull a soap box across a bath tub; but he
+can pull through a 'deal' I couldn't budge with a hand-spike."
+
+Miss Bettina sighed sympathetically, and smiled appreciatively. She felt
+deeply for her lover, and was justly proud of such a capable parent.
+"Every one does say papa is an excellent business man," she remarked;
+"and he certainly can swing some wonderful deals. Only yesterday I
+accidentally overheard him telling Mr. Proctor that he held an option--I
+think that was the word--from Haynes, Forster & Company on thousands and
+thousands of acres of timber land in Arkansas. He said it would expire
+to-day at two o'clock, but that he was going to buy the land for
+cash--'spot cash' he said was what they demanded."
+
+Mr. Strumley smiled ruefully. "And I guess it will be some of my 'spot
+cash,'" he ruminated. "I am not saying anything against your father,
+Bettina, but if it wasn't for such idle good-for-nothings as myself, who
+let their money accumulate in his bank, I doubt if he could swing many
+of these 'big deals.' If we were like he wanted us to be, we'd be
+swinging them ourselves."
+
+After Mr. Strumley had finished his bit of philosophy, he fell to
+communing with himself. Apparently his own wisdom had stirred a new
+thought within his breast. It had. He was beginning to wonder what would
+happen if Bettina's father suddenly found himself bereft of sufficient
+"spot cash" to take advantage of this option. Anyone having a second
+call on same might be fortunate enough to swing the "big deal"--and
+profit by it, according to his intentions!
+
+"Paul," Bettina broke in upon his meditations, a little note of hopeful
+pleading in her voice, "it might not be too late for you to--to
+reform?"
+
+Mr. Strumley aroused himself with difficulty, and looked into her
+bewitching face before replying. Then: "Maybe you are right," he mused;
+"at any rate I have an idea." And kissing her thoughtfully, he strode
+down the steps toward where encouragingly panted his car.
+
+The car proudly bore Mr. Strumley and his idea to the brand-new offices
+of a certain young friend of his who had himself only recently
+metamorphosed from the shell to the swivel chair. Mr. Greenlee looked up
+in mute surprise. But Mr. Strumley ignored it and came to the point with
+a rush. Did Mr. Greenlee have twenty thousand dollars in cash to spare?
+He did? Good! Would he lend it to Mr. Strumley on gilt-edge collateral?
+Never mind exclamations; they had no market value. Eight per cent. did.
+Then Mr. Greenlee was willing to make the loan? That was talking
+business; and Mr. Strumley with the securities would call in two hours
+for the cash. That would give Mr. Greenlee ample time in which to get it
+from his bank--the Commercial.
+
+When outside Mr. Strumley allowed himself to smile. Suddenly this
+evidence of inward hilarity broadened into a heartily exploded greeting,
+as a familiar figure turned the corner and advanced directly toward him.
+It was another wealthy customer of the aforesaid bank.
+
+"I was just on my way to your office, Mr. Proctor," Paul announced
+pleasantly, at the same time cautiously drawing to one side the customer
+of the Commercial. "I intend investing heavily in real estate," he
+vouchsafed with admirable sang-froid; "and need, right away, in spot
+cash, about thirty thousand dollars. Have you got that much to spare at
+8 per cent., on first class security?"
+
+Eight per cent! Mr. Proctor's expression expanded. He made his living by
+lending money for much less. If dear Mr. Strumley would call at his
+office within two hours he should have it every cent--just as soon as he
+could get a check cashed at the Commercial.
+
+Next the faithful machine whirled Paul to the rooms of his staid
+attorney and general manager, Mr. John Edwards.
+
+That elderly gentleman welcomed him with his nearest approach to a
+smile. But the young man was in no mood for an elaborate exchange of
+exhilarations. Without preface he inquired the amount of his deposit
+subject to check in the Commercial Bank. Fifty thousand dollars! A most
+delightful sum. He needed it every cent within an hour. Also he wanted
+from his safe-deposit box enough A1 collateral to secure loans of twenty
+and thirty thousand, respectively. But first would Mr. Edwards kindly
+call up and get second option on all Arkansas timber lands represented
+by Haynes, Forster & Company? Mr. Strumley believed that the first
+option was held by a local party. Furthermore he knew it expired to-day;
+and had reasons to believe that a local party would not be able to take
+advantage of it, and he, Mr. Strumley, thought that he could handle the
+property to a good purpose.
+
+For the first time Mr. Edwards learned that his young client had a will
+of his own. After a few fruitless exhortations he rose to obey, but
+remarking: "Right much money in these hard times to withdraw in a lump
+from the bank." Then, with a sidelong glance at the grave, boyish face,
+he added significantly: "Know you would not do anything to jeopardize
+Mr. Stokes's financial standing."
+
+"Oh, a bagatelle like that wouldn't embarrass as shrewd and resourceful
+a business man as he," assured Paul breezily.
+
+"Money is pretty tight," mused the lawyer. But he called up Haynes,
+Forster & Company without further remonstrances and afterward went out
+to perform his commissions. Soon Mr. Strumley lighted a cigar and
+followed. There would be something doing in the way of entertainment
+presently in the neighborhood of the musty old Commercial Bank.
+
+In front of that institution he had the good fortune to meet the town
+miser, who seldom strayed far from the portals behind which reposed his
+hoard. Mr. Strumley halted to liberally wish the local celebrity an
+abundance of good health and many days of prosperity. Incidentally he
+noted through the massive doors that his three cash-seeking friends were
+in the line before the paying teller's window, the lawyer being last
+and Mr. Greenlee first. When the latter came out, still busily trying to
+cram the packages of bills properly in the satchel he carried, Paul
+remarked confidentially to his companion:
+
+"Must be something doing to-day. The big guns are drawing all of theirs
+out."
+
+The old fellow gave a start as the suggestion shot home. Before Paul
+could nurse it further, he had sprinted off up the street like mad,
+chattering to himself about the desirability of returning immediately
+with his certificates of deposit.
+
+It is an old adage that no one knows the genesis of a "run on the bank."
+Maybe Mr. Strumley was the exception which proves the validity of the
+rule. At any rate he considered with large satisfaction the magical
+gathering of a panic-inoculated crowd, which, sans courage, sans reason,
+sans everything but a thirst for the touch of their adored cash,
+clamored loudly, despairingly, for the instant return of their dearly
+beloved.
+
+At last through the meshes of the mad throng appeared the shiny pate of
+Mr. John Edwards. He uttered an exclamation of relief at the sight of
+his calm client.
+
+"Hope you got it before the storm broke?" Mr. Strumley greeted amiably.
+
+"S-s-sh!" cautioned the attorney dramatically. "I was about to go in
+search of you." Then he added in even a lower key: "Mr. Stokes asked me
+to persuade you not to withdraw the money until he had had a chance to
+get the flurry well in hand."
+
+"But the money is mine, and I want it now," expostulated the young man.
+
+"Come with me, please, and listen to reason," beseeched the lawyer,
+drawing him resolutely in the direction of a side entrance. "It would be
+a dire misfortune, sir, a calamity to the community, if the bank were
+forced to close its doors. So far, however, it is only the small
+depositors who are clamoring; but the others will quickly enough follow
+if you do not let your fifty thousand remain to help wipe out this
+first rush. The bank, though, is as sound as a dollar."
+
+In another instant they were through the door, and before Mr. Strumley
+could reply, for the second time that morning he stood in the presence
+of Bettina's father.
+
+"As Mr. Edwards will tell you," explained Paul, unable altogether to
+suppress his nervousness, "I hold second option for to-day on large
+timber tracts in Arkansas, represented by Messrs. Haynes, Forster &
+Company. The first option, I was advised, will expire at two o'clock;
+and my party was of the belief it would not be closed. It is a big deal,
+Mr. Stokes,"--Mr. Stokes winced perceptibly--"and I was extremely
+anxious to swing it, because--er--well, because it's my first big
+venture and much depends on its success."
+
+"Yes," mused Mr. Stokes sadly, "it is quite probable the first option
+may be allowed to lapse, and I understand good money is to be made in
+Arkansas timber." His face had grown a trifle ashy. "Of course, this
+being the case, I feel in honor bound, Mr. Strumley, to instantly recall
+my request."
+
+Paul gave a gasp of admiration. He was glad Bettina's father was "game."
+So was Bettina. In the up-boiling of his feelings he emphatically vetoed
+the determination of the banker. Indeed, so well and eloquently did he
+argue for the retention and use of his funds by the Commercial, that
+even the self-effacing man of "deals" could not resist the onslaught. He
+rose with unconcealed emotion and grasped the hand of the young man
+whose generosity would save the credit of the old financial institution.
+
+Later, flushed with victory, Mr. Strumley returned to the cushions of
+his touring car; and the jubilantly chugging machine whizzed him off in
+the direction where, surrounded by cash, awaited the 8 per cent.
+expectations of Messrs. Proctor and Greenlee. Later still he descended
+with said cash upon the offices of Haynes, Forster & Company. And even
+later, after an exhilarating spin in the country, he arrived safe and
+blithesome at his well-appointed rooms in the Hotel Fulton, ready to
+remove with good soap and pure aqua the stains of mart and road before
+calling on Miss Bettina Stokes.
+
+The first thing that attracted his eyes on entering his little sitting
+room was a neatly wrapped parcel on the table. On the top of it reclined
+a dainty, snowy envelope. Mr. Strumley approached suspiciously. Then he
+recognized the handwriting and uttered an exclamation of joy. It was
+from Bettina.
+
+In the short time he held the missive poised reverently in his hand Paul
+permitted a glow of satisfaction to permeate his being. He had done well
+and was justly entitled to a moment of self laudation. Mr.
+Stokes--Bettina's father--would no longer be against him, for who could
+not say he was not capable of competing in the world-arena with
+full-grown, gladiatorial intellects? He had even successfully crossed
+blades with Mr. Stokes's own best brand of Damascene gray matter. And he
+had won the fray, for the everlasting good and happiness of all parties
+concerned. In anticipation he already felt himself thrilling proudly
+beneath the crown of Bettina's love and her father's benediction.
+
+The crackle of the delicate linen beneath his grasp brought him sweetly
+back to the real. What delicious token could Bettina be sending him? Of
+course her father had told her all. How happy she, too, must be! Mr.
+Strumley broke the seal of the envelope and read:
+
+"MR. PAUL STRUMLEY,
+City.
+
+"DEAR SIR:
+
+ "I herewith return your letters, photographs, etc. Papa has told me
+ all. It was at first impossible to believe you capable of taking such
+ a base advantage of my confidence about the Arkansas option; but I am
+ at last thoroughly convinced that you incited the run on the bank to
+ embarrass poor papa and compel him to let the deal fall into your
+ traitorous hands. And the by-play of yours in returning the money you
+ did not really need, though it has completely deceived him, has in
+ my eyes only added odium to your treachery. I trust that I have made
+ it quite clear that in the future we can meet only as strangers.
+
+"BETTINA STOKES."
+
+Mr. Strumley let the letter slip unnoticed through his palsied fingers.
+He sat down with heavy stupefaction. So this was the sud-spray of his
+beautiful bubble? It was incomprehensible! Bettina! Bettina! Oh, how
+could she? Where was her faith? No small voice answered from within the
+depths of his breast; and Mr. Strumley got clumsily to his feet. He was
+painfully conscious that he must do something--think something. But what
+was he to do? What was he to think? Could he ever make her understand?
+Make her believe? At least he could go and try.
+
+Mr. Strumley finished his toilet nervously; and repaired to the home of
+Bettina, to cast his hope on the waters of her faith and charity. The
+butler courteously informed him that she was "not in." But Mr. Stokes
+was in the library. Would Mr. Strumley like to see him? Mr. Strumley
+thought not.
+
+It was a bad night for Paul. From side to side he tossed in search of
+inspiration. Day came; and he rolled wearily over to catch the first
+beams of the gladsome spring sunshine. From its torrid home ninety-three
+million miles afar it hurried to his bedside. It shimmered in his face
+and laughed with warm invigoration into the torpid cells of his brain.
+It awakened them, filled them with new life, hope--inspiration!
+
+Mr. Strumley leaped from his bed to the bath-tub, and fluttered
+frolicsomely in the crystal tide. When he sprang out there was the flush
+of vigorous young manhood on his skin and the glow of an expectant
+lover's ardency in his breast. Everything was arranged satisfactorily in
+the space beneath Mr. Strumley's water-tousled hair, wherein sat the
+goddess of human happiness--reason.
+
+Mr. Strumley, after a hurried stop-over at the office of his astounded
+charge d'affaires, reached the Commercial Bank before the messenger
+boys. While waiting in the balm of the spring morning for the doors to
+open he circumnavigated the block nine times--he counted them. Coming
+in on the last tack he sighted the portly form of the banker careening
+with dignified speed around the corner. Another instant he had crossed
+the mat and disappeared into his financial harbor. Mr. Strumley steered
+rapidly in his wake.
+
+Again he stood in the presence of Bettina's father. This time, however,
+he was calm. In fact, the atmosphere about the two men was heavily
+charged with the essence of good fellowship. Mr. Stokes held out his
+hand cordially. The younger man pressed its broad palm with almost
+filial veneration. He noted, too, with a slight touch of remorse, that
+the banker's countenance was harassed. Evidently his heart still ached
+for the lost Arkansas timber. Mr. Strumley smiled philanthropically.
+
+He had something to say to Mr. Stokes, and began to say it with the easy
+enunciation of one who rests confident in the sunshine of righteousness.
+He spoke evenly, fluently. Of course Mr. Stokes at first might be a
+trifle perplexed. But please bear with him, hear him through, then he
+himself should be the sole judge.
+
+He, Mr. Strumley, did not care a rap--no, not a single rap, for every
+tree that grew in the entire state of Arkansas. What he wanted to do was
+to show Mr. Stokes--Bettina's father--that he was worth the while. That
+is, he wanted to demonstrate--it was a good word--to demonstrate that he
+had brains in his cranium as good as many another variety that boasted a
+trade mark of wider popularity. Had he done it? And if what he had done
+did not concur with the elements of high finance, he would like Mr.
+Stokes--Bettina's father--to tell him what it did concur with. Now,
+there was the whole story from its incipiency. And as conclusive proof
+that he did not mean to profit by the deal financially, would Mr. Stokes
+kindly examine those papers?
+
+Mr. Stokes looked at the documents tossed on the desk before him; and
+saw that they were several warranty deeds, conveying to Richard Stokes,
+his heirs and assigns forever, all titles and claims of all kinds
+whatsoever in certain therein-after described tracts or parcels of land
+in the state of Arkansas, for value received.
+
+Mr. Strumley leaned back and contentedly watched a flush overspread the
+banker's face. His automobile waited at the door to whisk him to
+Bettina, and he was ready to carry on the campaign there the moment her
+father had finished his effusions of gratitude. Meanwhile the flush
+deepened; and, all impatience to fly to his lady-love, Paul egged on the
+speech.
+
+"You will note, Mr. Stokes," he volunteered, "that the price is exactly
+the same you had proposed paying. At your convenience, of course, you
+can remit this amount to my attorney, Mr. Edwards."
+
+Mr. Stokes rose slowly. The flush had become apoplectic.
+
+"Mr. Strumley," he began, his large voice trembling, "this trick of
+yours is unworthy of an honorable man. Here, sir, take these papers and
+leave my office immediately."
+
+Mr. Strumley rose also. Like the banker's voice, he, too, was trembling.
+
+"But, sir----" he commenced to expostulate.
+
+"Go!" thundered the father of Bettina.
+
+Dazed, confused by the suddenness of the blast, Paul groped his way
+through the bank to the refuge of his car. Mechanically he put one hand
+on the lever and glanced ahead for obstacles. Crossing the street, not
+twenty yards ahead, tripped the most dangerous one conceivable--the
+beautiful Bettina herself!
+
+Mr. Strumley's hand fell limply to his knee. Fascinated he watched her
+reach the curb and with a little skip spring to the pavement. Then she
+came straight toward him; but he could see she was blissfully oblivious
+of his nearness. Suddenly an odd wave of emotion surged through his
+brain. His heart leaped with primitive savagery of love, and every fibre
+in him rebelled fiercely against the decrees and limitations of modern
+courtship. He had failed in the game as governed and modified by the
+rules of polite society and high finance. The primogenital man-spirit in
+him cried out for its inning. Mr. Strumley, as umpire, hearkened to its
+clamor.
+
+"Bettina!" he called, as that young lady came calmly abreast of the car,
+"wait a moment. I must speak with you."
+
+She started with a half-frightened exclamation; but met his look, at
+first defiantly, scornfully, then hesitatingly, faltering as she tried
+to take another step onward.
+
+"Bettina!" Mr. Strumley's voice vibrated determinedly, "I said I wished
+to speak with you. I can explain--everything."
+
+She halted reluctantly, and partly turned. In a moment he was at her
+side, his hand upon her arm. His glance had in it all the compelling
+strength of unadulterated, pristine manhood. She seemed to feel its
+potency, and without remonstrance suffered him to lead her toward the
+machine.
+
+For a moment, for a single moment, Mr. Strumley was exhilaratingly
+conscious of being borne aloft on a great wave of victorious gladness.
+Then the waters of triumph let him down with a shock.
+
+"Bettina!"
+
+At the word they both pivoted like pieces of automata. Mr. Stokes, large
+and severe, was standing between the portals of his financial
+fortification.
+
+"Bettina!" His voice was almost irresistible in the force of its
+parental summons.
+
+At the sound of it the primeval lover, newly renascent in Mr. Strumley's
+breast, cowed before the power of genitorial insistency. Then it came
+back into its own exultantly.
+
+"Bettina, my darling, get in," he commanded.
+
+She faltered, turned rebelliously, turned again and obeyed.
+
+"Bettina!" The voice of the childless banker faded off in the distance,
+its last echo drowned in the full-throated: "Bettina, we are going to be
+married at once," that broke joyously from Mr. Strumley's lips. "I have
+followed the example of the Romans, and taken me a wife from the
+Sabines."
+
+Bettina peeped up at him from beneath the dark screens of her lashes.
+"Then I, like the wise Sabian ladies, shall save the day for peace and
+for Rome," she smiled archly.
+
+And the machine laughed "Chug-chug!"
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+THE JAM GOD
+
+A Tale of Nigeria
+
+By H.M. EGBERT
+
+
+LIEUTENANT PETERS, of the Royal Nigerian Service, was lying upon the
+ground face downward, under a prickly tree. The sun was nearly vertical,
+and the little round shadow in which he reclined was interlaced with
+streaks of hot light. As the sun moved, Peters rolled into the shade
+automatically. His eyes were shut, and he was in that hot borderland
+which is the nearest approach to sleep at noontide in Nigeria.
+
+The flies were pestering him, and he was thirsty--not with that thirst
+of the mouth which may be quenched with a long draught, but with the
+thirst of the throat that sands and sears. He felt thirsty all over. He
+had been thirsty, like this, ever since he struck the bend of the Niger.
+What made it worse, every night he dreamed of fruits that were snatched
+away, like the food of Tantalus, as he approached to grasp them. Two
+nights before he had been wandering knee-deep in English strawberry
+beds; the night before he had been shaking down limes and oranges from
+groves of trees set with green leaves and studded with golden fruit.
+Once he had dreamed of a new fruit, a cross between a pear and a
+watermelon; but when he cut into it he found nothing but hard, small
+seeds, with a pineapple flavor, which he detested.
+
+Peters was dreaming now, for he twined his fingers in the long grass and
+tossed uneasily.
+
+"I'll pick them all," he muttered sleepily. "All mixed together, with
+ten or twelve pounds of damp, brown sugar, and boiled into jam."
+
+He woke and felt his teeth for the hundredth time, to note whether any
+untoward looseness betokened the advent of the dreaded scurvy.
+Reassured, he stretched his limbs and rolled over into the shade of the
+tree.
+
+"When I get back to a white man's country," he murmured--"when I get
+home to England what is it I am going to do? Why, I shall go into a
+restaurant and order some rich brown soup. Then I shall have _pate de
+foie gras_ sandwiches. Then scrambled eggs, chocolate, and muffins
+buttered with whipped cream. Then half a dozen cans of jam. I shall
+either begin with strawberry and conclude with apricot, or else I shall
+begin with apricot and wind up with raspberry. It doesn't matter much;
+any kind of jam will do except pineapple."
+
+He opened his eyes, brushed away the flies that swarmed noisily round
+him, took out his hard-tack, and opened a small can of dried beef. He
+munched for a while, sipping occasionally from the tepid water in his
+canteen. When he had finished he put the can-opener back in the pocket
+of his tunic and rose, his face overspread with a look of resolution.
+
+"I believe," he cried, "I believe that I could eat even a can of
+pineapple!"
+
+He rose, the light of his illusion still in his eyes, and began
+staggering weakly under the blazing sun in the direction of his camp. He
+was weaker than he had thought, and when he reached the shelter of his
+tent he sank down exhausted upon the bed. Through the open flap he could
+see, five hundred yards away, the round, beehive-shaped huts of the
+native village and, in their centre, the square palace of King
+Mtetanyanga, built of sticks and Niger mud, surrounded by its stockade,
+the royal flag, a Turkish bath-towel stained yellow and blue, floating
+proudly above.
+
+Lieutenant Peters had been sent by the Nigerian Government along the
+upper Niger to conclude treaties with the different kings and sweep them
+within the British sphere of interest. The French were out upon a
+similar errand, for in this region the two nations possessed only a
+vague and very indeterminate boundary line. Peters had been successful
+until he came to the village of King Mtetanyanga, who had balked at
+affixing his cross to the piece of mysterious parchment on the ground
+that it was unlawful to do so during the festival of the great Ju-Ju,
+whose worshipers could be heard wailing and beating tom-toms nightly in
+some unknown part of the jungle. What this Ju-Ju fetish was nobody could
+tell; it had come into the village recently, from the coast, men
+whispered; it possessed awful and mysterious potency; was guarded
+zealously by some score of priests, who veiled its awful vision; and it
+was the greatest Ju-Ju for hundreds of miles along the Niger, tribes
+from distant regions frequently arriving to sacrifice pigs to it.
+
+However, Lieutenant Raguet, the French commissioner, had been equally
+unsuccessful in inducing the dusky monarch to affix his signature to the
+French treaty, and the ambassadors of the rival nations were both
+encamped near the village, waiting for the Ju-Ju festivities to reach
+their plethoric conclusion before the king sobered up and attended to
+business.
+
+Raguet, strolling into his rival's camp that evening, found Peters in
+his tent, flushed, and breathing heavily.
+
+"Tcht! tcht! you are seeck," said the Frenchman sympathetically. "That
+ees too bad. Have you quinine?"
+
+"Quinine be hanged," cried Peters huskily. "I've taken the stuff until
+I've floated in it. There's only one thing can cure me, Raguet. I've
+been living on crackers and canned beef for over a month, and I'm pining
+for jam. Have you got any jam?"
+
+"Dsham, dsham?" repeated Raguet with a puzzled expression.
+
+"Yes, les preserves--le fruit et le sugar, bouilli--you know what I
+mean."
+
+"Ah, ze preserve!" said the Frenchman, with an expression of
+enlightenment. "Ze preserve, I have him not."
+
+"I tell you what, Raguet," said Peters irritably, "I've got to get some
+jam somewhere or I shall kick the bucket. I'm craving for it, man. If I
+had one can of the stuff it would put me upon my feet instantly, I can
+feel it. Now it's ten to one I'll be too sick to see the king after the
+ceremonies are over, and he'll sign your treaty instead of mine. And
+I've given him three opera hats, a phonograph, and a gallon of rum,
+curse the luck! What did you give him, Raguet?"
+
+"Me? I give him a umbrella with ze gold embroider," the Frenchman
+answered.
+
+"My government won't let me give the little kings umbrellas," said
+Peters in vexation. "It makes the big chiefs jealous. I say, Raguet," he
+rambled on, sitting up dizzily, "what is this Ju-Ju idol of theirs?"
+
+"I know not," said the French lieutenant. "Only ze king and ze priests
+have seen him. If zey tell, zey die--ze idol keel zem."
+
+"I suppose they'll be keeping up these infernal tom-toms for another
+week," grumbled the sick man, lying back and half closing his eyes from
+weariness. "Well, I'll have to try to get well in time."
+
+The Frenchman resisted the impulse to leap back in surprise, but his
+eyes narrowed till they were slits in his face. So! This Englishman did
+not know that this had been the last day of the sacrifices, that at
+midnight a hecatomb of pigs was to be killed and eaten in the bush in
+honor of the Ju-Ju. Nor that the king, when he had broached and drunk
+the cask of rum, would be in a mood to discuss the treaty. Peters
+evidently was unaware how much his majesty had been affronted by his
+failure to present him with an umbrella. La! la! Fortune was evidently
+upon his side. All this flashed through the Frenchman's mind in an
+instant. A solitary chuckle escaped him, but he turned it into an
+exclamation of grief, sighed deeply, seated himself upon the bed, and
+kissed Peters affectionately on either cheek.
+
+"My Peters, my poor friend," he began, "you must not theenk of leaving
+your tent for ze next two, t'ree days. Ze fever, he is very bad onless
+you receive him in bed. I shall take care of you."
+
+"You're a good fellow, Raguet," said Peters, wiping his face
+surreptitiously with the backs of his hands. When his visitor had left
+he turned over and sank into a half-delirious doze that lasted until the
+sun sank with appalling suddenness, and night rushed over the land.
+Tossing upon his bed, all through the velvet darkness he was dimly
+conscious, through his delirious dreams, of tom-toms beaten in the bush.
+His throat was parched, and in his dreams he drank greedily from his
+canteen; but each time that he awoke he saw it hanging empty from the
+tent flap. Presently a large, bright, yellow object rose up in front of
+him. Greedily he set his teeth into it; and even as he did so it
+disappeared, and he awoke, gasping and choking under the broiling
+blackness.
+
+"I'll have to take that canteen down to the stream and fill it," he
+muttered, rising unsteadily and proceeding toward the bank. To his
+surprise he found that rain had fallen. He was treading in ooze, which
+rose higher and higher until it clogged his footsteps. He struggled, but
+now it held him fast, and he was sinking slowly, but persistently, now
+to the waist, now to the shoulders. Frantically he thrust his hands
+downward to free himself, and withdrew them sticky with--jam! He scooped
+up great handsful greedily; and even as he raised it to his mouth it
+vanished, and he awoke once more in his tent.
+
+He flung himself out of bed with an oath, took down his canteen, and
+started toward the river. The noise of the tom-toms was louder than
+ever, proceeding, apparently, from some point in the bush a little to
+the left of the king's palace. Scrambling and struggling through the
+thorn thickets, he reached the sandy bed of the stream, filled his
+water-bottle at a pool, and drank greedily.
+
+It was that still hour of night when the many-voiced clamor of the bush
+grows hushed, because the lions are coming down to drink at the waters.
+The rising moon threw a pale light over the land. The tom-toms were
+still resounding in the bush, but to Peters's distorted mind they took
+on the sound of ripe mangoes falling to the ground and bursting open as
+they struck the soil. He counted, "one, two, three," and waited. He
+counted again. There must be thousands of them. Peters began to edge
+his way through the reeds in the direction of the sound. After a while
+he came to a wall of rocks perpendicular and almost insurmountable. He
+paused and considered, licking his lips greedily as the thud, thud
+continued, now, apparently, directly in front of him. All at once his
+eyes, curiously sensitive to external impressions, discovered a little,
+secret trail between two boulders. He followed it; a great stone
+revolved at his touch, and he found himself inside the sacred groves. He
+went on, gulping greedily in anticipation of the feast which awaited
+him.
+
+Suddenly he stopped short. He had seen something that brought back to
+him with a rush the realization of his whereabouts. Seated in the
+shelter of a cactus tree, not fifty yards away, was King Mtetanyanga,
+wearing his three opera hats, one upon another, in the form of a triple
+crown, and drinking his own rum with Raguet, under the shade of Raguet's
+umbrella. Prone at their feet crouched Tom, the interpreter.
+
+"His Majesty say, 'How you fix him Ju-Ju?'" translated Tom.
+
+"Tell His Majesty, my Ju-Ju stronger than the Englishman's Ju-Ju,"
+answered the Frenchman. "My Ju-Ju eat up his Ju-Ju. He very sick. If I
+choose, he die."
+
+"Ugh!" grunted the king, when this explanation was vouchsafed,
+apparently impressed.
+
+"Tell His Majesty my Ju-Ju stronger than his own Ju-Ju. If he no sign
+treaty, eat up his Ju-Ju," Raguet went on.
+
+A flow of language came from the king's lips.
+
+"His Majesty say, he bring his Ju-Ju, see whose greater," said the
+interpreter.
+
+Vaguely aware that treachery was impending, but crazed now by the
+falling mangoes, Peters left them palavering and followed the trail. All
+at once he emerged into a tiny clearing and stood blinking at a fire,
+round which a group of men--priests, as he knew, from their buffalo
+horns and crane feathers--were reclining, hammering upon tom-toms and
+shouting in various stages of intoxication. The firelight blinded their
+eyes. Peters stood still uncertainly. Then his eyes fell upon a
+sawed-off tree-trunk, in the hollow of which lay something wrapped in a
+white cloth, surrounded with snake-skins. He had come by this secret
+road into the actual presence of the great Ju-Ju.
+
+Curiously he inserted his hand, lifted the object out, and examined it.
+Inside was something of a strange, yet familiar shape, oval, and
+flattened at the ends. He lifted it out of its wrappings, and there, in
+his hand, he saw a can, bearing the legend:
+
+ GREENAWAY'S BEST JAM.
+
+He looked at it in solemn and holy meditation; then, sitting down, he
+drew the can-opener from his tunic and wiped it clean upon his sleeve.
+
+After awhile a babel of sound broke in upon his ears. Men had come
+running up, brandishing spears, stopped, flung themselves upon the
+ground prostrate in front of him. The priests were there, frantically
+abasing themselves; Mtetanyanga, his opera hats rolling, unheeded, on
+the ground. Their cries ceased; they veiled their eyes. Then from the
+dust came the feeble tones of the interpreter.
+
+"His Majesty say, you eat him Ju-Ju--yours greatest Ju-Ju, he want to
+sign treaty."
+
+But Peters, waving the empty can over his head, shouted:
+
+"I've eaten jam, I've eaten jam! It's pineapple--and I don't care!"
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+WHEN FATHER WORKED
+
+A Suburban Story
+
+By CHARLTON LAWRENCE EDHOLM
+
+
+ "H'everybody works but Fadher,
+ H'and 'e sets 'round h'all diy----"
+
+THUS in chorus shrilled the infant Cadges like the morning stars singing
+together, but still more like the transplanted little cockneys they
+were.
+
+The placid brow of Mr. Thomas Cadge was darkened with disapproval, he
+shifted his stubby brier pipe to the other corner of his mouth, edged a
+little from his seat on the sunny front stoop and, craning his neck
+around the corner of his house, revealed an unwashed area extending from
+collarbone to left ear.
+
+"Shet up, you kids!" he barked. "Wot for? Becos I say so, that's why. I
+don't like that song, 'taint fit for Sunday."
+
+With a soothing consciousness that he had upheld the sacred character of
+the Sabbath, Mr. Cadge settled back to the comfort of his sun-bath and
+smoke. But he had scarcely emitted three puffs before the piping voice
+of Arabella Cadge was again wafted to his ears. She sang solo this time,
+and the selection was of a semi-devotional nature, more in keeping with
+the day:
+
+ "Oh fadher, dear fadher, come 'ome wid me now,
+ De clock on de steeple strikes----"
+
+"Shet up, drat you!" again commanded her parent. "If I has to get up and
+go arter you----"
+
+The balance of this direful threat may never be known, for at that
+moment Mr. Job Snavely, garbed in the black broadcloth which he wore one
+day out of seven, paused in front of Mr. Cadge's door and bade him good
+morning.
+
+"Mornin'," responded the ruffled father.
+
+"Your little girl is quite a song bird," continued Mr. Snavely, with his
+usual facility in making well-meant small-talk more irritating than a
+hurled brick.
+
+"She sings too much," commented Mr. Cadge, shortly, "I likes people wot
+knows when to 'old their tongues."
+
+"Very true, very true!" amiably replied Mr. Snavely, "but for all that,
+there is nothing sweeter than the artless babble of babes; I declare it
+almost brought the tears to my eyes when I heard them prattling,
+'Everybody works but father,' it is so very, very appro----"
+
+Mr. Snavely checked himself abruptly, for the light in the small, green
+eyes of Thomas Cadge was baleful, and his square jaw protruded
+menacingly. The kindly critic of music had a vague feeling that the
+subject might be changed to advantage.
+
+"Been to church this morning, I suppose?" he inquired briskly with the
+assurance of a man just returning from that duty.
+
+"No I 'asn't," retorted Cadge, "and wot's more the old woman 'asn't, and
+the kids 'asn't neither. 'Cos why? 'Cos in this 'ere free country of
+yours, a laboring man can't make a living for 'is family, workin' 'ard
+as I does, Sundays, nights, and h'all the time. The missus and the kids
+stays from church 'cos their duds ain't fit, and I stays 'ome 'cos I've
+got to work like a slave to pay you for seven dollars' worth of spoiled
+vegetables and mouldy groceries. That's the reason I works on Sundays,
+if you've got to know."
+
+"Work on Sundays!" gasped the grocer. "Work! work?" and he stared at the
+reclining figure of Mr. Cadge in unfeigned astonishment.
+
+"Yes, work. This 'ere construction company wot's doing the job of
+grading this vacant block, employs me to sort of look after things,
+their shovels, scoops, and the like. A kind of private police officer,
+I am," he concluded, drawing himself up a little and puffing into the
+air.
+
+"And when are you on duty?" asked Mr. Snavely.
+
+"Nights," replied Cadge, "nights and Sundays, when the tools ain't in
+use."
+
+"I hope they pay you well for it?"
+
+"Ah, but they don't. 'Ow much do you think I get for stayin' awake
+nights and doin' without my church on Sunday? Three measly dollars a
+week and the rent of this 'ere 'ouse, if you can call it a 'ouse."
+
+It would have been difficult to determine just what name to give the
+residence of Mr. Thomas Cadge. It would hardly be called a cottage,
+though not because it was more spacious than the name implied; nor was
+it a piano-box, in spite of the fact that a piano would have fitted
+snugly within its walls, for no manufacturer would have trusted a
+valuable instrument in so flimsy a shell. It was not a real-estate
+office, as the sign which decorated its entire front proclaimed it to
+be, for through a jagged hole in the window facing the street projected
+a rusty iron stovepipe, which was wired to the façade of the building,
+and emitted the sooty smoke that had almost totally obscured and
+canceled the legend, "Suburban Star Realty Syndicate."
+
+Moreover, a litter of tin cans, impartially distributed at the front and
+back doors, indicated the domestic use to which this temporary office
+had been put. A smell of steaming suds that pervaded the place likewise
+indicated the manner in which Mrs. Cadge eked out her lord's stipend.
+This impression was confirmed by the chorus of irrepressible little
+Cadges proclaiming:
+
+ "Mother tikes in washin',
+ H'and so does sister h'Ann,
+ H'everybody works at our 'ouse,
+ But my old----"
+
+--a burst of melody which was abruptly checked with a tomato can hurled
+like a hand-grenade by their unmusical father.
+
+"Look here, Cadge," said Mr. Snavely, with the air of proprietorship one
+adopts to hopeless debtors, "three dollars a week is not going to keep
+your family, to say nothing of paying up that seven dollars. I can't
+carry you forever, you know. Why don't you get a daylight job?"
+
+"Ah, that is easy enough said," protested that injured individual.
+"'Aven't I tramped the streets day after day, lookin' for work?"
+
+"Them as 'as a good paying business don't know wot it means to look for
+a job," pursued Cadge bitterly.
+
+"Yes they do," asserted the grocer cheerfully. "I was given work at
+sweeping floors in the very store I now own. The fact is, I am sorry for
+you, Cadge, and I have been looking around to get you a job."
+
+Mr. Cadge seemed depressed.
+
+"And I am glad to say," chirruped Mr. Snavely, "that I have found a
+small piece of work for you, which will be worth a dollar and a half a
+day."
+
+Cadge's brow was still gloomy.
+
+"Of course, it is real work," added his kind-hearted creditor, briskly,
+"no sitting in the sun and watching other people's shovels; but a
+customer of mine, a widow lady, that lives along Catnip Creek, wants a
+man to pile up a wall of loose stones to keep her land from washing away
+in high water."
+
+Thomas Cadge shook his head with the air of Cæsar virtuously refusing
+the crown.
+
+"No, no, Snavely, it wouldn't do," he said. "I can see that it would
+interfere with my present h'occupation, and I can't afford to risk
+losing this 'ere job. Supposin' my family was to be turned out of
+doors!"
+
+"Nonsense! It will only take you about four days to build the wall, and
+at one-fifty per day, that will be six dollars, twice your week's wages
+right there, and almost enough to pay what you owe me."
+
+"I am afraid it can't be done, Snavely; the company might not like it;
+you see, I would be competing with them, that's their line."
+
+"They wouldn't handle so small a job. You know that, Cadge."
+
+"Yes, but a man can't draw pay for two positions at once; 't ain't
+honest."
+
+"Why, this is not a regular situation," protested the upright Snavely,
+who saw his bill still unpaid; "you could work on it at odd times if you
+like. She'll pay you by the piece, I am pretty sure, and you will get
+your six dollars cash when the wall is done."
+
+The furtive eyes of the hunter of work avoided those of his benefactor.
+He was pondering a new excuse when he happened to notice Master Cadge,
+aged nine, Thomas Cadge, Jr., aged eight, and Arabella Cadge, whose
+years were six, busily constructing a fort of cobblestones, and an idea
+struck him.
+
+"Very well," he said, loftily waving his pipe, "I'll drop in Monday and
+talk this over with you, Snavely. Then if the job suits me I may take
+it. I don't like to talk business on Sunday, you know."
+
+Thus rebuked, Mr. Snavely resumed his homeward way.
+
+The following Monday Cadge overslept; Tuesday found him with a headache
+as a result, which by Wednesday had settled in a tooth; Thursday he felt
+so much better that he feared to do anything which might check his
+convalescence; Friday was an unlucky day, but so desirous was he of work
+that he manfully conquered his superstitious qualms and strolled over to
+the little shop where Mr. Job Snavely dealt in groceries and vegetables.
+
+The details regarding the work were furnished with cheerful alacrity,
+the tradesman going so far as to accompany his protegé to the home of
+their patron, Mrs. Pipkin, a withered little lady who lived with her
+cats on the bank of the creek.
+
+The work to be performed demanded more brawn than brain and no vast
+amount of either. All that was required was to pile up the boulders and
+cobblestones which littered the bed of the stream, as a rough,
+unmortared wall, along the sloping bank of Mrs. Pipkin's property.
+
+It was evident that Mrs. Pipkin herself had not the slightest notion of
+how much a wall should cost, as she was ignorant of the two factors
+which determined it, namely, the wages of day-laborers and the time
+required to build the wall; therefore she requested Mr. Snavely, as a
+man of affairs, to make the bargain for her.
+
+It was well that she did so, for Mr. Cadge's ideas on the subject were
+as boundless as hers were limited. Day wages, he affirmed, ranged from
+two dollars up for common labor, and as building a wall was highly
+skilled labor he thought three and a half or four dollars per diem would
+be about right, going on the basis of at least six days of eight hours
+each.
+
+Mr. Snavely, on the contrary, after looking over the ground declared
+that four days' steady work would build a wall running the entire length
+of the widow's lot. Furthermore, that a dollar and a quarter a day was
+fair wages for such employment, while laborers would scramble for the
+job at a dollar and a half. As a concession to Mr. Cadge, he was willing
+to allow him to take his own time and agreed to pay six dollars when the
+wall should be completed.
+
+Mr. Cadge waxed indignant and very voluble, while Mr. Snavely was a mild
+man of few words; but the simple laborer was no match for a man who made
+his living by small chaffering. He was forced to give in, and Saturday
+morning, bright and early, he appeared on the banks of Catnip Creek
+accompanied by Master Cadge, Thomas Cadge, Jr., and Arabella Cadge.
+
+"Daddy's going to give you kids a treat to-day," he announced. "My eye!
+wot larks we will 'ave. Nothing to do all day long but play building a
+stone fort right on the brook, and Daddy will show you 'ow to build it."
+
+The little Cadges were perfectly charmed at this condescension on the
+part of their sire, who seldom acknowledged their presence except with a
+cuff in passing. They were eager to begin, and as they had no need to
+strip their legs, which were always bare, the work proceeded apace.
+
+Cadge, Sr., ensconced himself in the sunniest nook of the bank, and
+directed his offspring what stones to select and where to place them,
+and above all, to make haste, since the enemy would soon appear to
+attack the fort.
+
+Before their Saturday holiday was over, the children had discovered that
+their father was a strenuous playfellow. In vain they suggested fishing,
+hunting Injuns, or gathering wild flowers; they had set out to build a
+fort on Catnip Creek, and build it they must.
+
+They entertained hopes of sneaking off alone when they should go home
+for lunch, but Mr. Cadge had provided for this contingency. His wife
+appeared at noon with slices of bread and butter for the Cadgelings, to
+which was added a cold beefsteak and a bucket of beer for the support of
+their house. Having already lunched at home, she was permitted to lay a
+tier of heavier stones along the wall while waiting for her family to
+finish the repast.
+
+It was an arduous day for the tribe of Cadge, excepting, of course, its
+head. Not until the first star came out and the owls began to hoot along
+the Catnip did he declare himself satisfied with the day's work and
+proceed homeward to supper. Widow Pipkin's wall was half finished.
+
+Not until Saturday was the patient father able to enlist once more the
+services of his offspring, for, "What if they are your own kids!"
+retorted Mrs. Cadge from her wash-board. "I've rubbed my 'ands raw to
+give 'em the eddication you and me lacks, and to school they go. You
+build that wall yourself, or wait until the week's end for your pay."
+
+The former alternative was not to be thought of, and the Widow Pipkin
+wondered mildly whether the half finished wall was ever to be completed.
+
+But Saturday at dawn Cadge once more appeared, driving before him three
+tear-stained and reluctant Cadgelets. They had inherited part of their
+father's disposition in regard to real work, likewise his unwillingness
+to be imposed upon. Constructing fortifications along the Catnip was
+well enough for one Saturday, but their backs still ached from their
+exertions, and they had only disdain for the restricted paternal
+imagination which suggested that this time they build stone castles.
+
+Their sire waxed eloquent over the art of castle building and the sport
+of imprisoning ogres in them, but was finally compelled to assume the
+attitude of an ogre himself, and threatened to skin them alive if they
+did not do as they were bid.
+
+It was a long, hard day for the whole Cadge family. The little Cadges
+worked like galley-slaves in fear of the lash; their mother, out of pity
+for them, laid two tiers of cobbles when she came at noon, and even
+Cadge himself was tempted on one or two occasions to descend from his
+nook and lend a hand, but restrained himself.
+
+Again the owls hooted along the stream and bullfrogs croaked from the
+reedy places. Cadge knocked the dottle out of his pipe and arose,
+stretching his short, muscular limbs, which had become cramped from
+sitting still so long.
+
+"Run along 'ome, kiddies," he said, "and tell the old woman not to wait
+supper for me. There's a man down town as wants to see me about a job.
+I'll 'ave a bite with 'im."
+
+The little Cadges disappeared in the twilight and their father presented
+himself at the Widow Pipkin's door to receive his hard-earned wages.
+
+"Oh, dear me! I can't pay you to-night," answered Mrs. Pipkin. "I never
+keep any money in the house."
+
+Cadge grumbled something about, a check would do. He was pretty sure
+that the barkeeper at Spider Grogan's place would cash it.
+
+"Oh, but mine is a savings account, and I will have to go down to the
+bank myself and get the money; but, never mind, you shall have it first
+thing Monday morning."
+
+The thirsty man could find no solution to this problem and, although he
+urged the Widow Pipkin to think of a way, as his "missus needed the
+medicine something orful," that kind-hearted old lady could suggest
+nothing more to the point than going at once with a mustard poultice to
+the sufferer.
+
+Old women are so set in their notions that the anxious husband was a
+full half hour dissuading her, and, when he reached home with both hands
+in his empty pockets, Mrs. Cadge was washing the dishes.
+
+"Did the man give you a job?" inquired his wife brightly.
+
+"Wot man? Wot job? Where's my supper?" snapped Cadge. Then, as the
+ingenious ruse occurred to him, a flood of language rose to his lips and
+would not be dammed, though everything else was.
+
+"Gone and hogged all the supper, did you!" he growled. "H'it's a nice
+state of affairs, when a man comes 'ome from a 'ard day's work to a
+h'empty table."
+
+"But it was such a little steak, Tom," urged his wife, "and the children
+were so hungry that I let them finish it."
+
+There was no money in the house, and Snavely, the only credit grocer,
+had closed his shop, so Mr. Cadge's supper that night was bread and
+cheese without kisses.
+
+Sunday was a long-remembered day of misery for Cadge's wife and
+children, who played the scapegoat for Mr. Snavely and whipping-boy for
+Mrs. Pipkin.
+
+Monday morning the head of the house arose early and, before Mrs. Pipkin
+had finished her beauty sleep, that hard-working man was at the door
+demanding his pay. An hour was all the time she required for dressing.
+Mr. Cadge wished he had broken his fast before leaving home.
+
+"Really, I don't know whether I ought to pay you," replied Widow Pipkin
+when she finally answered his last, desperate ring. "Mr. Snavely made
+the bargain, and I should like to have him see the work before settling
+with you."
+
+She jingled some silver in her plump chain purse as she spoke.
+
+Aha, the widow had deceived him! It was eight o'clock, the bank would
+not open for an hour, she had had the money in the house all the time.
+The deceitfulness of women!
+
+Mr. Cadge's blood rose to his head. His little green eyes smouldered.
+Fortunately for the widow, Mr. Snavely drove up at that moment on his
+delivery wagon, and cheerfully agreed to appraise the work.
+
+"Oh, come now, Cadge, my man, you don't call that a finished job, I
+hope? Why, it is three foot short at each end and lacks a tier at the
+top. You had better pitch in for an hour or two and make a fair job of
+it, and then you'll get your money."
+
+"Wot do you call a fair job, I should like to know?" replied the heated
+Cadge; "look at them 'ere boulders, as I fished out of the h'icy water
+at peek o' day! Look at all them little stones, h'every one of them as
+cost me backache and sweat. H'if that job ain't worth six dollars it
+ain't worth six cents."
+
+"Mebbe so, mebbe so, my good man," responded the grocer, genially, "but
+whatever it's worth, I don't pay for a job until it's finished."
+
+At this point Cadge's torrent of eloquence swept away all punctuating
+pauses and he became slightly incoherent, but the drift of his harangue
+was that because he had worked like a slave and finished the wall in two
+days they wanted to rob him of his money. "I'll 'ave the six dollars for
+my work, or I'll 'ave the lor on you," he concluded.
+
+The amiable but tactless Snavely saw a happy solution of the problem.
+"Never mind, Mrs. Pipkin," he said, "there shall be no lawsuit. You pay
+me the six dollars, and I will write Cadge a receipt for the seven
+dollars he owes me. I lose a dollar that way, to be sure, but then it is
+just the same as finding six."
+
+"Ho! that's your game is it?" snarled Cadge, gasping with indignation.
+"That's 'ow you two plot against a poor 'ard-workin' man with a family,
+to beat him out of 'is pay. H'it's a put-up job, that's wot h'it is! But
+you don't get the best of Tom Cadge that way. I'll 'ave a h'orficer 'ere
+if I don't get my money, you bloomin' old plotters, you!"
+
+"Yes, you had better call an officer," agreed Mr. Snavely. "I saw one
+around the corner as I passed; the same one your brats were pelting from
+behind a fence last week."
+
+Mr. Cadge tacked adroitly. "No, I ain't going to spend my money with the
+loryers, as'd want twelve dollars to get you back six. I'll tear down
+the wall, that's wot I'll do. If I don't get my pay the loidy don't get
+her wall, and you can tike your measly job and give it to some poor man
+wot needs it."
+
+Mr. Snavely had one foot on the wheel and swung lightly into his cart.
+"Have it your own way, Cadge," he responded cheerfully. "You can finish
+the wall and get your six dollars cash, or you can leave it as it stands
+and take my receipt for seven, or you can tear it down and have your
+labor for your pains; but mind, if the police catch you destroying
+property, you will get a month in the chain gang."
+
+"I don't care if I get sixty days!" screamed the outraged laborer. "The
+city can look after my missus and the kids if their nateral provider is
+took from them. That wall is comin' down! I'm h'only a workin'-man, and
+I don't mind bein' spit on once in a while, but I won't stand for it
+bein' rubbed in."
+
+It was a sultry June day, the first of the summer vacation, and toward
+noon Mrs. Cadge set out to take her husband a bite of lunch. The little
+Cadges accompanied her, eager to exhibit the noble castle which they had
+completed on Catnip Creek. When they came to that charming stream, their
+eyes flew open in amazement and their jaws dropped.
+
+"Why, mamma, look at daddy!" they cried in unison. "Daddy's workin'!"
+
+Incredible though it seemed, it was true indeed. Father worked. Mrs.
+Cadge wondered whether she, too, was to have a vacation, after her years
+of drudgery.
+
+Cadge worked furiously, his rage uncooled by the waters of the Catnip
+which flowed through his shoes. He had discarded coat, vest, and hat,
+and was hurling rocks with the strength of a maddened giant, clear
+across the stream. What splendid muscles he had!
+
+A tier or two of Mrs. Pipkin's wall was already down. The telephone
+within her cottage was ringing madly.
+
+Even as the Cadgelings watched their parent sweating at his toil, a
+blue-coated figure ran swiftly down the bank, caught the hard-working
+man by the collar, and firmly led him away to where steady work awaited
+him.
+
+Mrs. Cadge watched him go with mingled feelings. She had seen him depart
+thus before, and remembered how much easier it was that month to feed
+four mouths instead of five. Besides, the exercise on the rock pile
+would do him good, poor man. A night-watchman's position was so
+confining.
+
+Mr. Snavely had driven up to the curb, and the Widow Pipkin ran out all
+of a flutter. They sympathetically related to Mrs. Cadge the events of
+the morning which had led to her husband's arrest.
+
+"And there was only an hour's work to be done on the job," said Mr.
+Snavely judicially.
+
+"I would gladly pay six dollars cash to have it just as it was this
+morning," added the tremulous Widow Pipkin, "and I'd make it ten if it
+were done as Mr. Snavely says."
+
+"And I'd still be willing to write a receipt for the full seven dollars
+for six dollars cash," interposed that astute philanthropist.
+
+Mrs. Cadge's shrewd, birdlike eyes were half closed in mental
+computation; ten dollars for the wall and one dollar discount on the
+grocery bill, that would make eleven dollars clear.
+
+"Come along, kiddies," she said, "you and me will pitch in and finish
+that wall to the queen's taste in an hour or two!" And she did.
+
+Eleven dollars clear, and the watchman's pay still going on, Cadge on
+the rock pile, hence the biggest mouth of the family fed by the city.
+Indeed, indeed, the little Cadges were not the only ones who enjoyed a
+vacation when father worked!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Golden Stories, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GOLDEN STORIES ***
+
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+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Golden Stories, by Various
+ </title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Golden Stories, by Various
+
+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: Golden Stories
+ A Selection of the Best Fiction by the Foremost Writers
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: September 22, 2006 [EBook #19356]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GOLDEN STORIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Lybarger, Brian Janes, Melissa Er-Raqabi
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<h1>Golden Stories</h1>
+
+
+<h3>A SELECTION OF THE BEST FICTION<br />
+BY THE FOREMOST WRITERS<br /><br /></h3>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/001.png"
+alt="publisher&#39;s mark" title="publisher&#39;s mark" />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center">NEW YORK<br />
+THE SHORT STORIES COMPANY<br />
+1909
+</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF TRANSLATION<br />
+INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES, INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN</p>
+
+<p class="center">COPYRIGHT, 1908-1909, BY THE SHORT STORIES COMPANY
+<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+
+
+<div class="tnote">
+<p>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:</p>
+
+<p>Following each author's name was a notice: "All rights reserved." This
+book is currently in the public domain, and the notices have been
+removed, but are mentioned here in the interest of completeness.</p>
+
+<p>Many inconsistencies in spelling, punctuation, and hyphenation have been
+normalized. Others remain as in the original. Any deviation from the
+author's intent is solely the responsibility of the transcriber.</p>
+
+<p>This book seems to have been bound in two sections, each with stories
+numbered I-XII. </p>
+
+<p>Though there was no Table of Contents in the original, one has been included
+for ease of navigation.</p></div>
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+<h2>TABLE OF CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Table of Contents">
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_NIGHT_EXPRESS">The Night Express</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#OVER_THE_GARDEN_WALL">Over The Garden Wall</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#RURAL_INSURANCE">Rural Insurance</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#HIS_HONOR_THE_DISTRICT_JUDGE">His Honor, The District Judge</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#A_FOG-HORN_CONCLUSION">A Fog-horn Conclusion</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#MARY_JANES_DIVERSION">Mary Jane's Diversion</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#BETWEEN_FRIENDS">Between Friends</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_HAMMERPOND_BURGLARY">The Hammerpond Burglary</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#A_FOCSLE_TRAGEDY">A Fo'c's'le Tragedy</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_ADOPTED_SON">The Adopted Son</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#PROVIDENCE_AND_MRS_URMY">Providence And Mrs. Urmy</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_MILLION_DOLLAR_FREIGHT_TRAIN">The Million Dollar Freight Train</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_BULLDOG_BREED">The Bulldog Breed</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#ICE_IN_JUNE">Ice In June</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_DITTY-BOX">The Ditty-box</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_YELLOW_CAT">The Yellow Cat</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#A_COCK_AND_POLICEMAN">A Cock And Policeman</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#PRISONERS_IN_THE_TOWER">Prisoners In The Tower</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#SANKEYS_DOUBLE-HEADER">Sankey's Double-header</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#AUNT_MARY_TELEGRAPHS">Aunt Mary Telegraphs</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_VENGEANCE_OF_THE_WOLF">The Vengeance Of The Wolf</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_WOOING_OF_BETTINA">The Wooing Of Bettina</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_JAM_GOD">The Jam God</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#WHEN_FATHER_WORKED">When Father Worked</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="THE_NIGHT_EXPRESS" id="THE_NIGHT_EXPRESS"></a>THE NIGHT EXPRESS</h2>
+
+<h3>The Story of a Bank Robbery</h3>
+
+<h3>By FRED M. WHITE</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A pelting</span> rain volleyed against the great glass dome
+of the terminus, a roaring wind boomed in the roof.
+Passengers, hurrying along the platform, glistened in big
+coats and tweed caps pulled close over their ears. By the
+platform the night express was drawn up&mdash;a glittering mass
+of green and gold, shimmering with electric lights, warm,
+inviting, and cozy.</p>
+
+<p>Most of the corridor carriages and sleeping berths were
+full, for it was early in October still, and the Scotch exodus
+was not just yet. A few late comers were looking anxiously
+out for the guard. He came presently, an alert figure in
+blue and silver. Really, he was very sorry. But the train
+was unusually crowded, and he was doing the best he
+could. He was perfectly aware of the fact that his questioners
+represented a Cabinet Minister on his way to
+Balmoral and a prominent Lothian baronet, but there
+are limits even to the power of an express guard, on the
+Grand Coast Railway.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what's the matter with this?" the Minister demanded.
+"Here is an ordinary first-class coach that will do very well
+for us. Now, Catesby, unlock one of these doors and turn
+the lights on."</p>
+
+<p>"Very sorry, my lord," the guard explained, "but it can't
+be done. Two of the carriages in the coach are quite full, as
+you see, and the other two are reserved. As a matter of
+fact, my lord, we are taking a body down to Lydmouth.
+Gentleman who is going to be buried there. And the other
+carriage is for the Imperial Bank of Scotland. Cashier
+going up north with specie, you understand."</p>
+
+<p>It was all plain enough, and disgustingly logical. To
+intrude upon the presence of a body was perfectly impossible;
+to try and force the hand of the bank cashier equally out of
+the question. As head of a great financial house, the Minister
+knew that. A platform inspector bustled along presently,
+with his hand to his gold-laced cap.</p>
+
+<p>"Saloon carriage being coupled up behind, my lord,"
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>The problem was solved. The guard glanced at his
+watch. It seemed to him that both the bank messenger and
+the undertaker were cutting it fine. The coffin came presently
+on a hand-truck&mdash;a black velvet pall lay over it, and
+on the sombre cloth a wreath or two of white lilies. The
+door of the carriage was closed presently, and the blinds
+drawn discreetly close. Following behind this came a barrow
+in charge of a couple of platform police. On the barrow
+were two square deal boxes, heavy out of all proportion
+to their size. These were deposited presently to the satisfaction
+of a little nervous-looking man in gold-rimmed
+glasses. Mr. George Skidmore, of the Imperial Bank,
+had his share of ordinary courage, but he had an imagination,
+too, and he particularly disliked these periodical trips
+to branch banks, in convoy, so to speak. He took no risks.</p>
+
+<p>"Awful night, sir," the guard observed. "Rather lucky
+to get a carriage to yourself, sir. Don't suppose you would
+have done so only we're taking a corpse as far as Lydmouth,
+which is our first stop."</p>
+
+<p>"Really?" Skidmore said carelessly. "Ill wind that
+blows nobody good, Catesby. I may be overcautious, but
+I much prefer a carriage to myself. And my people prefer it,
+too. That's why we always give the railway authorities
+a few days' notice. One can't be too careful, Catesby."</p>
+
+<p>The guard supposed not. He was slightly, yet discreetly,
+amused to see Mr. Skidmore glance under the
+seats of the first-class carriage. Certainly there was nobody
+either there or on the racks. The carriage at the far side
+was locked, and so, now, was the door next the platform.
+The great glass dome was brilliantly lighted so that anything
+suspicious would have been detected instantly. The
+guard's whistle rang out shrill and clear, and Catesby had
+a glimpse of Mr. Skidmore making himself comfortable as he
+swung himself into his van. The great green and gold serpent
+with the brilliant electric eyes fought its way sinuously into
+the throat of the wet and riotous night on its first stage of
+over two hundred miles. Lydmouth would be the first stop.</p>
+
+<p>So far Mr. Skidmore had nothing to worry him, nothing,
+that is, except the outside chance of a bad accident. He
+did not anticipate, however, that some miscreant might
+deliberately wreck the train on the off chance of looting
+those plain deal boxes. The class of thief that banks
+have to fear is not guilty of such clumsiness. Unquestionably
+nothing could happen on this side of Lydmouth.
+The train was roaring along now through the fierce gale at
+sixty odd miles an hour, Skidmore had the carriage to himself,
+and was not the snug, brilliantly lighted compartment
+made of steel? On one side was the carriage with the
+coffin; on the other side another compartment filled with
+a party of sportsmen going North. Skidmore had noticed
+the four of them playing bridge just before he slipped into
+his own carriage. Really, he had nothing to fear. He
+lay back comfortably wondering how Poe or Gaboriau
+would have handled such a situation with a successful robbery
+behind it. There are limits, of course, both to a
+novelist's imagination and a clever thief's process of invention.
+So, therefore....</p>
+
+<p>Three hours and twenty minutes later the express pulled
+up at Lydmouth. The station clock indicated the hour to
+be 11.23. Catesby swung himself out of his van on to the
+shining wet platform. Only one passenger was waiting
+there, but nobody alighted. Catesby was sure of this,
+because he was on the flags before a door could be opened.
+He came forward to give a hand with the coffin in the
+compartment next to Skidmore's. Then he noticed, to his
+surprise, that the glass in the carriage window was
+smashed; he could see that the little cashier was huddled
+up strangely in one corner. And Catesby could see also
+that the two boxes of bullion were gone!</p>
+
+<p>Catesby's heart was thumping against his ribs as he
+fumbled with his key. He laid his hand upon Skidmore's
+shoulder, but the latter did not move. The fair hair
+hung in a mass on the side of his forehead, and here it was
+fair no longer. There was a hole with something horribly
+red and slimy oozing from it. The carpet on the floor
+was piled up in a heap; there were red smears on the
+cushions. It was quite evident that a struggle had taken
+place here. The shattered glass in the window testified
+to that. And the boxes were gone, and Skidmore had
+been murdered by some assailant who had shot him through
+the brain. And this mysterious antagonist had got off
+with the bullion, too.</p>
+
+<p>A thing incredible, amazing, impossible; but there it was.
+By some extraordinary method or another the audacious
+criminal had boarded an express train traveling at sixty
+miles an hour in the teeth of a gale. He had contrived
+to enter the cashier's carriage and remove specie to the
+amount of eight thousand pounds! It was impossible
+that only one man could have carried it. But all the same
+it was gone.</p>
+
+<p>Catesby pulled himself together. He was perfectly certain
+that nobody at present on the train had been guilty
+of this thing. He was perfectly certain that nobody had
+left the train. Nobody could have done so after entering
+the station without the guard's knowledge, and to
+have attempted such a thing on the far side of the river
+bridge would have been certain death to anybody. There was
+a long viaduct here&mdash;posts and pillars and chains, with
+tragedy lurking anywhere for the madman who attempted
+such a thing. And until the viaduct was reached the
+express had not slackened speed. Besides, the thief who
+had the courage and intelligence and daring to carry out
+a robbery like this was not the man to leave an express
+train traveling at a speed of upwards of sixty miles an hour.</p>
+
+<p>The train had to proceed, there was no help for it. There
+was a hurried conference between Catesby and the stationmaster;
+after that the electric lamps in the dead man's carriage
+were unshipped, and the blinds pulled down. The
+matter would be fully investigated when Edinburgh was
+reached, meanwhile the stationmaster at Lydmouth would
+telephone the Scotch capital and let them know there what
+they had to expect. Catesby crept into his van again, very
+queer and dizzy, and with a sensation in his legs suggestive
+of creeping paralysis.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Naturally, the mystery of the night express caused a
+great sensation. Nothing like it had been known since the
+great crime on the South Coast, which is connected with
+the name of Lefroy. But that was not so much a mystery
+as a man hunt. There the criminal had been identified.
+But here there was no trace and no clue whatever.
+It was in vain that the Scotland Yard authorities tried to
+shake the evidence of the guard, Catesby. He refused to
+make any admissions that would permit the police even
+to build up a theory. He was absolutely certain that Mr.
+Skidmore had been alone in the carriage at the moment
+that the express left London; he was absolutely certain
+that he had locked the door of the compartment, and the
+engine driver could testify that the train had never traveled
+at a less speed than sixty miles an hour until the bridge
+over the river leading into Lydmouth station was reached;
+even then nobody could have dropped off the train without
+the risk of certain death. Inspector Merrick was
+bound to admit this himself when he went over the spot.
+And the problem of the missing bullion boxes was quite
+as puzzling in its way as the mysterious way in which Mr.
+Skidmore had met his death.</p>
+
+<p>There was no clue to this either. Certainly there had
+been a struggle, or there would not have been blood marks
+all over the place, and the window would have remained
+intact. Skidmore had probably been forced back into
+his seat, or he had collapsed there after the fatal shot
+was fired. The unfortunate man had been shot through
+the brain with an ordinary revolver of common pattern,
+so that for the purpose of proof the bullet was useless.
+There were no finger marks on the carriage door, a proof
+that the murderer had either worn gloves or that he had
+carefully removed all traces with a cloth of some kind.
+It was obvious, too, that a criminal of this class would
+take no risks, especially as there was no chance of his being
+hurried, seeing that he had had three clear hours for his work.
+The more the police went into the matter, the more puzzled
+they were. It was not a difficult matter to establish
+the bona fides of the passengers who traveled in the next
+coach with Skidmore, and as to the rest it did not matter.
+Nobody could possibly have left any of the corridor coaches
+without attracting notice; indeed, the very suggestion was
+absurd. And there the matter rested for three days.</p>
+
+<p>It must not be supposed that the authorities had been
+altogether idle. Inspector Merrick spent most of his time
+traveling up and down the line by slow local trains on the
+off-chance of hearing some significant incident that might
+lead to a clue. There was one thing obvious&mdash;the bullion
+boxes must have been thrown off the train at some spot
+arranged between the active thief and his confederates.
+For this was too big a thing to be entirely the work of one
+man. Some of the gang must have been waiting along the
+line in readiness to receive the boxes and carry them to a
+place of safety. By this time, no doubt, the boxes themselves
+had been destroyed; but eight thousand pounds in gold
+takes some moving, and probably a conveyance, a motor
+for choice, had been employed for this purpose. But
+nobody appeared to have seen or heard anything suspicious
+on the night of the murder; no prowling gamekeeper
+or watcher had noticed anything out of the common.
+Along the Essex and Norfolk marshes, where the Grand
+Coast Railway wound along like a steel snake, they had
+taken their desolate and dreary way. True, the dead body
+of a man had been found in the fowling nets up in the mouth
+of the Little Ouse, and nobody seemed to know who he
+was; but there could be no connection between this unhappy
+individual and the express criminal. Merrick shook his
+head as he listened to this from a laborer in a roadside
+public house where he was making a frugal lunch on
+bread and cheese.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you call fowling nets?" Merrick asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, what they catches the birds in," the rustic
+explained. "Thousands and thousands of duck and teel
+and widgeon they catches at this time of year. There's
+miles of nets along the road&mdash;great big nets like fowl runs.
+Ye didn't happen to see any on 'em as ye came along in
+the train?"</p>
+
+<p>"Now I come to think of it, yes," Merrick said thoughtfully.
+"I was rather struck by all that netting. So they
+catch sea birds that way?"</p>
+
+<p>"Catches 'em by the thousand, they does. Birds fly
+against the netting in the dark and get entangled. Ducks
+they get by 'ticing 'em into a sort of cage with decoys.
+There's some of 'em stan's the best part of half a mile long.
+Covered in over the top like great cages. Ain't bad sport,
+either."</p>
+
+<p>Merrick nodded. He recollected it all clearly now. He
+recalled the wide, desolate mud flats running right up to
+the railway embankment for some miles. At high tide
+the mud flats were under water, and out of these the great
+mass of network rose both horizontally and perpendicular.
+And in this tangle the dead body of a man had been found
+after the storm.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing really significant in the fact that the
+body had been discovered soon after the murder of Mr.
+George Skidmore. Still, there might be a connection
+between the two incidents. Merrick was going to make
+inquiries; he was after what looked like a million to one
+chance. But then Merrick was a detective with an imagination,
+which was one of the reasons why he had been
+appointed to the job. It was essentially a case for the
+theoretical man. It baffled all the established rules of the
+game.</p>
+
+<p>Late the same afternoon Merrick arrived at Little Warlingham
+by means of a baker's cart. It was here that the
+body of the drowned man lay awaiting the slim chances
+of identity. If nothing transpired during the next eight
+and forty hours, the corpse would be buried by the parish
+authorities. The village policeman acted as Merrick's
+guide. It was an event in his life that he was not likely
+to forget.</p>
+
+<p>"A stranger to these parts, I should say, sir," the local
+officer said. "He's in a shed at the back of the 'Blue
+Anchor,' where the inquest was held. If you come this
+way, I'll show him to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Anything found on the body?"</p>
+
+<p>"Absolutely nothing, sir. No mark on the clothing or
+linen, either. Probably washed off some ship in the storm.
+Pockets were quite empty, too. And no signs of foul play.
+<i>There</i> you are, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>Casually enough Merrick bent over the still, white form
+lying there. The dead face was turned up to the light,
+Rembrandtesque, coming through the door. The detective
+straightened himself suddenly, and wiped his forehead.</p>
+
+<p>"Stranger to you, sir, of course?" the local man said
+grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, no," Merrick retorted. "I happen to know the
+fellow quite well. I'm glad I came here."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Until it was quite too dark to see any longer Merrick
+was out on the mud flats asking questions. He appeared
+to be greatly interested in the wildfowlers and the many
+methods of catching their prey. He learned, incidentally,
+that on the night of the express murder most of the nets
+and lures had been washed away. He took minute particulars
+as to the state of the tide on the night in question;
+he wanted to know if the nets were capable of holding up
+against any great force. For instance, if a school of porpoises
+came along? Or if a fish eagle or an osprey found
+itself entangled in the meshes?</p>
+
+<p>The fowlers smiled. They invited Merrick to try it for
+himself. On that stormy east coast it was foolish to take
+any risks. And Merrick was satisfied. As a matter of
+fact, he was more than satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>He was really beginning to see his way at last. By the
+time he got back to his headquarters again he had practically
+reconstructed the crime. As he stood on the railway
+permanent way, gazing down into the network of the
+fowlers below, he smiled to himself. He could have tossed
+a biscuit on to the top of the long lengths of tarred and
+knotted rigging. Later on he telephoned to the London
+terminus of the Grand Coast Railway for the people there
+to place the services of Catesby at his disposal for a day
+or two. Could Catesby meet him at Lydmouth to-morrow?</p>
+
+<p>The guard could and did. He frankly admitted that
+he was grateful for the little holiday. He looked as if
+he wanted it. The corners of his mouth twitched, his
+hands were shaky.</p>
+
+<p>"It's nerves, Mr. Merrick," he explained. "We all
+suffer from them at times. Only we don't like the company
+to know it, ye understand? To tell the truth, I've
+never got over that affair at the Junction here eight years
+ago. I expect you remember that."</p>
+
+<p>Merrick nodded. Catesby was alluding to a great railway
+tragedy which had taken place outside Lydmouth
+station some few years back. It had been a most disastrous
+affair for a local express, and Catesby had been
+acting as guard to the train. He spoke of it under his breath.</p>
+
+<p>"I dream of it occasionally even now," he said. "The
+engine left the line and dragged the train over the embankment
+into the river. If you ask me how I managed to
+escape, I can't tell you. I never come into Lydmouth with
+the night express now without my head out of the window
+of the van right away from the viaduct till she pulls up at
+the station. And what's more, I never shall. It isn't
+fear, mind you, because I've as much pluck as any man.
+It's just nerves."</p>
+
+<p>"We get 'em in our profession, too," Merrick smiled.
+"Did you happen to be looking out of the window on the
+night of the murder?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and every other night, too. Haven't I just told
+you so? Directly we strike the viaduct I come to my feet
+by instinct."</p>
+
+<p>"Always look out the same side, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, on the left. That's the platform side, you understand."</p>
+
+<p>"Then if anybody had left the train there&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Anybody left the train! Why we were traveling at
+fifty miles an hour when we reached the viaduct. Oh,
+yes, if anybody <i>had</i> left the train I should have been bound
+to see them, of course."</p>
+
+<p>"But you can't see out of both windows at once."</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody could leave the train by the other side. The
+stone parapet of the viaduct almost touches the footboard,
+and there's a drop of ninety feet below that. Of course
+I see what you are driving at, Mr. Merrick. Now look
+here. I locked Mr. Skidmore in the carriage myself, and I
+can <i>prove</i> that nobody got in before we left London. That
+would have been too dangerous a game so long as the train
+was passing any number of brilliantly lighted stations,
+and by the time we got into the open we were going at sixty
+miles an hour. That speed never slackened till we were
+just outside Lydmouth, and I was watching at the moment
+that our pace dropped. I had my head out of the window
+of my van till we pulled up by the platform. I am prepared
+to swear to all this if you like. Lord knows how the thing
+was done, and I don't suppose anybody else ever will."</p>
+
+<p>"You are mistaken there," said Merrick drily. "Now,
+what puzzles you, of course, is the manner in which the
+murderer left the train."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, isn't that the whole mystery?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not to me. That's the part I really do know. Not
+that I can take any great credit to myself, because luck
+helped me. It was, perhaps, the most amazing piece of
+luck I have ever had. It was my duty, of course, to take
+no chances, and I didn't. But we'll come to that presently.
+Let it suffice for the moment that I know how the murderer left
+the train. What puzzles me is to know how he got on it.
+We can dismiss every other passenger in the train, and we
+need not look for an accomplice. There <i>were</i> accomplices, of
+course, but they were not on the express. Why didn't Mr.
+Skidmore travel in one of the corridor coaches?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was too nervous. He always had a first-class carriage
+to himself. We knew he was coming, and that was
+why we attached an ordinary first-class coach to the train.
+We shouldn't do it for anybody, but Lord Rendelmore,
+the chairman of Mr. Skidmore's bank, is also one of our
+directors. The coach came in handy the other night
+because we had an order from a London undertaker to bring
+a corpse as far as here&mdash;to Lydmouth."</p>
+
+<p>"Really! You would have to have a separate carriage
+for that."</p>
+
+<p>"Naturally, Mr. Merrick. It was sort of killing two
+birds with one stone."</p>
+
+<p>"I see. When did you hear about the undertaking job?"</p>
+
+<p>"The same morning we heard from the bank that Mr.
+Skidmore was going to Lydmouth. We reserved a coach
+at once, and had it attached to the Express. The other
+carriages were filled with ordinary passengers."</p>
+
+<p>"Why didn't I hear of this before?" Merrick asked.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> don't know. It doesn't seem to me to be of much
+importance. You might just as well ask me questions as
+to the passengers' baggage."</p>
+
+<p>"Everything is of importance," Merrick said sententiously.
+"In our profession, there are no such things as
+trifles. I suppose there will be no difficulty in getting at
+the facts of this corpse business. I'll make inquiries here
+presently."</p>
+
+<p>So far Merrick professed himself to be satisfied. But
+there were still difficulties in the way. The station people
+had a clear recollection of the receipt of a coffin on the night
+of the tragedy, and, late as it was, the gruesome thing had
+been fetched away by the people whom it was consigned
+to. A plain hearse, drawn by one horse, had been driven
+into the station yard, the consignment note had been
+receipted in the usual way, and there was an end of the
+matter. Lydmouth was a big place, with nearly a quarter
+of a million of inhabitants, and would necessarily contain
+a good many people in the undertaking line. Clearly it was no
+business of the railway company to take this thing any further.</p>
+
+<p>Merrick admitted that freely enough. It was nearly dark
+when he came back to the station, profoundly dissatisfied
+with a wasted afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>"No good," he told Catesby. "At the same time there
+are consolations. And, after all, I am merely confirming
+my suspicions. I suppose your people here are on the telephone.
+If so, I should like to send a message to your head
+office. I want the name of the firm in London who consigned
+the coffin here. I suppose the stationmaster could
+manage this for me."</p>
+
+<p>An hour or so later the information came. Merrick,
+at the telephone, wanted a little further assistance. Would
+the Grand Coast Railway call up the undertaker's firm
+whilst he held the line and ask the full particulars as to the
+body sent from London to Lydmouth. For half an hour
+Merrick stood patiently there till the reply came.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you there? Is that Inspector Merrick? Oh, yes.
+Well, we have called up Lincoln &amp; Co., the undertakers.
+We got on to the manager himself. He declares that the
+whole thing is a mistake. They have not sent a corpse
+over our trunk system for two months. I read the manager
+the letter asking for special facilities, a letter on the
+firm's own paper. The manager does not hesitate to say
+the whole thing is a forgery. I think he is right, Inspector.
+If we can do anything else for you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Merrick hung up the receiver and smiled as if pleased
+with himself. He turned to his companion, Catesby.</p>
+
+<p>"It's all right," he said. "Is there any way we can
+get back to London to-night? The whole thing is perfectly
+plain, now."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Though Merrick returned to London thoroughly satisfied,
+he knew that the sequel was not just yet. There was
+much conjuring work to be done before it would be possible
+to place all the cards on the table. The Christmas
+holidays had arrived before Merrick obtained a couple of
+warrants, and, armed with these, he went down to Brighton
+on Boxing Day, and put up at the Hotel Regina, registering
+himself as Colonel Beaumont, sometime of the United
+States Field Forces. Merrick could pose as an authority
+on Cuba, for on one occasion he had been there for six
+months on the lookout for a defaulting bank manager.
+He had made certain changes in his appearance, and just
+now he bore little resemblance to Inspector Merrick of
+New Scotland Yard.</p>
+
+<p>The big hotel on the front was full. There was a smart
+dance that same night, preceded by a children's party and
+Christmas tree. The house swarmed with young folks,
+and a good many nationalities were represented. On
+occasions like these somebody generally takes the lead,
+and by common consent the part of the chief of the events
+had been allotted to the Marquis de Branza.</p>
+
+<p>To begin with, he was immensely rich. He had vast
+estates in Italy. He had been staying at the Regina for
+the past month, and it was whispered that his bill had
+reached three figures. He entertained lavishly; he was
+the soul of hospitality; he was going to buy a palace in
+Kings' Gardens, and more or less settle down in Brighton.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to all this the Marquis was a handsome man,
+very fascinating, and a prime favorite with all the boys and
+girls at the Regina. He had his little peculiarities, of course&mdash;for
+instance, he paid for everything in gold. All his
+hotel bills were met with current coin.</p>
+
+<p>Merrick had gleaned all this before he had been a day
+at the Regina. They were quite a happy family, and the
+Colonel speedily found himself at home. The Marquis
+welcomed him as if he owned the hotel, and as if everybody
+was his guest. The dance was a great success, as
+also were the presents in connection with the cotillon
+promoted by the Marquis.</p>
+
+<p>At two o'clock the following morning the Marquis was
+entertaining a select party in the smoking-room. The
+ladies had all vanished by this time. The Marquis was
+speaking of his adventures. He really had quite a talent
+in that direction. Naturally, a man of his wealth was
+certain to be the mark for swindlers. Merrick listened with
+an approving smile. He knew that most of these stories
+were true, for they had all been recorded from time to time
+at Scotland Yard.</p>
+
+<p>"You would have made an excellent detective, Marquis,"
+he said. "You have made it quite clear where the police
+blundered over that Glasgow tragedy. I suppose you read
+all about the Grand Coast Railway murder."</p>
+
+<p>The Marquis started ever so slightly. There was a
+questioning look in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you?" he said. "Naturally one would, Colonel.
+But a matter the most inexplicable. I gave him up. From
+the very first I gave him up. If the guard Catesby was
+not the guilty person, then I admit I have no theory."</p>
+
+<p>One by one, the smoking-room company faded away.
+Presently only Merrick and the Marquis remained, save
+one guest who had fallen asleep in his chair. A sleepy
+waiter looked in and vanished again. The hotel was absolutely
+quiet now. Merrick, however, was wide awake
+enough; so, apparently, was the Marquis. All the same,
+he yawned ostentatiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us to bed," he said. "To-morrow, perhaps&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No," Merrick said somewhat curtly. "I prefer to-night.
+Sit down."</p>
+
+<p>The last two words came crisply and with a ring of command
+in them. The Marquis bowed as he dropped into
+a chair and lighted a fresh cigarette. A little red spot
+glowed on either of his brown cheeks, his eyes glittered.</p>
+
+<p>"You want to speak to me, Colonel?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Very much indeed. Now, you are an exceedingly clever
+man, Marquis, and you may be able to help me. It happens
+that I am deeply interested in the Grand Coast Express
+murder; in fact, I have devoted the last two months to its
+solution."</p>
+
+<p>"With no success whatever, my dear Colonel?" the
+Marquis murmured.</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary, my dear Marquis, with absolute satisfaction.
+I am quite sure that you will be interested in my
+story."</p>
+
+<p>The Marquis raised his cigarette graciously.</p>
+
+<p>"You are very good to give me your confidence," he said.
+"Pray proceed."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you. I will not bore you with any preliminary
+details, for they are too recent to have faded from your
+memory. Sufficient that we have a murder committed in
+an express train; we have the disappearance of eight thousand
+pounds in gold, without any trace of the criminal.
+That he was on the train at the start is obvious. That he
+was not in any of the carriages conveying ordinary passengers
+is equally obvious. It is also certain that he left
+the train after the commission of the crime. Doubtless
+you read the evidence of the guard to prove that nobody
+left the train after the viaduct leading to Lydmouth station
+was reached. Therefore, the murderer contrived to make
+his escape when the express was traveling at sixty miles
+per hour."</p>
+
+<p>"Is not all this superfluous?" the Marquis asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, not quite. I am going to tell you how the murderer
+joined the train and how he left it after the murder and the
+robbery."</p>
+
+<p>"You are going to tell me that! Is it possible?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think so," Merrick said modestly. "Now, Mr. Skidmore
+had a compartment to himself. He was locked in
+the very last thing, and nobody joined the train afterward.
+Naturally a&mdash;well&mdash;an amateur detective like myself
+wanted to know who was in the adjoining compartments.
+Three of these could be dismissed at once. But in the fourth
+there was a corpse&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"A corpse! But there was no mention of that at the
+inquest."</p>
+
+<p>"No, but the fact remains. A corpse in a coffin. In a
+dark compartment with the blinds down. And, strangely
+enough, the firm of undertakers who consigned, or were
+supposed to consign, the body to Lydmouth denied the whole
+business. Therefore, it is only fair to suppose that the
+whole thing was a put-up job to get a compartment in the
+coach that Mr. Skidmore traveled by. I am going to assume
+that in that coffin the murderer lay concealed. But let
+me give you a light&mdash;your cigarette is out."</p>
+
+<p>"I smoke no more," the Marquis said. "My throat,
+he is dry. And then&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, the first part is easy. The man gets out of
+the coffin and proceeds to fill it with some heavy substance
+which has been smuggled into the carriage under the pall.
+He screws the lid down and presently makes his way
+along the footboard to the next compartment. An athlete
+in good condition could do that; in fact, a sailor has done
+it in a drunken freak more than once. Mind you, I don't
+say that murder was intended in the first instance; but will
+presume that there was a struggle. The thief probably
+lost his temper, and perhaps Mr. Skidmore irritated him.
+Now, the rest was easy. It was easy to pack up the gold
+in leather bags, each containing a thousand sovereigns,
+and to drop them along the line at some spot previously
+agreed upon. I have no doubt that the murderer and his
+accomplices traveled many times up and down the line
+before the details were finally settled. Any way, there
+was no risk here. The broken packing cases were pitched
+out also, probably in some thick wood. Or they might
+have been weighted and cast into a stream. Are you
+interested?"</p>
+
+<p>The Marquis gurgled. He had some difficulty in
+speaking.</p>
+
+<p>"A little dangerous," he said. "Our ingenious friend
+could not possibly screw himself down in the coffin after
+returning to his compartment. And have you perceived
+the danger of discovery at Lydmouth?"</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely," Merrick said drily. "It is refreshing to
+meet with so luminous a mind as yours. There were many
+dangers, many risks to take. The train might have been
+stopped, lots of things might have happened. It would
+be far better for the man to leave the express. And he
+did so!"</p>
+
+<p>"The express at top speed! Impossible!"</p>
+
+<p>"To the ordinary individual, yes. But then, you see,
+this was not an ordinary individual. He was&mdash;let us
+suppose&mdash;an acrobat, a man of great nerve and courage,
+accustomed to trapeze work and the use of the diving net."</p>
+
+<p>"But Colonel, pardon me, where does the net come in?"</p>
+
+<p>"The net came in at a place near Little Warlingham,
+on the Norfolk coast. There are miles of net up there,
+trap and flight nets close by the side of the line. These
+nets are wide and strong; they run many furlongs without
+supports, so that an acrobat could easily turn a somersault
+on to one of these at a given spot without the slightest
+risk. He could study out the precise spot carefully
+beforehand&mdash;there are lightships on the sands to act as
+guides. I have been down to the spot and studied it all
+out for myself. The thing is quite easy for the class of man
+I mean. I am not taking any great credit to myself, because
+I happened to see the body of the man who essayed that
+experiment. I recognized him for&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You recognized him! You knew who he was?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly. He was Luigi Bianca, who used to perform
+in London years ago, with his brother Joseph, on the
+high trapeze. Then one of them got into trouble and subsequently
+embarked, as the papers say, on a career of crime.
+And when I saw the body of Luigi I knew at once that he
+had had a hand in the murder of Mr. Skidmore. When
+the right spot was reached the fellow took a header in the
+dark boldly enough, but he did not know that the storm
+had come with a very high October tide, and washed the
+nets away. He fell on the sands and dislocated his neck.
+But I had something to go on with. When I found out
+about the bogus corpse I began to see my way. I have
+been making careful inquiries ever since for the other
+criminal&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The other criminal! You mean to insinuate&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I insinuate nothing," Merrick said coldly; "naturally
+enough I wanted to find Joseph Bianca. He was the man
+who picked up the gold; he was the man who hired a car
+in London from Moss &amp; Co., in Regent Street, for a week.
+This was to recover the gold and incidentally also to take
+up the thief who stole it. I wanted to find Joseph Bianca,
+and <i>I've done it!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>The Marquis leaped to his feet. As he did so the man
+in the distant chair woke up and moved across the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't make a fuss!" Merrick said quietly. "You
+will be able to explain presently&mdash;perhaps what you are
+doing here posing as a Marquis, and where you got all that
+ready money from. Meanwhile, let me inform you that I
+am Inspector Merrick, of Scotland Yard, and that this is
+Sergeant Matthews. Joseph Bianca, you are my prisoner,
+and I have a warrant for your arrest as an accessory before
+and after the fact for the murder of Mr. George Skidmore.
+Ask them to call us a cab, Matthews!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="OVER_THE_GARDEN_WALL" id="OVER_THE_GARDEN_WALL"></a>OVER THE GARDEN WALL</h2>
+
+<h3>The Story of a Vacation</h3>
+
+<h3>By LOUISE HAMILTON MABIE</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> impression, which floated vaguely as a perfume
+in the wake of the departing Mr. and Mrs. Jasper
+Prentiss, adapted itself pleasingly to any point of view.
+Generally, it was thought that Katrina Prentiss was to
+remain at home under the eye of Grandfather McBride.
+Particularly, was this Grandfather McBride's reading of
+the unspoken word. But Miss Prentiss, herself, thought
+so otherwise that the situation completely reversed itself.
+To Miss Prentiss, Grandfather McBride was left absolutely
+under her eye.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the Jasper Prentisses, characteristically
+explaining nothing, commanding nothing, leaving events
+to work themselves out somehow, as events have been known
+to do, were off for their month's fishing without undue worry.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandfather will smoke his pipe all over the house,"
+remarked Mrs. Prentiss easily, as they drove away.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Katrina will manage somehow," returned Mr.
+Prentiss, as easily. "They'll come to terms. By the way,
+Kitty, we mustn't forget that marmalade." And, absorbed
+in their list of supplies, the Jasper Prentisses disappeared
+from view.</p>
+
+<p>Grandfather McBride, eighty-one, dependent, save in
+moments of excitement, upon his knotted stick, hard-featured,
+with a rusty beard and a shabby black hat, departed
+slowly for his own quarters. Miss Prentiss, twenty-one,
+hazel-eyed and graceful, with a wonderful creamy skin,
+under a crown of auburn braids, sank dreamily upon the
+broad porch step and gazed across the green lawn into the
+future.</p>
+
+<p>"A whole month," thought Miss Prentiss, "of doing as
+I please&mdash;consulting nobody, ordering things, going to
+places, and coming home to&mdash;freedom." Miss Prentiss
+spread out her hands with a sigh of content. "Not that
+I'm interfered with&mdash;ever," she added, reproaching herself,
+"but now&mdash;well, I'm it."</p>
+
+<p>She rose swiftly and turned up the steps. In the wide
+doorway stood Grandfather McBride, stick in hand, hat
+jammed down, and in his mouth, at a defiant angle, a battered
+black pipe. A red flag, backed up by a declaration
+of the rights of man, could not have spoken more plainly.
+Miss Prentiss drew back; Mr. McBride stepped forward.
+Their eyes met. Then the old gentleman flung down his
+challenge. He removed the pipe and held it poised in his
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>"What you goin' to do to-day, Triny?" he asked, briskly.
+"When you goin' over to see the Deerings' parrot? There
+ain't another such bird in America. You go over there
+this morning and see that parrot. Don't loll about the
+house. Don't be lazy!" Whereupon, with less profanity,
+but as much of autocracy as was ever displayed by an Irish
+boss whipping into shape the lowliest of his Italian gang,
+Mr. McBride replaced his pipe elaborately, and walked
+off with the honors. Katrina, utterly astonished, stared
+after him, then shrugged, then smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Grandfather," she reached at length, "in minor
+matters I'll let him have his way."</p>
+
+<p>The next day, Grandfather McBride smoked his pipe
+on the porch. On the third morning he smoked it in the
+drawing-room&mdash;out of sheer defiance, for he never entered
+the room save under compulsion. Katrina, reminding herself
+that peace was to be desired above victory, shrugged
+once more, smiled, and went for a ride. When she swept
+in, an hour or so later, Grandfather McBride was in the
+back garden with John, and the smoke of a huge bonfire
+obscured the sunlight. This was revolution, simple and
+straightforward, and Katrina went at once to the back
+garden.</p>
+
+<p>"John," she said, "what is the meaning of this? Don't
+you know that Mr. Prentiss never allows bonfires? The
+rubbish is to be carted away, <i>not</i> set on fire."</p>
+
+<p>John, apologetic, perturbed, nodded toward the old
+gentleman. "Yes, miss, I know. I told Mr. McBride,
+miss&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Grandfather McBride turned coldly upon Katrina. "I
+ordered this bonfire," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"But, Grandfather, you know the old orders. Father
+never allows them."</p>
+
+<p>"I allow them," said Mr. McBride. "Your father's
+away fishing, and I'm in charge. This is my bonfire. I
+order bonfires when I please. I like 'em. I like the smell
+of 'em, I like the smoke&mdash;&mdash;" Here an unexpected cough
+gave Katrina a word.</p>
+
+<p>"But, Grandfather," she began again, only to be cut
+short.</p>
+
+<p>"When the folks are home, I sit still and mind my own
+business. Now they're away, I'm goin' to do things. I'm
+on a vacation myself," said Mr. McBride, "and I'll have
+a bonfire on the front lawn if I say so. You go back to the
+house, Katriny, and read Gibson."</p>
+
+<p>"Ibsen," flashed Katrina.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care what his Dutch name is&mdash;read him. Or
+else"&mdash;a grim light of humor in his hard gray eye&mdash;"go
+over and see that parrot."</p>
+
+<p>Katrina almost stamped her foot. "I loathe parrots,"
+she cried, "and I came out to talk about this bonfire."</p>
+
+<p>"I know you did," said Mr. McBride, "but this parrot
+ain't like other parrots. It's a clown. It would make
+a rag baby laugh."</p>
+
+<p>Katrina, flushed, angry, at a loss what to say, decided
+to say nothing. The sight of John, discreetly gazing at
+the roof of the chicken house, the grimness of Grandfather's
+face, the discomfort of the choking smoke, urged a dignified
+retreat. She turned abruptly and left them, overwhelmed
+at the exhibition furnished by Mr. McBride, confounded
+at his sudden leap into activity after years of
+serene floating and absolutely in the dark as to any method
+of controlling him in the future.</p>
+
+<p>For a week, his pipe and his daily bonfire contented Mr.
+McBride. Between himself and Katrina, relations were
+polite but not cordial. Katrina preserved a dignity which
+deceived neither of them. Both knew that she was awaiting
+something sensational, and the fact worried the old
+gentleman, for already he had exhausted his possibilities.
+He longed for new ideas in this matter of revolution, but
+none came. He began to be bored by bonfires, and the
+lack of opposition to them. Even the parrot failed to
+amuse, and he was sinking into dull monotony, when a walk
+down the long lane behind the back garden one sunny afternoon
+changed the horizon of his world.</p>
+
+<p>He was gone for two hours; but Katrina was away from
+the house herself, and did not notice. The next afternoon
+he disappeared for three, finally dragging in weary in
+body, but high in spirit. Twice at dinner he chuckled
+audibly, and three times he recommended the parrot across
+the street to Katrina. The next day he vanished after
+luncheon, and was late for dinner. At this, Katrina decided
+to take a hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandfather," she said abruptly at dessert, after a long
+interval of silence on both sides, "it's all very well to take
+a vacation, but there is such a thing as overdoing it. I'm
+sure you would do nothing that would alarm mother, and I
+know that if she were at home she would worry over you.
+For days you have had no nap. Please rest to-morrow.
+Don't go walking. Let me drive you to the club for
+luncheon."</p>
+
+<p>The old gentleman glanced up at Katrina quickly. "I
+declare if I hadn't forgot all about that fellow till this minute,"
+he said. "Speaking of the club, how's Sparks, Katriny?"</p>
+
+<p>Katrina sat suddenly erect and her color deepened. "Do
+you by any chance mean Mr. Willoughby Park, Grandfather?
+If so, I know nothing whatever about him. I
+haven't seen him for a week." This with a jerk.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you marry that chap, Katriny," went on Mr.
+McBride, unimpressed, "and don't you let him come around
+here. He's no good. A fellow that hangs around a country
+club when he ain't hangin' around a girl, is always no good.
+You marry a chap with brains, Katriny, even if he ain't so
+long on the cash. Why, I know a young fellow&mdash;&mdash;" Mr.
+McBride pulled himself up short. "You dash in for brains,
+Triny, and I'll take out my pocket book." Here he nodded,
+as if concluding a bargain, but Katrina was already upon
+her feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandfather McBride, you are growing insufferable,"
+she cried. "Simply because I mention the club, you assume
+that I am&mdash;angling&mdash;for a man that&mdash;that has been
+decently polite to me. I have never been invited to marry
+Mr. Park. And you give me low advice about laying traps
+for some other sort of a man. And you mention pocket
+books! And you go off alone for hours and come home
+worn out. And you smoke your horrible old pipe and build
+your sickening bonfires, just to spite me! I think you are
+a wretch, and I've worried over you every day since
+mother left." Here she stopped suddenly, with a catch in
+her throat.</p>
+
+<p>The old gentleman looked at her silently. Then he got
+up and came around the table. Awkwardly, he patted her
+shoulder. Katrina sat down.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm glad you don't like Sparks, my dear," said Mr.
+McBride, leaning on his stick. "And don't worry your
+heart over Grandfather, Triny. Grandfather's no fool.
+He ain't had so much fun in years." Mr. McBride winked
+just here, and put on an air of profound mystery.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder where you do disappear to," said Katrina.
+"I think I'll go along."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you do that," spoke up Mr. McBride alertly.
+"Don't you do that! A man can't stand a woman tagging
+at his heels. He's got to have room, and air to breathe."</p>
+
+<p>"Smoke, you mean," put in Katrina, with returning
+spirit, "and I warn you, Grandfather, that if you make
+fires off our place, you'll be arrested."</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh! Fires!" said Mr. McBride contemptuously.
+"Amusement for children. I ain't a-makin' fires these
+days, Katriny. I've got other things to do." And, with
+a final pat upon her shoulder, and a last most telling wink,
+Grandfather McBride dragged himself wearily, but triumphantly,
+to bed.</p>
+
+<p>When Katrina, on the lookout next afternoon, saw Mr.
+McBride join John in the back garden, hold with him a
+whispered consultation broken by many stealthy glances
+toward the house, and finally disappear with him down the
+lane, behind a wheelbarrow laden with boards, she gave orders
+that she was not at home, waited half an hour, and followed.</p>
+
+<p>The lane wound coolly green and deserted from the Prentiss
+place into the heart of the country. Katrina, walking
+steadily, passed her own, passed the Graham and the Haskell
+boundaries, and stopped in surprise. At a branching path
+hung a new and conspicuous sign. "Private Road! No
+Trespassing, Under Penalty of the Law."</p>
+
+<p>It was a churlish sign. The people of the neighborhood&mdash;a
+summer settlement of friends and pleasant informalities&mdash;were
+used to no such signs. And Katrina, knowing
+Grandfather McBride, turned at once into the branching
+path. At some distance in, she passed a similar sign, with
+every mark of disdain. Finally, she was brought up short
+by a wire fence, with a gate, high, wooden, and new, that
+stretched across the path. She tried the gate, but it did
+not budge. From the wood beyond came the sound of
+voices and the strokes of a hammer. With a quick glance
+behind her, and a determined set to her chin, she began to
+climb the gate.</p>
+
+<p>She was descending upon the other side in safety, when
+Grandfather McBride came upon her. His hat was pushed
+back upon his head, his stick was forgotten. He descended
+upon her as might a hungry lion upon its prey. He roared&mdash;in
+fact, he bellowed.</p>
+
+<p>"Katrina Prentiss, get back over that fence. Climb back
+over that gate; you're trespassing. Didn't you see the signs?
+Are you blind? Can't you read? What do you mean by
+coming in here where you don't belong? Climb back there
+and go home at once!"</p>
+
+<p>Katrina, unprepared for battle and aware of being at a disadvantage,
+swallowed hard and obeyed. She climbed back
+over the gate. Once upon solid earth, however, and she
+glared as fiercely at Grandfather McBride as he stared ferociously
+at her.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not a child," she said furiously, when he stopped to
+breathe, "to be ordered about and sent home and insulted.
+I have never been so treated in my life and I give you fair
+warning, Grandfather, that I'll stand it no longer. After this
+I'll do as I please." Whereupon Katrina, having woman-like,
+in the act of obedience, said her say, retreated with dignity
+and dispatch. Behind her, Mr. McBride waved his
+recovered stick over the gate and shouted, but she did not
+turn nor attempt an answer.</p>
+
+<p>He came home within an hour, slowly, leaning heavily upon
+his stick. John followed with the empty wheelbarrow. They
+parted at the barn and Mr. McBride went at once to his
+room and shut the door. Katrina, sitting at her own window,
+looked thoughtfully into space and swung a key upon
+her forefinger. After a time she stood up, smoothed her
+hair and pinned on her wide, rose-laden hat. Then she
+went down the hall quietly, stopped before Mr. McBride's
+door, and listened a moment. A gentle snore proclaimed
+Mr. McBride's occupation. Katrina fitted the key into the
+lock and turned it, took it out again and slipped it beneath
+a corner of the rug, listened a further moment and then
+walked down the stairs, out through the back garden, and,
+with a final glance behind her, turned once more into the
+green and deserted lane.</p>
+
+<p>It must be confessed that Katrina started upon her quest
+in a spirit far removed from that of your single-minded
+explorer. She was urged by a variety of causes. Among
+them was a determination to disobey Grandfather McBride,
+to serve him with his own medicine, to pay him in his own
+coin, and to do it as quickly and as frankly as possible. Her
+rapidly increasing curiosity concerning the region he guarded
+with so much mystery counted as well, but the paramount
+force&mdash;for Katrina was young enough to take her responsibility
+seriously&mdash;was anxiety over the old gentleman himself.
+In fact, Katrina departed, as did Lot's wife, with her
+face and her thought turned backward, a policy not conducive
+to brilliant success in exploration.</p>
+
+<p>This time, however, she was stopped by no one. She passed
+the gate safely, penetrated the wood and came at length upon
+a part of Mr. McBride's secret. It was a rough little flight of
+steps, made with the help of John, the wheelbarrow, and the
+boards, which led to the top of a high brick wall. The wall
+astounded Katrina even more than did the steps, which is
+saying a good deal. The whole elaborate contrivance for
+keeping people away, puzzled Katrina. It was some time
+before she mounted the steps and looked over the wall, but
+when she finally did so, she ceased to be merely puzzled.
+She became lost in a maze of wonder.</p>
+
+<p>Stretching before her, was a wide expanse of green. Just
+opposite stood a long, low building of workmanlike appearance.
+At the left was a very presentable rose garden. At
+the right, a rustic summer-house. Surrounding all was the
+high brick wall. But it was none of these things that amazed
+Katrina.</p>
+
+<p>Moving toward her, from the door of the long building,
+came a little procession&mdash;men and women, walking slowly,
+sedately dressed in old-time silks and finery, decked with
+plumes, jewels, laces, bouquets of flowers. Arrived at a
+broad space near the summer-house, the company, after a
+series of low and preliminary bows, launched forth into a
+stately dance. Katrina, conscious of music, descried an
+individual in very modern blue overalls, who manipulated a
+phonograph. A voice from beyond the summer-house, called
+forth instructions at intervals, with a huskiness vaguely suggestive
+of old Coney.</p>
+
+<p>"More side-play there, Miss Beals. Just imagine he's a
+young hobo you're in love with and yer father won't let him
+up the steps. You're doing the Merry Widow act while
+the old man's not looking. Don't bow so low you hide your
+face, Mr. Peters. Your face is worth money to us all. And
+everybody get a move on! You're too slow! Hit it up a
+bit, Jim."</p>
+
+<p>The overalls, thus adjured, accelerated the time of his
+machine, and a new spirit animated the group. Katrina
+leaned far over the wall in order to miss nothing. At length,
+the dance, moving toward a finale, reached it with a succession
+of stirring chords, and a flourish of curtseys, and the group
+dissolved.</p>
+
+<p>"That'll do for to-day. You can knock off now," began
+the husky voice, when Jim, glancing up from his phonograph,
+beheld Katrina in her rose-laden hat, leaning far over the wall.
+If he had stopped to reflect, he might have ignored the vision,
+for he was but man, and the vision a guilelessly pretty one,
+but he did not stop to reflect. With Jim, to see a thing was
+to proclaim it abroad. Immediately, he yelled:</p>
+
+<p>"Hey! Get on to the lady on the wall! Hey! Mr.
+Connor, come around here. There's somebody on the wall.
+Hey!"</p>
+
+<p>At once Katrina, to her utmost discomfort, became the
+centre of the stage. Everybody turned, saw her, and began
+to stare. The silken ladies, the velvet gentlemen, delayed their
+return to modern apparel, and took her in. Jim stared
+clamorously. Mr. Connor, rounding the summer-house,
+glared angrily. To Katrina, even the long building blinked its
+windows at her, and she thought, with sudden longing, of
+Grandfather McBride. She wished she had not come. Most
+of all, she wished to go, but she did not quite dare.</p>
+
+<p>At once, Mr. Connor took charge of the situation. "Say,
+young lady," he demanded, in a truculent manner, "what do
+you mean by gettin' into these grounds and rubberin' at us
+over our wall? Don't you know you can be run in for passin'
+those signs? Didn't you see that gate?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," faltered Katrina; "yes&mdash;I saw the gate."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, how'd you get past that gate and them signs," Mr.
+Connor wanted to know.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I climbed the gate," hesitated Katrina.</p>
+
+<p>Clearly this was not what Mr. Connor expected. Such
+simplicity must cover guile. A suppressed smile glimmered
+through the group and Mr. Connor became more suspicious
+of Katrina.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't want no kiddin' now, do you hear?" he burst
+forth. "You're in a tight place, young woman, and you may
+as well wake up to the fact at once. The Knickerbocker is
+doin' things on a plane of high art, and our methods are our
+own. Now, I want to know who you represent? And freshness
+don't go, d'you see?"</p>
+
+<p>Katrina hardly heard Mr. Connor. Her mind was occupied
+with the freedom that lay clear behind her, and the possible
+patrol-wagons and police stations before her. Perhaps she
+might conciliate this red-faced man by allowing him to talk,
+by being mild and meek and polite. Perhaps a chance might
+come for a desperate attempt at escape. But Mr. Connor,
+conversing fluently, read her very soul.</p>
+
+<p>"Bring that there light ladder, Jim," he interrupted himself
+to order, "and if you try to get away, young woman, it'll be
+the worse for you. Now, I want to know what yellow sheet
+you represent?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yellow&mdash;why do you take me for a newspaper woman?"
+cried Katrina. "I'm not. I'm nothing of the sort. I've
+never been inside a newspaper office in my life."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course not," observed Mr. Connor, ironically. "They
+never have. Always society ladies that can't write their own
+names. You stand just where you are, miss, till that ladder
+arrives. Then I'm coming up to confiscate any little sketches
+and things you may have handy.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a brute," said Katrina, lips trembling but head
+held high. "I am Miss Prentiss. I live near here, and you
+will not dare to detain me."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, won't I?" returned Mr. Connor. "I have a picture
+of myself letting you go. And where the deuce is Jim?"
+He turned impatiently toward the building across the lawn,
+then somewhat relaxed his frown. "Oh, well, I can take an
+orchestra chair," observed Mr. Connor. "Here comes the
+boss."</p>
+
+<p>Katrina, with deepening concern, glanced from Mr. Connor
+toward the long building. A young man was sprinting across
+the stretch of green&mdash;a clean-cut young man in gray flannels.
+At the first sight of him, Katrina caught her breath sharply
+and blushed. It was Katrina's despair that she blushed so
+easily. As the young man neared them the spectators achieved
+the effect of obliterating themselves from the landscape. They
+melted into space. There remained the young man, Mr.
+Connor, and a divinely flushed Katrina.</p>
+
+<p>The young man looked up at her without smiling. He
+bowed to her gravely. Then he turned to Mr. Connor. With
+a few low-spoken words, he wilted Mr. Connor. Katrina,
+gazing at the rose-garden, heard something in spite of herself.
+She heard her name, and caught Mr. Connor's articulate
+amazement. She heard mentioned some "old gentleman."
+She heard a recommendation to Mr. Connor to go more slowly
+in the future and to mend his manners at all times. After a
+hint to Mr. Connor to look up Jim and the ladder, she heard
+that gentleman withdraw much more quietly than he had
+come, and her eyes finally left the rose-garden and looked
+straight down into those of warm gray, belonging to the
+young man below her.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you mind&mdash;waiting&mdash;just a moment longer?" he
+asked. "This is more luck than I've had lately."</p>
+
+<p>Katrina smiled tremulously. "It's in my power to go,
+then," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the young man, firmly, "it isn't. On second
+thoughts, you are to stay just where you are till that blockhead
+brings the ladder. I've a good deal to say. I'm going to
+walk home with you."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," said Katrina. "And what will become of your
+fancy-dress party?"</p>
+
+<p>"My fancy-dress party," returned the young man, "will
+catch the next trolley for New York. Oh! Here labors the
+trusty henchman across the green. Right you are, Jim!
+No, the lady is not to come down. I'm to go up." And
+go up he did, in the twinkling of an eye, and in less than
+another the rose-wreathed hat and the young man's gray
+cap had disappeared from view together.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what do you know about that?" observed Jim, under
+his breath, staring at the top of the wall. He whistled softly.
+Then he grinned. "Hypnotized, by thunder," concluded
+Jim, returning with the ladder.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the two lingered homeward through the deepening
+twilight. The gate opened easily to a key from the young
+man's pocket; the signs glimmered dimly. They talked
+lightly, but what they said proved to both simply an airy veil
+for what they did not say. Katrina spoke of the club and the
+tennis tournament.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, we lost," she said. "Our best man," with a
+sidelong look, "did not enter. The committee said that he
+was away&mdash;on business. I see now that they were
+misinformed."</p>
+
+<p>"But they weren't," said the young man, eagerly, "if you
+mean me. I am 'away on business.' Why, do you know it's
+seven days since I've seen you?"</p>
+
+<p>Katrina regarded her neat brown shoes.</p>
+
+<p>"The fact is," continued the young man, diffidently, "I've
+been trying a new method with you. I've been endeavoring
+to be missed. And I'm afraid to hear that I haven't been."</p>
+
+<p>"A little wholesome fear is good for anyone," observed
+Katrina, judicially, "but I can truthfully say that I rejoiced at
+the sight of you this afternoon. That red-faced man was about
+to drag me off the wall by the hair."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Connor," said the young man. "Connor's not
+polished, but in his line, he's a jewel. He used to be a stage
+manager, and considered in that light, he's really mild."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he?" said Katrina, drily. "Does he stage manage for
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Practically that. Don't scoff&mdash;please. You see, there's
+a big future in this business. My father growled at first,
+but he's come clean around. The land was mine, and we
+are using it this way. The American public are going in for
+this thing. They want amusement and they want it quick.
+And the thing is to provide them with what they want, when
+they want it."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," said Katrina. "And you are providing the American
+public with what they want&mdash;back there?" with a tilt
+of her head behind her.</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly," he answered. "That's our plant. We are
+the Knickerbocker Film Manufacturing Company."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," said Katrina, again. "And the fancy-dress people?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are getting up 'Romeo and Juliet,'" said the young
+man. "Please don't laugh. It's been proven that the moving
+picture audiences like Shakespeare canned."</p>
+
+<p>"Moving picture audiences," repeated Katrina in surprise,
+and then as the light broke, she stopped short and looked at
+the young man.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, didn't you guess?" he queried. "The summer-house&mdash;why,
+of course, the summer-house must have hidden
+the camera." He looked at her dejectedly. "I've wanted
+you so much to know all about it," he said, "and now that you
+do, it sounds&mdash;oh, drivelling."</p>
+
+<p>"But it doesn't," cried Katrina, eyes shining. "It sounds
+splendid. It sounds thrilling. I'm sure it will be a success.
+You're bound to make it one. I congratulate you. You've
+left out a good deal. You've told your story very badly, but
+I'm good at filling in. The fact is, I'm proud to know you,
+and you may shake hands with me if you wish to."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Katrina," murmured the young man, and they clasped
+hands. It was just here that Grandfather McBride turned into
+the lane from the back garden and came upon them. When
+they became aware of him, leaning heavily upon his stick
+and frowning at them through the dusk, Katrina braced
+herself to meet whatever might come. But, suddenly,
+to her intense surprise, Mr. McBride beamed upon them
+radiantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well, Katriny," he said, in high good humor, "so
+you've been over that gate again, eh? Been lookin' over that
+wall, eh? I knew you would, my dear, I knew you would.
+There's some of the McBride spirit in you after all, thank
+God. I meant to take you myself, but you got ahead of me."
+Here he shook hands with the young man. "Glad to see you
+again, my boy," said Grandfather McBride. "Brought my
+little girl home, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we were on the way," admitted the young man with
+enthusiasm. "I see you got the steps up, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Mr. McBride, "oh, yes. I'm much obliged to
+you for the permission. It's as good as any vaudeville, and it's
+a sight nearer home. You're bound to make money. I
+tell my granddaughter," with a triumphant nod to the lady
+in question, "to bank on brains and energy and American
+push. I tell her," with a profound wink to Katrina, "to let this
+old family nonsense and society racket go hang. I'm glad
+she met you."</p>
+
+<p>"But we mustn't stand here in the lane, Grandfather,"
+put in Katrina, hurriedly. "It's getting damp."</p>
+
+<p>"That's so," agreed Mr. McBride, "and it's getting late."
+He hooked his cane about the young man's arm. "Come in
+and have dinner with us," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Katrina stared in amazement at Mr. McBride. The
+young man looked eagerly at Katrina. "If Miss Prentiss will
+allow me&mdash;&mdash;" he began.</p>
+
+<p>"Huh! Miss Prentiss," spoke up Mr. McBride. "What's
+she got to say about it? I allow you." And as Katrina,
+behind Mr. McBride's back, smiled and nodded, the young
+man accepted promptly.</p>
+
+<p>Together the three went through the back garden and up to
+the house. Arrived there, Katrina disappeared. Grandfather
+McBride, after settling his guest, came straight upstairs and
+stopped at her door.</p>
+
+<p>"Little cuss," beamed Mr. McBride, "goin' off, locking up
+her old grandfather and meetin' young chaps. Say, Katriny,"
+he remarked casually, "he's a fine fellow, ain't he?"</p>
+
+<p>Katrina, busy with her hair, nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, if I was a girl," continued Mr. McBride, diplomatically,
+"and a fellow like that took a shine to me I'd show
+a glimmer of sense. I'd up and return it."</p>
+
+<p>"Would you?" remarked Katrina. "I'm glad you like him.
+You see, Grandfather, you are too smart for me. I didn't
+know until just now that you had even met Mr. Park."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. McBride's smile stiffened, then froze, finally disappeared.
+He opened his mouth, and shut it. He swallowed
+hard. At last, he got it out. "Katriny&mdash;Katriny, is <i>that</i>
+Sparks&mdash;that fellow downstairs? Is that <i>Sparks</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hush," said Katrina. "Of course, that is Willoughby
+Park. Why, Grandfather, didn't you ask his name?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Mr. McBride, "I didn't. I just saw he was a
+fine, likely&mdash;&mdash;" He stopped abruptly. "Well, I'll be
+damned," said Mr. McBride.</p>
+
+<p>Katrina came over to him and put her hand on his shoulder.
+Mr. McBride looked into space. Standing so, he spoke once
+more. "Do you&mdash;do you really like him, Triny?" he asked,
+and although he looked into space, Mr. McBride saw Katrina's
+blush. He patted her hand once, and left her.</p>
+
+<p>On his way downstairs, the grimness of Mr. McBride's face
+relaxed. In the lower hall, he went so far as to chuckle.
+When he joined Mr. Park on the porch, he grinned at him
+amiably.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm a good sport," remarked Mr. McBride, irrelevantly,
+"but I know when to retire to my corner and stay there.
+Say," continued Mr. McBride, unconscious of discrepancies
+between thought and action, "after dinner I'm goin' to take
+you children across the street to see that parrot."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="RURAL_INSURANCE" id="RURAL_INSURANCE"></a>RURAL INSURANCE</h2>
+
+<h3>The Story of a Wayside Halt</h3>
+
+<h3>By CLOTILDE GRAVES</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Exhausted</span> by the effort involved in keeping the
+thermometer of the closing day of August at an
+altitude intolerable to the human kind and irksome to the
+brute, a large, red-hot sun was languidly sinking beyond
+an extensive belt of dusky-brown elms fringing the western
+boundary of a seventy acre expanse of stubbles diagonally
+traversed by a parish right-of-way leading from the
+village of Bensley to the village of Dorton Ware. A knee-deep
+crop of grasses, flattened by the passage of the harvest
+wains, clothed this strip of everyman's land, and a
+narrow footpath divided the grass down the middle, as a
+parting divides hair.</p>
+
+<p>A snorting sound, which, accompanied by a terrific clatter
+of old iron and the crunching of road-mendings, had been
+steadily growing from distant to near, and from loud to
+deafening, now reached a pitch of utter indescribability;
+and as a large splay-wheeled, tall-funneled, plowing engine
+rolled off the Bensley highroad and lumbered in upon the
+right-of-way, the powerful bouquet of hot lubricating oil
+nullified all other smells, and the atmosphere became opaque
+to the point of solidity. As the dust began to settle it was
+possible to observe that attached to the locomotive was a
+square, solid, wooden van, the movable residence of the
+stoker, the engineer, and an apprentice; that a Powler cultivator,
+a fearsome piece of mechanism, apparently composed
+of second-hand anchors, chain-cables, and motor driving-wheels,
+was coupled to the back of the van, and that a bright
+green water-cart brought up the rear. Upon the rotund
+barrel of this water-cart rode a boy.</p>
+
+<p>The plowing-engine came to a standstill, the boy got
+down from the water-cart and uncoupled the locomotive
+from the living-van. During the operations, though the boy
+received many verbal buffets from both his superiors, it
+was curiously noticeable that the engineer and stoker, while
+plainly egging one another on to wreak physical retribution
+upon the body of the neophyte, studiously refrained
+from personally administering it.</p>
+
+<p>"Hook off, can't ye, hook off!" commanded the engineer.
+"A 'ead like a dumpling, that boy 'as!" he commented
+to the stoker, as Billy wrought like a grimy goblin at the
+appointed task.</p>
+
+<p>"A clout on the side of it 'ud do 'im good!" pronounced
+the stoker, who was as thin and saturnine as the engineer
+was stout and good-humored. "Boys need correction."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll allow you're right," said the engineer. "But it
+ain't my business to 'it Billy for 's own good. Bein' own
+brother to 'is sister's 'usband&mdash;it's plainly your place
+to give 'im wot for if 'e 'appens to need it."</p>
+
+<p>The stoker grunted and the clock belonging to the Anglo-Norman
+church tower of the village struck six. Both the
+engineer and his subordinate wiped their dewy foreheads
+with their blackened hands, and simultaneously thought of
+beer.</p>
+
+<p>"Us bein' goin' up to Bensley for a bit, me an' George,"
+said the engineer, "an' supposin' Farmer Shrubb should
+come worritin' along this way and ask where us are, what
+be you a-going to tell 'im, Billy boy?"</p>
+
+<p>"The truth, I 'ope," said the stoker, with a vicious look
+in an eye which was naturally small and artificially bilious.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but wot is the truth to be, this time?" queried the
+engineer. "Let's git it settled before we go. As far as
+I'm consarned, the answer Billy's to give in regards to my
+question o' my whereabouts is: 'Anywhere but in the tap o'
+the Red Cow.'"</p>
+
+<p>"And everythink but decently drunk," retorted the stoker.</p>
+
+<p>"That's about it," assented the unsuspecting engineer.</p>
+
+<p>The stoker laughed truculently, and Billy ventured upon
+a faint echo of the jeering cachinnation. The grin died from
+the boy's face, however, as the engineer promptly relieved
+a dawning sense of injury by cuffing him upon one side of
+the head, while the stoker wrung the ear upon the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Ow, hoo," wailed Billy, stanching his flowing tears in
+the ample sleeve of his coat, "Ow, hoo, hoo!"</p>
+
+<p>"Stop that blubberin', you," commanded the stoker,
+who possessed a delicate ear, "and make th' fire an' git th'
+tea ready against Alfred and me gits back. You hear me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, plaize," whimpered Billy.</p>
+
+<p>"An' mind you warms up the cold bacon pie," added the
+stoker.</p>
+
+<p>"And don't you forget to knock in the top of that tin o'
+salmon," added the engineer, "an' set it on to stew a bit.
+An' don't you git pickin' the loaf wi' they mucky black
+fingers o' yours, Billy, my lad, or you'll suffer for it when
+I comes home."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, plaize," gasped Billy, bravely swallowing the recurrent
+hiccough of grief. "An' plaize where be I to build
+fire?"</p>
+
+<p>"The fire," mused the engineer. He looked at the crimson
+ball of the sun, now drowning in a lake of ruddy vapors
+behind the belt of elms; he nodded appreciatively at the
+palely glimmering evening star and pointed to a spot some
+yards ahead. "Build it there, Billy," he commanded briefly.</p>
+
+<p>The stoker hitched his thumbs in his blackened leather
+waist-strap and spat toward the rear of the van. "You
+build the fire nigh th' hedge there," he ordered, "so as us
+can sit wi' our faces to'rds yon bit o' quick an' hev th' van
+to back of us, an' git a bit o' comfort outside four walls fur
+once. D' ye hear, boy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, George," quavered Billy.</p>
+
+<p>The sleepy eye of the engineer had a red spark in it that
+might have jumped out of his own engine-furnace as he
+turned upon the acquiescent Billy. "Didn't you catch
+wot I said to you just now, my lad?" he inquired with ill-boding
+politeness.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Alfred," gasped the alarmed Billy.</p>
+
+<p>"If the boy doesn't mind me," came from the stoker,
+who was thoroughly roused, "and if I don't find a blazin'
+good fire, an' victuals welding hot, ready just in the place
+I've pointed out to 'im, when I've 'ad my pipe and my
+glass at the 'Red Cow,' I'll&mdash;&mdash;" A palpably artificial
+fit of coughing prevented further utterance.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll strap 'im within an inch of 'is life, I dursay,"
+hinted the engineer. "You pipe what George says, Billy?"
+he continued, as Billy applied his right and left coat cuffs to
+his eyes in rapid succession. "He's give you his promise,
+and now I give you mine. If I don't find a roarin'
+good fire and the rest to match, just where I've said
+they're to be when I come back from where I've said
+I'm a-goin'&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You'll wallop 'im a fair treat, I lays you will," said the
+stoker, revealing a discolored set of teeth in a gratified
+smile. "We'll bide by wot the boy does then," he added.
+"Knowin' that wot 'e gits from either of us, he'll earn.
+An' your road is my road, Alfred, leastways as far as the
+'Red Cow.'"</p>
+
+<p>The engineer and the stoker walked off amicably side by
+side. The sun sank to a mere blot of red fire behind the
+elms, and crowds of shrilly-cheering gnats rose out of the
+dry edges and swooped upon the passive victim, Billy,
+who sat on the steps of the living van with his knuckles in
+his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Neither of 'em can't kill me, 'cos the one what did it
+'ud 'ave to be 'ung," he reflected, and this thought gave
+consolation. He unhooked a rusty red brazier from the
+back of the living van, and dumping it well into the hedge at
+the spot indicated by the stoker, filled it with dry grass,
+rotten sticks, coals out of the engine bunker, and lumps
+of oily cotton waste. Then he struck and applied a match,
+saw the flame leap and roar amongst the combustibles,
+filled the stoker's squat tea-kettle with water from the green
+barrel, put in a generous handful of Tarawakee tea, and,
+innocent of refinements in tea-making, set it on to boil.</p>
+
+<p>"George is more spitefuller nor wot Alfred is," Billy
+Beesley murmured, as the kettle sent forth its first faint
+shrill note. Then he added with a poignant afterthought,
+"But Alfred is a bigger man than wot George be."</p>
+
+<p>The stimulus of this reflection aided cerebration. Possessed
+by an original idea, Billy rubbed the receptacle containing
+it, and his mouth widened in an astonished grin.
+A supplementary brazier, temporarily invalided by reason
+of a hole in the bottom, hung at the back of the living-van.
+The engineer possessed a kettle of his own. Active as a
+monkey, the small figure in the flapping coat and the baggy
+trousers sped hither and thither. Two hearths were established,
+two fires blazed, two tea-kettles chirped. Close
+beside the stoker's brazier a bacon pie in a brown earthen
+dish nestled to catch the warmth, a tin of Canadian salmon,
+which Billy had neglected to open, leaned affectionately
+against the other. Suddenly the engineer's kettle boiled
+over, and as Billy hurried to snatch it from the coals, the
+salmon-tin exploded with an awe-inspiring bang, and oily
+fragments of fish rained from the bounteous skies.</p>
+
+<p>"He'll say I did it a purpose, Alfred will!" the aggrieved
+boy wailed, as he collected and restored to the battered tin
+as much of its late contents as might be recovered. While
+on all fours searching for bits which might have escaped
+him, and diluting the gravy which yet remained in the tin
+with salt drops of foreboding, a scorching sensation in the
+region of the back brought his head round. Then he yelled
+in earnest, for the roaring flame from the other brazier had
+set the quickset hedge, inflammable with drought, burning
+as fiercely as the naphtha torch of a fair-booth, while
+a black patch, widening every moment, was spreading through
+the dry, white grasses under the clumsy wheels of the living-van,
+whose brown painted sides were beginning to blister
+and char, as Billy, rendered intrepid by desperation, grabbed
+the broken furnace-rake handle, usually employed as a poker,
+and beat frantically at the encroaching fire. As he beat
+he yelled, and stamped fiercely upon those creeping yellow
+tongues. There was fire from side to side of the field pathway
+now, the straggling hedge on both sides was crackling
+gaily. And realizing the unconquerable nature of the
+disaster, Billy dropped the broken furnace-rake, uttered
+the short, sharp squeal of the ferret-pressed rabbit, and took
+to his heels, leaving a very creditable imitation of a prairie
+conflagration behind him.</p>
+
+<p>It was quite dark by the time the engineer and his subordinate
+returned from the "Red Cow," and their wavering
+progress along the field pathway was rendered more
+difficult, after the first hundred yards or so, by the unaccountable
+absence of the hedge. It was a singularly oppressive
+night, a brooding pall of hot blackness hung above their
+heads, clouds of particularly acrid and smothering dust
+arose at every shuffle of their heavy boots, even the earth
+they trod seemed glowing with heat, and they remarked
+on the phenomenon to one another.</p>
+
+<p>"It's thunder weather, that's wot it be," said the engineer,
+mopping his face. "I'm like my old mother, I feel
+it coming long before it's 'ere. Phew!"</p>
+
+<p>"Uncommon strong smell o' roast apples there is about
+'ere," commented the stoker, sniffing.</p>
+
+<p>"That beer we 'ad must 'ave bin uncommon strong,"
+said the engineer in a low, uneasy voice. "I seem to see
+three fires ahead of us, that's what I do."</p>
+
+<p>"One whopping big one to the left, one little one farther
+on, right plumb ahead, and another small one lower down
+on my right 'and. I see 'em as well as you," confirmed
+the stoker in troubled accents. "And that's how that
+young nipper thinks to get off a licking from one of us&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"By obeying both," said the engineer, quickening his
+pace indignantly. "This is Board School, this is. Well,
+you'll learn 'im to be clever, you will."</p>
+
+<p>"You won't leave a whole bone in his dirty little carcase
+once you're started," said the stoker confidently.</p>
+
+<p>By this time they were well upon the scene of the disaster.
+Before their dazed and horrified eyes rose the incandescent
+shell of what had been, for eight months past, their movable
+home, and a crawling crisping rustle came from the
+pile of ashes that represented the joint property of two men
+and one boy.</p>
+
+<p>"Pinch me, Alfred," said the stoker, after an interval of
+appalled silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't ask me," said the engineer, in a weak voice, "I
+'aven't the power to kill a flea."</p>
+
+<p>"There ain't one left living to kill," retorted the stoker,
+as he contemplated the smoking wreck. "There was
+'undreds in that van, too," he added as an afterthought.</p>
+
+<p>"Burned up the old cabin!" moaned the engineer, "an'
+my Sunday rig-out in my locker, an' my Post Office Savings
+Bank book sewed up in the pillar o' my bunk, along o'
+my last week's wages what I 'adn't paid in."</p>
+
+<p>"I shouldn't wonder if Government 'ung on to they
+savings o' yourn," said the stoker, shaking his head.
+"It's a pity, but you'd invested yours as I 'ave mine,"
+he added.</p>
+
+<p>"In public 'ouses?" retorted the engineer.</p>
+
+<p>"Some of it 'as went that way," the stoker admitted, "but
+for three weeks past I've denied myself to put a bit into a
+concern as I think is going to prove a paying thing."</p>
+
+<p>"Owch!" exclaimed the engineer, who had been restlessly
+pacing in the velvety darkness round the still glowing wreck
+of the living-van.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you believe wot I've told you?" demanded the
+stoker haughtily.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't always lie, George," said the engineer, gently.
+"Wot made me shout out like that just now," he explained,
+"was treading on something queer, down by the near side
+wheels. Somethink brittle that cracked like rotten sticks
+under my 'eel, an' then I slid on something round an'
+squashy. An' the smell like roast apples, what I noticed
+before, is stronger than ever."</p>
+
+<p>"'Ave you a match about you?" asked the stoker eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"One," said the engineer, delicately withdrawing a solitary
+"kindler" from the bottom of his waistcoat pocket.</p>
+
+<p>The stoker received the match, and struck it on his trousers.
+A blue glimmer resulted, a faint s-s-s! followed, and the match
+went out.</p>
+
+<p>"On'y a glim," said the stoker in a satisfied tone, "but it
+showed me as I've made my money. An' made it easy, too."</p>
+
+<p>"'Ow much 'ave you pulled orf, then?" asked the
+engineer.</p>
+
+<p>"Double the value," replied the stoker, smiling broadly
+through the darkness, "of the property what I've lost in this
+here conflagration."</p>
+
+<p>"That 'ud bring you in about eighteenpence," retorted
+the engineer bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>The stoker laughed pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Wot do you say to three pun' seventeen?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Better than a poke in the eye with a burnt stick," said
+the engineer. "Wot did you say was the concern you
+invested in?"</p>
+
+<p>The stoker felt in the darkness for his superior's arm,
+grasped it, and putting his mouth close to where he thought
+his ear ought to be, said loudly:</p>
+
+<p>"A boy."</p>
+
+<p>"Look 'ere, mate," began the engineer, hotly, "if you're
+trying a joke on me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It ain't no joke," responded the stoker cheerfully. "Leastways
+not for the boy, it ain't. But Lord! when I think 'ow
+near I come to lettin' the policy fall through." He chuckled.
+"It's three weeks gone since I took it out," he said contentedly,
+"an' paid three weeks' money in advance, an' at threepence
+a week, that makes ninepence, an' the thought o' them
+nine half-pints I might 'ave 'ad out o' money 'as drove me
+'arf wild with thirst, over an' over. I should 'ave 'ad to
+pay again come Monday, if only 'e 'ad 'ave lived."</p>
+
+<p>"If only 'e 'ad lived&mdash;" repeated the engineer in a strange
+far-away tone, "Oo's 'e?" he asked eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"You know old Abey Turner as keeps the little sweet-an'-tobaccer
+shop over to Dorton Ware?" pursued the stoker.
+"Old Abey is a agint for the Popular Thrifty Life Insurance
+Company&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I know 'e is," confirmed the engineer.</p>
+
+<p>"Abey 'as bin at me over an' over again to insure my life,"
+explained the stoker, "but I told 'im as I didn't 'old with
+laying out good money wot wouldn't never come 'ome to
+roost-like, until I was dead. Then Abey leans over the
+counter an' ketches me by the neck 'andkerchief an' says,
+'Think of the worst life you know, an' 'ave a bit on that.'
+Naturally, talkin' o' bad lives, you're the first chap whose
+name comes into my 'ead."</p>
+
+<p>"Me!" ejaculated the engineer, starting.</p>
+
+<p>"But it wasn't wickedness old Abey meaned," continued
+the stoker, "only un'ealthiness in general. Somebody wot
+wasn't likely to live long, that's the sort o' man or woman
+'e wanted me to insure. 'A child'll do,' says 'e, smiling,
+an' tells me 'ow a large family may be made a source of
+blessing to parents 'oo are wise enough to insure in the
+Popular Thrifty. Then it comes into my mind all of a
+sudden as 'ow Billy 'ud do a treat, an' I names 'im to Old
+Abey. 'That young shaver!' calls out old Abey, disgusted
+like. 'Why, 'e's as 'ard as nails. Wot's likely to 'appen
+to 'im?' 'If you was to see the 'andling 'e gets when my
+mate is in 'is tantrums,' I says to old Abey, 'you'd put
+your bit o' money on 'im cheerful an' willin'.' 'Is Alfred
+Evans such a savage in 'is drink?' says old Abey, quite
+surprised&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll surprise 'im!" muttered the engineer, "when I
+meets 'im!"</p>
+
+<p>The stoker continued: "So the long an' the short is,
+I insured Billy, an' Billy's dead!"</p>
+
+<p>"You don't really think so?" cried the engineer, in
+shocked accents.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think," said the stoker, in a hard, high tone, "I
+knows 'e is."</p>
+
+<p>"Not&mdash;burned with the van!" gasped the engineer.</p>
+
+<p>"Burned to cinders," said the stoker comfortably. "'Ow
+about that smell o' roasting you kep' a sniffing as we came
+along, an' wot were it if not cooked boy? Wot was it your
+foot crashed into when you called out awhile back? 'Is
+ribs, 'im being overdone to a crisp. Wot was it you slipped
+on&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>"Stop!" shuddered the engineer. "'Old 'ard! I can't
+bear it."</p>
+
+<p>"I can," said the stoker, following his comrade as he
+gingerly withdrew from the immediate scene of the tragedy.
+"I could if it was twice as much."</p>
+
+<p>"It will be that to me!" sighed the engineer, seating himself
+upon the parish boundary stone, over which he had
+stumbled in his retreat, and sentimentally gazing at the
+star-jewelled skies. "Twice three pound is six, an' twice
+seventeen bob is one-fourteen. Seven pounds fourteen is
+wot that pore boy's crool end 'as dropped into my pocket,
+and I'd 'ad those best clothes ever since I got married;
+an' there was only eight an' fourpence in the piller o' the
+bunk, an&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The engineer stopped short, not for lack of words, but
+because the stoker was clutching him tightly by the windpipe.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't durst dare to tell me," the frenzied mechanic
+shouted, "as wot you went an' insured Billy too?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's just wot I 'ave done," replied the half-strangled
+engineer. Then as the dismayed stoker's arms dropped
+helplessly by his side, he added, "you ought to be grateful,
+George, you 'ad no 'and in it. I couldn't 'ave
+enjoyed the money properly, not if you'd 'ad to be 'ung
+for the boy's murder. That's wot I said to old Abey
+two weeks back, when I told 'im as 'ow Billy's life went
+more in danger than anyone else's what I could think of,
+through your being such a brutal, violent-tempered, dangerous
+man."</p>
+
+<p>"An' wot did that old snake in the grass say to that
+bloomin' lie?" demanded the stoker savagely.</p>
+
+<p>"'E said life was a uncertain thing for all," sniggered
+the engineer, gently. "An' I'd better 'ave a bit on
+the event an' turn sorrow into joy, as the saying is. So
+I give Abey a shillin', bein' two weeks in advance, an'
+the Company sent me the policy, an' 'ere I am in for the
+money."</p>
+
+<p>"Like wot I am, an' with clean 'ands for both of us,"
+said the stoker in a tone of cheerful self-congratulation.
+"I 'aven't laid a finger on that boy, not since I insured 'im."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I ave'n't," said the engineer. "It's wonderful
+how I've bin able to keep my temper since I 'ad the policy
+to take care of at the same time."</p>
+
+<p>"Same with me," said the stoker happily. "Why, wot's
+wrong?" he added, for a tragic cry had broken from the
+engineer.</p>
+
+<p>"Mate," he stammered tremulously, "where did you
+keep your policy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Meanin' the bit o' blue-printed paper I 'ad from the
+Popular Thrifty? Wot do you want to know for?"
+snapped the stoker suspiciously.</p>
+
+<p>"It just come into my 'ead to arsk," said the engineer,
+in faltering accents.</p>
+
+<p>"In my little locker in the van, since you're so curious,"
+said the stoker grudgingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I 'ad mine stitched up in the piller o' my bunk with
+my Post Office Savin's book," said the engineer in the deep,
+hollow voice of a funeral bell. "An' it's burned to hashes,
+an' so is yours!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then it's nineteen to one the company won't pay up,"
+said the stoker after an appalled silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Ten 'underd to one," groaned the engineer.</p>
+
+<p>Another blank silence was broken by the stoker's saying,
+with a savage oath:</p>
+
+<p>"I wish that boy was alive, I do."</p>
+
+<p>"I know your feeling," agreed the engineer sympathetically.
+"It 'ud be a comfort to you to kick 'im&mdash;or any-think
+else weak and small wot didn't durst to kick back."</p>
+
+<p>"If I was to give you a bounce on the jor," inquired the
+stoker, breathing heavily, "should you 'ave the courage
+to land me another?"</p>
+
+<p>The engineer promptly hit out in the darkness, and arrived
+safe home on the stoker's chin. With a tiger-like roar of
+fury, the stoker charged, and on the engineer's dodging
+conjecturally aside, fell heavily over the parish boundary-stone.
+He rose, foaming, and a pitched battle ensued,
+in which the combatants saw nothing but the brilliant showers
+of stars evoked by an occasional head-blow, and the general
+advisability of homicide. Toward dawn fatigue overcame
+them. The stoker lay down and declined to get up
+again and the engineer even while traveling on all fours in
+search of him, lost consciousness in slumber.</p>
+
+<p>A yellow glare in the east heralded the rising of the orb
+of day, as the figures of an aged man and a ragged boy moved
+from the shelter of the belt of elms that screened the village
+of Dorton Ware, and proceeded along the right-of-way.</p>
+
+<p>"It's burned, right enough, Billy, my boy," said the
+old man, shading his bleared eyes with his horny hand as
+he gazed at the blackened skeleton of the living-van. "An'
+all considered, you can't be called to blame."</p>
+
+<p>Billy whistled.</p>
+
+<p>"If you'd bin asleep inside the van when that theer blaze
+got started," said old Abey, rebukingly, as he hobbled along
+by the boy's side, "you wouldn't be whistlin' 'My Own
+Bluebell' now; your pore widowed mother, what lives in
+that theer little cottage o' mine at Porberry End&mdash;and
+'om I persuaded to insure you in the Popular Thrifty&mdash;would
+'ave 'ad a bit o' money comin' in 'andy for 'er Michaelmas
+rent, an' one or two other people would be a penny o' th'
+right side, likewise." He paused, and shading his bleared
+eyes under his gnarled hand, looked steadfastly at two huddled,
+motionless, grimy figures, lying in the charred grass
+beside the pathway. "Dang my old eyes!" he cried. "'Tis
+George an' Alfred&mdash;Alfred an' George&mdash;snatched away
+i' their drink an' neither of 'em insured. I'll lay a farden.
+Here's a judgment on their lives, what wouldn't listen
+to Old Abey an' put into the Popular Thrifty. Here's
+a waste of opportunity&mdash;here's&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Old Abey's voice quavered and broke off suddenly as
+the corpse of the engineer, opening a pair of hideously blood-shot
+eyes, inquired ferociously what in thunder he meant
+by making such a blamed row, while the body of the stoker
+rolled over, yawned, revealing a split lip, and sat up staring.</p>
+
+<p>"We&mdash;we thought you was dead, mates," faltered Old
+Abey. "Didn't us, Billy?"</p>
+
+<p>"At first I did," Billy admitted, "an' then I&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Then you wot?" repeated the engineer, bending his
+brows sternly above a nose swollen to twice its usual size.</p>
+
+<p>"Out with it!" snarled the stoker, whose lip was painful.</p>
+
+<p>"I was afraid as it couldn't be true," stuttered Billy.</p>
+
+<p>The stoker exchanged a look with the engineer.</p>
+
+<p>"The van's burnt, an' we've both lost our property,
+to say nothin' of our prospects, mate," he said with a sardonic
+sneer, "but one comfort's left us, Billy's alive!"</p>
+
+<p>A little later the plowing engine with its consort was
+at work under the hot September sky. As the Powler cultivator
+traveled to and fro, ripping up the stubbles, the boy
+who sat on the iron seat and manipulated the guiding-wheel,
+snivelled gently, realizing that the brief but welcome interval
+of icy aloofness on the part of his superiors had passed,
+never to return; and that the injunction of the Prophet would
+thenceforth be scrupulously obeyed.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="HIS_HONOR_THE_DISTRICT_JUDGE" id="HIS_HONOR_THE_DISTRICT_JUDGE"></a>HIS HONOR, THE DISTRICT JUDGE</h2>
+
+<h3>A Tale of India</h3>
+
+<h3>By JOHN LE BRETON</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">His</span> Honor, Syed Mehta, the District Judge of Golampore,
+had dined with the Malcolms, and he was the
+first of the Collector's guests to leave the bungalow. He
+sauntered down the drive, lifting his contemplative gaze
+to the magnificence of the starry heavens. Behind him,
+the lamp-lit rooms sent long thrusts of light, sword-wise,
+into the hot darkness. Joan Malcolm had taken up her
+violin, and the sweet, wailing notes of it came sighing out
+on to the heavy air. Ruddy, broad-faced young Capper, of
+the Police, lounged by the open window, eating her up with
+adoring eyes.</p>
+
+<p>His Honor smoked his cigar tranquilly, but at heart,
+he smouldered. Harrow and Lincoln's Inn backed his
+past, the High Courts awaited him in the future. For the
+present he was a Civil Servant of excellent position and recognized
+ability, a Mohammedan gentleman who had distinguished
+himself in England as well as in the land of his
+birth. Also, he was of less account in the eyes of Joan
+Malcolm than Capper, a blundering English Acting-Superintendent
+of Police, with a pittance of six hundred rupees
+per mensem.</p>
+
+<p>Possibly Capper had not intended to be offensive, but
+it is not given to the young and the British to entirely conceal
+all consciousness of superiority when speaking with
+a native. His courtesy was that of a man who considered it
+to be beneath his dignity to use less ceremony. His civility
+was due to his respect for himself, not for the person
+whom he honored with his unintellectual conversation.</p>
+
+<p>The Judge flipped the ash off his cigar, and his slender
+hand was cool and leisurely. His dark, straight-featured
+face was impassive as carven stone. Mentally, he was
+cursing Capper with curses of inexhaustible fire and venom.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm, the Collector, had a right to speak loudly, and
+to say this or that without cause, for he was Collector; but
+Capper, a mere Superintendent of the Police, a cub of
+twenty-three, was on a very different footing. Yet, not
+even as an equal had he borne himself toward a District
+Judge.</p>
+
+<p>His Honor's bungalow was on the outskirts of the town,
+and as he paced along the dusty road, he came to a footpath
+that ran down the hill, through dense jungle, to the
+native village in the valley. There was a swarm of dark-skinned
+fellow-men down there, to whom his name stood
+for all that is highest in authority. They would have
+loaded him with gifts had he permitted them to approach
+him. To them, it seemed that he was placed far above as
+a god, holding their lives and their fate 'twixt finger and
+thumb, in mid-air. In the unfathomed depths of the
+Judge's educated, well-ordered mind stirred a craving for
+solace. Galled by the brutish indifference of the Englishmen,
+there was yet left to him the reverence of his own
+people. He looked sharply up and down the road before
+he dived into the moist heat beneath the trees. He knew
+all that he was risking for a mere escapade. He had
+never trodden that path before, excepting when he had
+gone on a shooting expedition with the Collector. There
+were strange noises in the darkness, stealthy rustlings,
+small, unfamiliar cries. He heard nothing but Capper's
+comment on his carefully reasoned prediction that the day
+must come when India would govern herself.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! you think so?"</p>
+
+<p>Stupid, unmeaning, absurd, but&mdash;successful.</p>
+
+<p>Then, immediately Capper was talking to Miss Malcolm
+about tennis, and she was listening, smiling and intent.
+The Judge was a crack tennis player. He loathed the
+game, but he had made himself proficient in it, because it is
+one of the things that people expect of a man. He was
+impelled to challenge Capper, and the answer was a
+drawled excuse.</p>
+
+<p>The Judge was well down the hill now, descending the
+last precipitous slope, and the countless odors of the Indian
+village rose to his nostrils. There was a dull murmurous
+commotion afar off, such as bees make when they are hiving.
+He listened, without curiosity, as he pressed forward.
+Suddenly he halted. The murmur boomed out into a long,
+thunderous roar. Then silence, and out of the silence a
+single voice, deep and ringing.</p>
+
+<p>"An infernal protest meeting," the Judge's British training
+informed him.</p>
+
+<p>He went forward again, moving noiselessly, and reached
+the outskirts of the crowd, sheltering himself between the
+bushes that fringed the jungle. Torches flared, and smoked,
+and shed a ruddy, uncertain light on hundreds of rapt,
+upturned faces. The orator stood tall and straight above
+them, fully revealed by purposely clustered lights. He
+volleyed reproach and insult upon his listeners, he gave
+them taunts instead of persuasion. They stood enthralled
+by the passionate voice, and bitter words found their mark,
+and rankled poisonously.</p>
+
+<p>"These <i>soors</i> of Feringhi, whom you call your masters,
+beat you, and they use your brothers to be their sticks. But
+for your brothers, who wear the uniform of the Feringhi,
+and carry their guns, these worthless masters would be
+trodden into the dust beneath your feet. The men who
+hedge them in with steel must turn that steel against them."</p>
+
+<p>The roar of voices thundered among the trees, and died
+away suddenly, so that no word from the speaker might
+be lost.</p>
+
+<p>"They are cunning, these Feringhi, my brothers. They
+steal the wisest from among us while yet they are children,
+and bear them away to their own land, and give them over
+to their own teachers. Thus come back your own, with
+power and authority to scourge you. Your sons, your brothers
+come back to you, learned, praised greatly, having striven
+against the Feringhi in their own schools, and won what
+they desired. Collector-sahib, Judge-sahib, yea, even
+padre-sahib, come they back to you&mdash;not to lift you to
+honor and happiness beside them, but to side with those
+that oppress you, to grind taxes from you who starve, to
+imprison you who would be free. Sons of unspeakable
+shame! They drink your blood, they fatten on your misery,
+and they have their reward. <i>We</i> curse, them, brothers!
+The Feringhis smile upon them, they eat bread and salt
+in their company, but they spit when they have passed by!"</p>
+
+<p>Something in the scornful voice rang familiarly on the
+Judge's ears, and incautiously he changed his position and
+tried to get a clearer view of the treasonmonger. Instantly
+the man's bare brown arm shot out, and pointed him to
+public notice.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is one," pealed out the trumpet-voice, "has he
+come as our brother? Or comes he as the slave of our
+masters, to spy upon our meetings, and to deal out punishment
+to those who dare to be free? O brother, do you
+walk to Calcutta, where the High Courts be, over our bodies,
+and the bodies of our children? Will you go to the Collector-sahib
+with tales of a native rising, and call up our brothers
+of the police to kill and maim us? Or come you to offer
+us a great heart?"</p>
+
+<p>The Judge stood there, a motionless figure, flaring
+against the dark jungle in his spotless, white linen evening
+dress. There was a broad silk cummerband about his
+lean waist, and a gold signet-ring gleamed on his left hand.
+Half a dozen Englishmen, thread for thread in similar
+garb, still lounged in the Collector's drawing-room. He
+appeared the very symbol of Anglicized India. The brown,
+half-naked mob surged and struggled to look at him. The
+brown, half-naked orator still pointed at him, and waited
+for reply. Meanwhile, he had been recognized.</p>
+
+<p>"Iswar Chandra&mdash;by Jove," muttered the Judge.</p>
+
+<p>The last time they had met was in a London drawing-room.
+Iswar Chandra, the brilliant young barrister-at-law
+had discoursed to a philanthropic peeress upon the
+social future of his native land, whilst an admiring circle
+of auditors hung upon his words. The fate of India's women,
+he had said, lay at the feet of such fair and noble ladies as
+her Grace. The Judge remembered that people were saying
+that evening of Iswar Chandra that he was a fascinating
+and earnest man, and that he would be the pioneer of great
+things in the country of his birth.</p>
+
+<p>The eyes of the half-naked savage challenged the Judge
+over the sea of moving heads, and drove away the supercilious
+smile from his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Brother, we claim you! You are of our blood, and we
+need such as you to lead us. The Feringhi have sharpened
+a sword to cut us down, but it shall turn to destroy them.
+Brother, we suffer the torments of hell&mdash;will you deliver
+us? Brother, we starve&mdash;will you give us food? Will
+you deal out to us life or death, you whose fathers were as
+our fathers? Choose now between great honor and the
+infamy that dies not! You are the paid creature of the
+British Raj, or you are a leader of free men. Brother,
+speak!"</p>
+
+<p>As in a dream the Judge approached the waiting crowd.
+His mouth was parched, his heart beat fitfully. He wanted
+that piercing voice to wake the echoes again, to take up
+the story of the old blood-feud, to goad him into doing that
+which he had not the courage to do. Vanished was his
+pride of intellect, and of fine achievement. He was a
+native, and he tugged and crawled at the stretch of the
+British chain.</p>
+
+<p>"The Feringhi are few, and we are many. Shall the
+few rule the many? Shall we be servants and poor while
+yet in the arms of our own golden mother? In their own
+country do the Feringhi not say that the word of the majority
+shall be law? So be it! We accept their word. The
+majority shall rule! O brother, skilled in the Feringhi
+craft, high-placed to administer justice to all who are brought
+before thee, do I not speak the truth?"</p>
+
+<p>The Judge threw away the dead end of his cigar, and
+shouldered his way into the inmost circle.</p>
+
+<p>"Peace, thou," he said, thickly; "this is folly. Ye must
+wait awhile for vengeance."</p>
+
+<p>Chandra threw up his arms, writhing in a very ecstasy
+of fury.</p>
+
+<p>"We have waited&mdash;have we not waited?&mdash;beside our
+open graves. Death to the Feringhi! Let them no longer
+desecrate our land. Let us forget that they ever were.
+They be few, and we be many. Brothers! To-night,
+to-night!"</p>
+
+<p>The Judge was tearing off his clothes, he was trampling
+them beneath his feet, he was crying out in a strange, raucous
+voice; and all the swaying crowds were taking up his
+words, maddening themselves and their fellows with the
+intoxicating sounds.</p>
+
+<p>"Death to the Feringhi! To-night, to-night! Our land
+for ourselves!"</p>
+
+<p>All but a few torches were extinguished. Secret places
+were torn up, and out came old guns, old swords sharpened
+to razor-like edges, great pistols, clubs, skinning-knives,
+daggers. Then, up and up through the dark jungle they
+thronged, hordes of them in the grip of a red and silent
+frenzy. Chandra was in the forefront, but the leader was
+his Honor the District Judge, a glassy-eyed, tight-lipped
+Mussulman in a loincloth and a greasy turban.</p>
+
+<p>The lights of the Collector's bungalow came in view,
+and the leader thought of young Capper, and rushed on,
+frothing like a madman, waving his sword above his head.
+Then he paused, and ran back to meet the laggards of a
+yard or two.</p>
+
+<p>"Only the men!" he shouted.</p>
+
+<p>Chandra mocked at him as the press bore him onward
+again, with scarcely an instant's halt.</p>
+
+<p>"Only the men, my brother!" he echoed.</p>
+
+<p>A few of the native police stood guard at the Collector's
+gates, but they turned and fled before the overwhelming
+numbers of the attacking force. Up the long drive the dark
+wave poured, and into the wide, bright rooms. The bungalow
+was deserted. Some fleet-footed servant had brought
+warning in time, and the British were well out of the town
+by the other road, with young Capper and a score of his
+men guarding their rear.</p>
+
+<p>The mob howled with disappointment. The next instant
+it was screaming with triumph as it settled down to sack
+and burn and destroy.</p>
+
+<p>The Judge went into the dining-room, and looked at
+the long table still decked with silver, and glass, and flowers.
+He looked at the chair on which he had sat, with Joan Malcolm
+at his side, and he picked it up and dashed it with all
+his might into a great ivory-framed mirror, and laughed aloud
+at the crash, and the ruin, and the rain of jagged splinters.</p>
+
+<p>"India must pass into the hands of the Indians!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! <i>you</i> think so&mdash;you think so&mdash;you think so...."</p>
+
+<p>He overthrew a couple of standard lamps, and watched
+the liquid fire run and eat up their silken shades, and run
+again and leap upon the snowy curtains, and so, like lightning,
+spring to the ceiling, and lick the dry rafters with a
+thousand darting tongues. Then, he was out in the night
+again, the night of his life, the wonderful night that was
+calling for blood, and would not be denied.</p>
+
+<p>There was no lack of light now to make clear the path
+to vengeance. The Collector's bungalow roared red to the
+very heavens, and flames shot up in a dozen different parts
+of the town. The bazaar was looted, and English-made
+goods were piled upon bonfires in the street. A greater mob
+than had entered the town poured out of it, swift on the
+road to Chinsurah where thousands of their brothers lay,
+lacking only courage and leaders.</p>
+
+<p>At the midway turn of the road where the giant trees
+rear themselves at the side of the well, came a sudden check,
+and the mob fell back upon itself, and grew dead silent.
+Those in the rear could only wait and guess what had happened.
+The forefront saw that the road was barred. The moon
+had risen, and well out in the white light, was Capper Sahib.
+Some of his men were behind him. There were soldiers
+there, too, how many could not be seen, for they were
+grouped in the velvety black shadows which the trees flung
+across the road. There might have been only fifty&mdash;or
+five hundred.</p>
+
+<p>Young Capper came forward with his hands in his pockets,
+and stared at them. They saw that he was not afraid.
+He spoke to them in Maharattee, bluntly and earnestly,
+so that some of them wavered, and looked back. He said
+they were fools, led by a few rotten schemers who had only
+personal gain in view.</p>
+
+<p>"Take good advice," he said, "go to your homes while
+ye may. Ignorant, and greatly daring that ye are, the
+<i>bandar-log</i>, or such thievish scum among ye, drive ye with
+idle words and chatterings even to the brink of death. So
+far have ye come, but no farther&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The Judge had snatched a villager's gun, and fired.
+Capper Sahib fell, unspoken words upon his lips. His
+fair head draggled in the dust, and a red stain showed suddenly
+upon the white linen over his breast.</p>
+
+<p>A triumphant roar swept the mob from end to end.
+British rifles cracked out the answer, and the bullets went
+home surely, into the rioting mass. Amid shrill screams
+of pain and fury the leaders rallied their men, and charged
+forward. A second volley stopped them, before young
+Capper's prostrate body could be reached. Few had joined
+the attack, but now they were fewer, and neither of the
+leaders stood among them.</p>
+
+<p>That was the end. Bearing their dead and wounded,
+the rebels returned, wailing as they went. Before daylight
+the townsmen were in their houses, and the villagers
+had passed through the jungle, and regained their homes.
+Arms were concealed with all haste. The dead were buried,
+the wounded, for the most part, were hidden. Prisoners
+had been taken, but only an inconsiderable number.
+Before daylight also, the headman of the village, and a native
+surgeon came stealthily from the Judge's bungalow, and
+went their ways. They had their order, and they went to
+spread it abroad. The order was&mdash;<i>Silence!</i> The headman
+had bowed himself to the earth when it was given,
+for he understood all that it meant. Prisoners would be
+brought before a brother, not only to-day, but to-morrow,
+and for many morrows. So much had the night given them.</p>
+
+<p>At noon His Honor came stiffly into the court-room,
+leaning upon the arm of his native servant. The Collector,
+who was awaiting him there, feared that he had been
+injured by the rioters on the previous night; but he was
+quickly reassured. The Judge, it seemed, had sprained
+his knee shortly after leaving the Malcolm's hospitable roof.
+It was nothing. A mere trifle, though indisputably painful.</p>
+
+<p>The Collector seated himself near the bench, and talked
+in a low voice. The ladies were all safe. No Europeans
+had been killed, and few injured. Capper had been shot
+by some cowardly dog while parleying with the rioters, but
+there were good hopes of him.</p>
+
+<p>The Judge was most truly concerned to hear of the calamity
+which had befallen Mr. Capper&mdash;immensely thankful to
+know that things were no worse with him.</p>
+
+<p>His Honor had heard little or nothing of what had happened
+during the riot, being laid by the leg, as it were, in
+his own room.</p>
+
+<p>The first batch of prisoners was brought in. At first
+the Judge did not look at them. Afterward his eyes sought
+their gaze, and held it, and they knew him for their brother.
+They heard his soft voice speaking of them compassionately,
+as wayward children whom mercy would win over, though
+harshness might confirm them in their foolish resistance to
+authority. The Collector seemed to protest, but with gentle
+courtesy his objections were put aside. He leaned back
+in his chair, flushed and angry, as one after another, the
+sullen-looking rebels were fined, and having paid what was
+demanded, were set at liberty.</p>
+
+<p>When the Judge looked up again, a single prisoner stood
+before him, a wounded, hawk-faced native, whose eyes
+blazed hate and contempt. The Collector drew his chair
+closer to the bench, and began to speak in gruff undertones.</p>
+
+<p>"A ring-leader. Man of some education, I understand&mdash;qualified
+as a barrister, and has taken to journalism. Must
+make an example of him&mdash;eh?"</p>
+
+<p>The Judge, straining in agony of mind and body, was
+aware of sudden relief from the pain of his wound. The
+bandage had slipped, and blood was cooling the torturing
+fire. A deathly faintness was upon him, and through it he
+spoke distinctly&mdash;again of mercy.</p>
+
+<p>"They were all blind. The leaders were blind. The
+blind leading the blind. Blind&mdash;blind&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The Collector sprang up with a startled exclamation.
+A thin stream of blood trickled from behind His Honor's
+desk, and went a twisting way down to the well of the court.
+He caught the Judge in his arms as he fell forward, and
+lowered him gently to the ground. Then it was seen that
+the unconscious man's clothes were saturated with blood.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly the court was cleared. A military surgeon
+cut away the blood-stained clothing from the Judge's thigh,
+and laid bare the clean wound made by a British bullet. A
+look passed between him and the Collector, but never a word.
+Syed Mehta's life had ebbed with his blood, and so he passed,
+unawakened, from swoon to death.</p>
+
+<p>The English, as their way is, betrayed nothing. It was
+His Honor, the District Judge of Golampore, who had died,
+and they gave him burial the next day with due regard to the
+high position which he had held in the service of H.M. the
+King and Emperor.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="A_FOG-HORN_CONCLUSION" id="A_FOG-HORN_CONCLUSION"></a>A FOG-HORN CONCLUSION</h2>
+
+<h3>The Story of a Gramophone</h3>
+
+<h3>By FOX RUSSELL</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> <i>Saucy Sally</i> was a vessel of renown. No blustering
+liner, no fussy tug, no squattering steamer, she; but
+a bluff-bowed, smartly painted, trim-built sailing barge,
+plying chiefly from the lower reaches of the Thames to ports
+west of Dover. She had no equal of her class, at any point of
+sailing, and certainly her Master, Mr. Joseph Pigg, was not
+the man to let her fair fame suffer for want of seamanship.</p>
+
+<p>"Cap'n Pigg," as he insisted upon being called, was a great,
+hairy-faced man, with brawny muscles and a blood-shot eye.
+And in these respects, his mate, Bob Topper, greatly favored
+him&mdash;in fact, their physical resemblance was rather marked;
+but their tastes were in no way similar; 'the Cap'n' was
+fond of his glass, whilst the mate was a blue-ribbon man;
+Joseph Pigg couldn't bear music, in any form, whilst the
+total abstainer had a weakness for the flute and would not
+infrequently burst into song; the Skipper hated women,
+whereas the mate was, what he himself called "a bit of a gay
+Lathero." But notwithstanding these dissimilarities of tastes
+and disposition, they got along fairly well together, and both
+met on the common ground of getting as much work out of the
+two "hands" as was ordinarily possible. The Skipper didn't
+drink alcoholic liquors before the mate, and the mate returned
+the compliment by refraining from any musical outrage in
+the hearing of his superior officer.</p>
+
+<p>One hot summer afternoon, when the <i>Saucy Sally</i> was
+taking in cargo and the Skipper was ashore, Mr. Topper,
+seated on the coamings of the hatchway, abandoned himself
+to the melancholy pleasures of Haydn's "Surprise," the tune
+being wrung out of a tarnished German-silver flute. "Kittiwake
+Jack," one of the crew, was seated as far as possible
+for'ard, vainly trying to absorb his tea and stop his ears, at
+one and the same time, whilst his fellow-sufferer, Bill Brown,
+having hastily dived below, lay in his bunk, striving to deaden
+the weird, wailing sounds that filled the ship. And just as
+Haydn's "Surprise" was half way through, for the seventh
+time, the Skipper walked on board.</p>
+
+<p>The flutist stopped short, and stared up at him.</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't expect you back so soon, Cap'n," he said in
+confused tones.</p>
+
+<p>"No. What's that 'owlin' row you're making?"</p>
+
+<p>"I dunno about no 'owlin' row, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I do. I s'pose, accordin' to you, I ain't got no
+musical h'ear," sneered Cap'n Pigg.</p>
+
+<p>"This&mdash;this here tune&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. This disgustin' noise&mdash;what is it?"</p>
+
+<p>The mate looked sulky.</p>
+
+<p>"This is Haydn's 'Surprise,'" he growled.</p>
+
+<p>"So I should think. I dunno who the bloke was, but it
+must have given Haydn quite a turn! Don't let's 'ave no
+more of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I don't see as there's no 'arm in music. And I
+didn't loose it off when you was about. I know you don't
+like it, so I studied your pecooliarities. Fact is, I studies yer
+too much," and the mate looked mutinous.</p>
+
+<p>Cap'n Pigg scowled.</p>
+
+<p>"You shet yer 'ead," he grunted as he stamped off below.
+He went to a small cupboard in the corner of the cabin, and
+mixed himself a stiff "go" of gin and water, which he tossed off
+at one gulp, saying:</p>
+
+<p>"Haydn's 'S'prise,' eh? Haydn's S'prise be d&mdash;dished!
+'E don't come no s'prises 'ere while I'm master of the <i>Saucy
+Sally</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>After this slight breeze, things quickly settled down again
+on the old lines between master and mate, and the voyage to
+Chichester Harbor was entirely uneventful, the barge bringing
+up at a snug anchorage near Emsworth.</p>
+
+<p>The next day Mr. Topper had undressed and gone overboard
+for a swim. After this, climbing up the bobstay, he
+regained the deck, and proceeded to dry his hairy frame on an
+ancient flannel shirt. In the midst of this occupation, temporarily
+forgetful of his superior officer's prejudices, he broke
+into song.</p>
+
+<p>Thirty seconds after he had let go the first howl, the Skipper's
+head was thrust up the companion-way.</p>
+
+<p>"Wodjer want to make all that row about? Anything
+disagreed with yer? If so, why don't yer take something
+for it?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's a funny thing yer carn't let a man alone, when all 'e's
+a doin' is making a bit of 'armony on board," replied the mate,
+pausing in the act of drying his shock head.</p>
+
+<p>"'Armony be d&mdash;driven overboard!" cried Mr. Pigg,
+wrathfully. "Now, look 'ere, Bob Topper, I ain't a onreasonable
+man in my likes and dislikes, but it ain't fair to sing at a
+feller creature with the voice nature fitted you out with! I
+never done you no 'arm."</p>
+
+<p>Next day the <i>Saucy Sally</i> shipped some shingle ballast, got
+under weigh on the first of the ebb tide, and safely threading
+her way past the shallows and through the narrow channels
+of the harbor, emerged into the open sea, and turned her bluff-bowed
+stem eastwards.</p>
+
+<p>The following afternoon, as Bob Topper took his trick at the
+wheel, he ruminated on the mutability of human affairs in
+general, and the "contraryness" of skippers in particular.</p>
+
+<p>"Won't 'ave no music, won't he? Well, I reckon it's like
+religion when the missionaries is a shovin' of it into the
+African niggers&mdash;they just jolly well got to 'ave it! An'
+so it'll be with the ole man. I'll jest fix up a scheme as'll
+do 'im a treat."</p>
+
+<p>He smiled broadly; and when Bob Topper smiled, the corners
+of his mouth seemed to almost meet at the back of his
+head.</p>
+
+<p>And as soon as the <i>Saucy Sally</i> had pitched and tossed her
+way up channel&mdash;for she was light as a cork in ballast&mdash;and
+dropped anchor a little way off Gravesend, Bob Topper sculled
+himself ashore. Twenty minutes after stepping out of the
+boat, he was seated in the back-parlor of a friend, a musical-instrument
+maker.</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. Topper went aboard again, he carried under
+his arm a large brown paper package, which he smuggled
+below, without encountering the Skipper, who was in his
+cabin at the time, communing with a bill of lading and a
+glass of Hollands neat. And, soon after the mate had come
+aboard, "the Cap'n" went ashore.</p>
+
+<p>And then Mr. Topper laid himself out for some tranquil
+enjoyment, on quite an unusual scale. He unfastened the
+package, produced a gramophone, brought it on to the deck,
+and started "The Washington Post."</p>
+
+<p>"Kittiwake Jack" and Bill Brown immediately fled below.</p>
+
+<p>The mate sat on the edge of the hatch and gazed lovingly
+at the new instrument of torture, as he beat time to the inspiring
+strains, with a belaying pin. When the "Washington
+Post," was finished, he laid on "Jacksonville," with a chorus
+of human laughter, which sounded quite eerie. And so
+intent was he on this occupation, that he never even noticed
+the approach of Cap'n Pigg's boat until it was almost alongside.</p>
+
+<p>The Skipper clambered aboard, looking black as thunder.
+This new outrage was not to be borne. Just as his foot
+touched the deck the instrument gave forth its unholy cachinnation
+of "Ha! Ha! Ha!" in the high nasal tones peculiar to
+its kind.</p>
+
+<p>Cap'n Pigg was not easily disconcerted, but this ghostly
+"Ha! Ha! Ha!" was a distinct trial to his nerves; he thrust his
+hands deep into his coat pockets, glared at the mate, and then
+growled:</p>
+
+<p>"Wodjer got there? More 'armony?"</p>
+
+<p>"Grammarphone," was the mate's brief reply. He was
+getting sulky.</p>
+
+<p>"Grammar be blowed! Worst grammar I ever 'eard,"
+returned Pigg. "Turn the bloomin' thing off&mdash;and turn it
+off at the main. Enough to give any respectable, law-abidin'
+sailor-man the 'ump!"</p>
+
+<p>He proceeded two steps down the companion; then hurled
+this parting shot at the offending mate:</p>
+
+<p>"You oughter be 'ead of a laundry where the 'andle of the
+mangle turns a pianer-horgan as well&mdash;work and play!" he
+concluded scornfully, as he disappeared from the musician's
+sight below.</p>
+
+<p>The mate whistled softly; then he stopped the offending
+instrument and conveyed it below.</p>
+
+<p>"P'raps the old man'll be glad of it, one o' these days,"
+he muttered mysteriously.</p>
+
+<p>The next trip of the <i>Saucy Sally</i> was a more eventful one.
+She left Tilbury in a light haze, which first thickened into a
+pale-colored fog, and then, aided by the smoke from the tall
+chimneys, to a regular "pea-souper." The mate, taking
+advantage of the Captain's spell below, brought up a long
+yard of tin, which looked remarkably like the <i>Saucy Sally's</i>
+fog-horn, and quietly slipped it overboard.</p>
+
+<p>As they got lower and lower down the river, the fog increased,
+and both Cap'n Pigg and Topper experienced a certain amount
+of anxiety as, first another barge, then a tramp steamer, and
+finally, a huge liner, all sounding their fog-horns loudly, passed
+them considerably too close for comfort. The Skipper himself
+was at the wheel and, coughing the raw, damp fog out of
+his throat, he shouted hoarsely to Topper:</p>
+
+<p>"Better get our fog-horn goin', mate."</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, aye, Skipper. It's in your cabin, ain't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, in the first locker."</p>
+
+<p>The mate descended the companion-steps, with a mysterious
+smile on his face, and his dexter optic closed. The
+casual observer might have thought that Mr. Topper was
+actually indulging in a wink.</p>
+
+<p>After a time, he reappeared on deck, walked aft, and said:</p>
+
+<p>"Fog-horn don't seem nowheres about, Skipper. Thought
+you always kept her in your charge."</p>
+
+<p>Cap'n Pigg whisked the wheel round just in time to escape
+a tug, fussing up-stream, and feeling her way through the
+fog at half-speed, and then he grunted sourly:</p>
+
+<p>"So I do. What the d&mdash;delay in findin' it is, I can't understand.
+'Ere, ketch 'old o' the spokes, and I'll go; always
+got to do everything myself on this old tank, seems to me."</p>
+
+<p>And thus grumbling, Cap'n Pigg went below&mdash;not
+altogether unwillingly, as, being a man who understood the
+importance of economizing time, he combined his search
+for the fog-horn with the quenching of a highly useful thirst.
+But when he came on deck again, wiping his mouth with the
+back of his hand, he was unaccompanied by the fog-horn.</p>
+
+<p>"Where the blamed thing's got to, I dunno, more'n the
+dead. I see it there, myself, not two days ago, but it ain't
+nowheres to be found now."</p>
+
+<p>"Rather orkard, Skipper, ain't it, in all this maze o'
+shippin'?" returned Mr. Topper with a half turn at the wheel.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I don't more'n 'arf like it," returned the Cap'n
+uneasily. "My nerves arn't quite what they was. An' a fog's
+a thing as I never could abide."</p>
+
+<p>On glided the <i>Saucy Sally</i>, almost the only one on the great
+water way which spoke not, in the midst of a babel of confusing
+sounds. Syrens whooped, steam whistles shrieked
+hoarsely; the raucous voices of fog-horns proclaimed the
+whereabouts of scores of craft, passing up and down the
+river; but the trim-built barge slid noiselessly along, ghost-like,
+in the dun-colored "smother," giving no intimation of her
+proximity.</p>
+
+<p>Then it was that Mr. Bob Topper's moment for action
+arrived. In casual tones, he observed to the Skipper:</p>
+
+<p>"Pity, we ain't got something as'll make a sound o' some
+kind, so's to let people know as we 're a-comin'."</p>
+
+<p>Cap'n Pigg said nothing: but the anxiety deepened perceptibly
+in his face.</p>
+
+<p>"Where the blank blank are yer comin' to?" roared the voice
+of another bargeman, as, tooting loudly on a fog-horn, one of
+the "Medway flyers," shaved past them.</p>
+
+<p>"Near thing, that," observed the mate, calmly.</p>
+
+<p>Cap'n Pigg went a shade paler beneath the tan on his
+weather-beaten face.</p>
+
+<p>"Cuss 'im! careless 'ound!" he muttered. "Might a'
+sunk us."</p>
+
+<p>"'Ad no proper lookout, I expect," returned Mr. Topper,
+"even if 'e 'ad, 'e couldn't see anything, and we got no fog-'orn
+to show 'em where we was, yer see."</p>
+
+<p>"No. An' p'raps we shall go to the bottom, all along o'
+our 'aving lost our ole bit o' tin. It's a orful thing to think
+of, ain't it?" said Cap'n Pigg solemnly.</p>
+
+<p>The mate appeared to be in a brown study. Then, as
+though he had suddenly been inspired, he exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"What about the grammarphone, Skipper?"</p>
+
+<p>Even in the midst of his perturbation, Cap'n Pigg looked
+askance at mention of the hated instrument. But it was a
+case of 'any port in a storm,' and, with a grim nod, he relieved
+the mate at the wheel, and said:</p>
+
+<p>"Fetch the bloomin' consarn up."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Topper obeyed, with alacrity in his step, and a wink
+in his eye. The 'consarn' was quickly brought on deck, and
+the 'Washington Post' let loose on the astonished ears of fog-smothered
+mariners, right and left of them.</p>
+
+<p>One old shell-back, coming up river on a Gravesend shrimper,
+listened in blank astonishment for a minute, and then
+confided huskily to his mate that he thought their time had
+come.</p>
+
+<p>"'Eavenly, strains! It's wot they calls 'the music o' the
+spears,'" he said mysteriously, "Hangels' music wot comes just
+before a bloke's time's up. We better prepare for the wust."</p>
+
+<p>His mate, less superstitious and with more common sense,
+rejoined:</p>
+
+<p>"Garn! 'Music o' the spears' be blowed! It's more like a
+pianer-horgan or a 'urdy-gurdy."</p>
+
+<p>The shrimper glided on, and a tramp steamer, going dead
+slow, just shaved past the musical barge. Its master roared
+derisively from the bridge:</p>
+
+<p>"'Ullo, barge, ahoy! Wot yer got there? Punch and
+Judy show aboard?"</p>
+
+<p>Which cost Cap'n Pigg a nasty twinge. He had always
+prided himself on his seaman-like ways, and to proceed thus,
+down the great river, like a mountebank, or a Cockney out on
+a Bank Holiday, hurt his feelings more than he could say.</p>
+
+<p>Yet another insult was to be hurled at the <i>Saucy Sally</i>, for
+"Jacksonville," with its weird human chorus, having been
+turned on&mdash;when the "Ha! Ha! Ha!" rang out on the ears
+of a passing tug's captain, that outraged gentleman, thinking
+he was being personally derided, shouted, as the tide swept
+them out of sight:</p>
+
+<p>"Yah! 'Oo yer larfin' at? Set o' bloomin' monkeys!"</p>
+
+<p>But the gramophone was certainly playing a useful part in
+warning others off the <i>Saucy Sally</i>, down that fog-laden river.
+And, when, at the end of their day's slow journey, they let go
+their anchor, the "Washington Post" was again nasally shrieking
+out its march-time glories.</p>
+
+<p>The mate stopped the machine and carried it tenderly
+below, then, returning to the deck, he observed.</p>
+
+<p>"Good job as we 'ad the grammarphone aboard, Cap'n."</p>
+
+<p>Cap'n Pigg swallowed a lump in his throat, and looked like
+a child confronted with a dose of nauseous medicine, as he
+gruffly replied:</p>
+
+<p>"It's better n' nothin' when yer wants a row made."</p>
+
+<p>A pause ensued, and then the Skipper went on:</p>
+
+<p>"In future, I don't object&mdash;not very much&mdash;to the dammarphone&mdash;grammarphone,
+I mean&mdash;If you can stand
+music, well, so can I. But you can't contrarst the beauty o'
+the two instruments, and I'm goin' ashore, straight away, to
+buy myself a good, old-fashioned fog-'orn. The tone of that
+is altogether more 'armonious and more soothin' to the hear,
+than that there beastly grammarphone ever could be!"</p>
+
+<p>The mate heaved a deep sigh and sorrowfully went below.
+In the effort to ram music into his superior officer he had to
+admit himself defeated.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>VI</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="MARY_JANES_DIVERSION" id="MARY_JANES_DIVERSION"></a>MARY JANE'S DIVERSION</h2>
+
+<h3>A Western Tale</h3>
+
+<h3>By CHARLES ALDEN SELTZER</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Texas Rankin</span> stood in the street in front of the
+High Card Saloon, his lank body trembling with
+surprise, indecision, and indignation; his face alight with
+the fire of outraged dignity. Three long paces from him
+stood Sheriff Webster, indifferently fondling an ivory-handled
+.45.</p>
+
+<p>The sheriff was nonchalantly deliberative in his actions,
+betraying only a negative interest in Rankin's movements&mdash;for
+Rankin's holster yawned with eloquent emptiness.
+With his empty holster dragging on his desires,
+it seemed to Rankin that to await the sheriff's pleasure
+was his most logical course.</p>
+
+<p>And so he waited.</p>
+
+<p>The sheriff had come upon him, when, in an incautious
+moment, he had emerged from the High Card Saloon, having
+forgotten the very important fact that the sheriff was
+looking for him. This forgetfulness had been the cause of
+his undoing, for at the instant he had turned to go down the
+street the sheriff had reached for his gun. The empty holster
+was evidence of his success.</p>
+
+<p>After that there was no use in getting excited. True, Texas
+had flashed around in his tracks when he had felt the gun
+leaving its holster, and had made a lightning movement
+with his hand to prevent such a disgraceful occurrence.
+But he might just as well have reached for a rainbow.
+As he had faced about, rage-flushed and impotent, he saw
+his gun swinging loosely in Webster's left hand, while in
+Webster's right hand another big six-shooter had reached a
+foreboding level.</p>
+
+<p>The distance between the two men approximated ten
+feet; for Webster had wisely stepped back, knowing Rankin's
+reluctance toward submission.</p>
+
+<p>And now, over the ten feet of space, captive and captor
+surveyed one another with that narrowing of the eyes which
+denotes tension and warns of danger.</p>
+
+<p>"I reckon I was too quick for you, Texas," said Webster,
+with a gentleness that fell too softly to be genuine.</p>
+
+<p>Rankin gazed dolefully at his empty holster. The skin
+tensed over his teeth in a grinning sneer.</p>
+
+<p>"I ain't sayin' that you took a mean advantage," he said,
+raising his eyes and allowing them an expression of mild
+innocence that contrasted strangely with his drawn lips,
+"but you might have given me a chance to fight it out square.
+I wouldn't have took your gun, Jim."</p>
+
+<p>Knowing Texas less intimately, the sheriff might have
+been misled by this crude sentiment; but the sheriff's fingers
+only drew more closely around the ivory handle of his
+.45. And there came a glint of humor into his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I ain't sayin' you would, Texas. But as sheriff of
+Socorro County I ain't takin' any chances. I wanted to
+talk to you, an' I knew if I had your gun I'd feel easier."</p>
+
+<p>"Which means that you didn't want me to have a
+chance," complained Texas glumly. "Socorro's always
+been meaner'n &mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"'T ain't Socorro's fault," interrupted the sheriff with
+a sudden coldness; "you've been cuttin' didoes in Socorro
+for so long a time that you've disgraced yourself. You've
+gambled an' shot yourself into disfavor with the <i>&eacute;lite</i>.
+You've been as ornery an' as compromisin' as it's possible
+for any human maverick to get without havin' to requisition
+the unwillin' mourners."</p>
+
+<p>"Not that I'm sayin' you're naturally bad, Texas. It's
+that you've got an overdose of what them modern brain
+specialists call exaggerated ego; which us common critters
+would call plain swell head. That there disease is listed
+an' catalogued in the text books of the New York Medical
+Institoot as bearin' a close relationship to the geni Loco;
+which is a scientific way of sayin' that you've got buzzers
+in your attic."</p>
+
+<p>Texas smiled, showing his teeth in wan sarcasm.</p>
+
+<p>"You wouldn't say that if I had my gun, Jim. It ain't
+like you to pour out your blackguardisms on a man what
+ain't armed."</p>
+
+<p>"I ain't blackguardin' you none," said Webster easily.
+"It's the naked truth, an' you know it. Takin' your gun
+was part of my official duty. Personally I could have talked
+to you without trampling down any of the niceties of etiquette,
+but officially I had to have your gun."</p>
+
+<p>Rankin's face lengthened with a deep melancholy.
+With this expression he intended to convey the impression
+that he was suffering a martyrdom. But the sheriff's
+acquaintance with Texas was not recent.</p>
+
+<p>"An' now that you've got the gun," said Texas, after
+an embarrassed silence, "what's the next thing on the
+programme?"</p>
+
+<p>"Takin' your gun," said the sheriff heavily, "was a preliminary;
+like they say in the sporting papers. The big
+event is that you're goin' to say your adoos to Socorro without
+bein' allowed to make any farewell announcement.
+The reason is that you an' Socorro is incongruous&mdash;like a
+side-saddle on a razor-back hog. Socorro won't stand for
+you a minute longer. You're a Public Favorite which
+has lost its popularity an' which has become heterogeneous
+to the established order of things. In other words, you're
+an outlaw; a soft-spoken, lazy, good-for-nothin' road-agent.
+An' though Socorro ain't never had anything on you before,
+it knows you had a hand in robbin' the express office last
+night. An' it's&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You're a damn &mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;&mdash;like playin' a king-full against three deuces that
+you done the trick. You was seen goin' toward the station
+about an hour before Budd Tucker found Ridgely, the
+agent, stretched out on the floor of the office, a bullet
+from a .45 clean through him. An' there's five thousand
+dollars in gold gone, an' no trace of it. An' there's been
+no strangers in town. An' here's your gun, showin' plain
+that it's been shot off lately, for there's the powder smudge
+on the cylinder an' the barrel. That's a pay streak of
+circumstantial evidence or I ain't sheriff of Socorro!"</p>
+
+<p>Rankin's eyes had flashed with an unusual brilliancy as
+the sheriff had spoken of him being seen going toward the
+station previous to the finding of the agent's body, but they
+glazed over with unconcern during the rest of the recital.
+And as the sheriff concluded, Rankin gazed scornfully at
+him, sneering mildly:</p>
+
+<p>"I couldn't add nothin' to what you've just said." He
+idly kicked the gray dust that was mounded at his feet, standing
+loose and inert, as though he cared little what might
+be the outcome of this impromptu interview. And then,
+suddenly, his blue eyes twinkled humorously as he raised
+them to meet the sheriff's.</p>
+
+<p>"Give you time you might tell me where I spent the
+money," he said drily. "There's no tellin' where your
+theorizin' might end."</p>
+
+<p>The sheriff ignored this, but he eyed his prisoner
+meditatively.</p>
+
+<p>"There's been a rumor," he said coldly, "that you've
+got cracked on my daughter, Mary Jane. But I ain't never
+been able to properly confirm it. I meant to tell you some
+time ago that while I ain't had no objection to livin' in the
+same town with you, I'm some opposed to havin' you
+for a son-in-law. But now, since the express robbery, it
+won't be necessary for me to tell you not to nose around
+my house, for you're goin' to ride straight out of Socorro
+County, an' you ain't comin' back any more. If you
+do, I reckon you'll discover that Socorro's present leniency
+ain't elastic enough to be stretched to cover your home-comin'."</p>
+
+<p>"I ain't sayin' nothin'," said Texas, glancing with pensive
+eyes to a point far up the sun-baked street where his
+gaze rested upon a pretentious house in a neatly-fenced
+yard where there were green things that gave a restful
+impression. "Circumstantial evidence is sure convincin'."
+he sighed deeply. "I reckon you knowed all along that I
+thought a heap of Mary Jane. That's the reason you picked
+me out for the express job."</p>
+
+<p>He scowled as his eyes took in the meagre details of
+Socorro's one street. Because of long association these
+details had become mental fixtures. Socorro had been his
+home for ten years, and in ten years things grow into a man's
+heart. And civic pride had been his one great virtue. If
+in the summer the alkali dust of the street formed into miniature
+hills of grayish white which sifted into surrounding
+hollows under the whipping tread of the cow-pony's hoofs,
+Texas likened it unto ruffled waters that seek a level. The
+same condition in another town would have drawn a curse
+from him. If in the winter the huge windrows of caked
+mud stretched across the street in unlovely phalanx, Texas
+was reminded of itinerant mountain ranges. The stranger
+who would be so unwary as to take issue with him on this
+point would regret&mdash;if he lived. The unpainted shanties,
+the huddled, tottering dives, the tumble-down express
+station&mdash;all, even the maudlin masquerade of the High
+Card Saloon&mdash;were institutions inseparable from his
+thoughts, inviolable and sacred in the measure of his love
+for them.</p>
+
+<p>And now! Something caught in his throat and gave
+forth a choking sound.</p>
+
+<p>"But I reckon it's just as well," he said resignedly. "I
+sure ain't of much account." He hesitated and smiled
+weakly at the sheriff. "I ain't croakin'," he said apologetically;
+"there's the circumstantial evidence." He hesitated
+again, evidently battling a ponderous question. "You
+didn't happen to hear Mary Jane say anything about the
+express job?" he questioned with an expression of dog-like
+hopefulness. "Anything that would lead you to believe she
+knowed about it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see what&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, of course!" He shuffled his feet awkwardly. "An'
+so she don't know anything. Didn't mention me at all?"
+The hopefulness was gone from his eyes, and in its place
+was the dull glaze of puzzled wonder. "Not that it makes
+any difference," he added quickly, as he caught a sudden
+sharp glance from the sheriff's eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"An' so I'm to leave Socorro." He looked dully at
+the sheriff. "Why, of course, there's the circumstantial
+evidence." His eyes swept the shanties, the street, the
+timber-dotted sides of the mountains that rose above the
+town&mdash;familiar landmarks of his long sojourn; landmarks
+that brought pleasant memories.</p>
+
+<p>"I've lived here a long time," he said, with abrupt melancholy,
+his voice grating with suppressed regret. "I won't
+forget soon."</p>
+
+<p>There ensued a silence which lasted long. It brought
+a suspicious lump into the sheriff's throat.</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't take it so hard, Texas," he said gently.
+"Mebbe it'll be the best for you in the long run. If you
+get away from here mebbe you make a man&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Quit your damn croakin'!" flashed back Texas. "I
+ain't askin' for none of your mushy sentiment!" He
+straightened up suddenly and smiled with set lips. "I
+guess I've been a fool. If you'll hand over that six-shooter
+I'll be goin'. I've got business in San Marcial."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll walk up to the station platform an' lay the gun
+there," said the sheriff coldly; for Texas was less dangerous
+at a distance; "an' when you see me start away from
+the platform you can start for the gun. I'm takin' your
+word that you'll leave peaceable."</p>
+
+<p>And so, with his gun again in its holster, Texas threw
+himself astride his Pinto pony and loped down toward the
+sloping banks of the Rio Grande del Norte.</p>
+
+<p>A quarter of a mile from town he halted on the bare
+knob of a low hill and took a lingering look at the pretentious
+house amid the green surroundings.</p>
+
+<p>Near the house was something he had not seen when
+he had looked before&mdash;the flutter of a white dress against the
+background of green. As he looked the white figure moved
+rapidly through the garden and disappeared behind the house.</p>
+
+<p>"She didn't say a word," said Texas chokingly.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Ten hours out of Socorro Texas Rankin rode morosely
+into San Marcial. Into San Marcial the unbeautiful, with
+its vista of unpainted shanties and lurid dives. For in
+San Marcial foregathered the men of the mines and the
+ranges; men of forgotten morals, but of brawn and muscle,
+whose hearts beat not with a yearning for high ideals, but
+with a lust for wealth and gain&mdash;white, Indian, Mexican,
+half-breed; predatory spirits of many nations, opposed in
+the struggle for existence.</p>
+
+<p>For ten hours Texas had ridden the river trail, and for ten
+hours his ears had been burdened with the dull beat of his
+pony's hoofs on the matted mesquite grass, and the rattle
+of his wooden stirrups against the chaparral growth. And
+for ten hours his mind had been confused with a multitude
+of perplexities and resentments.</p>
+
+<p>But all mental confusions reach a culminating point when
+the mind finally throws aside the useless chaff of thought
+and considers only the questions that have to do with the
+heart. Wherefore, Texas Rankin's mind dwelt on Mary Jane.
+Subconsciously his mind harbored rebellion against her
+father, who had judged him; against Socorro, which had
+misunderstood him; against Fate, which had been unjust.
+All these atoms of personal interest were elements of a primitive
+emotion that finally evolved into one great concrete
+determination that he would show Jim Webster, Socorro,
+Mary Jane&mdash;the world, that he was not the creature they
+had thought him. Tearing aside all mental superfluities,
+there was revealed a new structure of thought:</p>
+
+<p>"I am goin' to be a man again!"</p>
+
+<p>And so Texas rode his tired pony in the gathering dusk;
+down the wide street that was beginning to flicker with the
+shafts of light from grimy windows; down to the hitching
+rail in front of the Top Notch Saloon&mdash;where he dismounted
+and stood stiffly beside his beast while he planned
+his regeneration.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Half an hour later Texas sat opposite a man at a card
+table in the rear of the Top Notch Saloon.</p>
+
+<p>The man conversed easily, but it was noticeable that he
+watched Texas with cat-like vigilance, and that he poured
+his whiskey with his left hand.</p>
+
+<p>Ordinarily Texas would have noticed this departure from
+the polite rules, but laboring under the excitement that
+his new determination brought him he was careless. For
+he had planned his regeneration, and his talk with the
+man was the beginning.</p>
+
+<p>"You lifted the express box at Socorro, Buck!" said Texas,
+so earnestly that the table trembled.</p>
+
+<p>Buck Reible, gambler, outlaw, murderer, pushed back
+his broad-brimmed hat with his hand&mdash;always he used his
+left&mdash;and gazed with level, menacing eyes at Texas. His
+lips parted with a half-sneer.</p>
+
+<p>"If a man does a job nowadays, there's always some
+one wants in on it!" he declared, voicing his suspicion of
+Rankin's motive in bringing up the subject. "Because
+you was lucky in bein' close when the game come off is the
+reason you want a share of the cash," he added satirically.
+"How much&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Go easy, Buck," said Texas. "I ain't no angel, but I
+never played your style. I ain't askin' for a share."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what in&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It's a new deal," declared Texas heavily. "A square
+deal. You took five thousand dollars out of Socorro, an'
+you salivated the agent doin' it. Jim Webster thought it
+was me, an' I was invited to a farewell performance in which
+I done the starrin'. Some night-prowler saw me down
+near the station just before you made your grand entr&eacute;e,
+an'&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Serves you right for spoonin' with a female so close to
+where gentlemen has business," said Buck. "I saw her
+when you come toward me shootin'."</p>
+
+<p>"An' what makes it more aggravatin'," continued Texas,
+unmoved by the interruption; "is that the lady was Jim
+Webster's daughter, an' we was thinkin' of gettin' married.
+But we didn't want Jim to know just then, an' she told
+me to keep mum, seein' that Jim was opposed. She said
+we'd keep it secret until&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I admire the lady's choice," said Buck, sneering ironically.</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;&mdash;until I braced up an' was a man again," went on
+Texas, with bull-dog persistency.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you wasn't thinkin' of gettin' married soon,"
+slurred Buck.</p>
+
+<p>"I reckon we was," returned Texas coldly; "that's why
+I came here. I'm goin' to take that five thousand back
+to Socorro with me!"</p>
+
+<p>And now Buck used his right hand. But quick as he
+was, he was late. Rankin's gun gaped at him across the
+table the while his own weapon lagged tardily half-way in
+its holster.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm goin' to be a man again," said Texas. There
+was a positiveness in his voice that awoke thoughts of death
+and violence.</p>
+
+<p>"You damn&mdash;&mdash;" began Buck.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll count ten," said Texas frigidly. "If the money
+ain't on the table then I reckon you won't care what becomes
+of it!"</p>
+
+<p>"One!&mdash;Two!"</p>
+
+<p>With a snarl of rage and hate Buck rose from his chair
+and sprang clear, his gun flashing to a level with the movement,
+its savage roar shattering the silence.</p>
+
+<p>Texas did not wince as the heavy bullet struck him, but
+his face went white. He had been a principal in more
+than one shooting affray, and experience had taught him
+the value of instantaneous action. And so, even with the
+stinging pain in his left shoulder, his hand swept his gun
+lightly upward, and before it had reached a level he had
+begun to pull the trigger. But to his astonishment only
+the metallic click, click of the hammer striking the steel
+of the cylinder rewarded his efforts. Once, twice, thrice;
+so rapidly that the metallic clicks blended.</p>
+
+<p>And now he saw why he was to meet his death at the
+muzzle of Buck's gun. Fearing him, Jim Webster had
+removed the cartridges from his weapon before returning
+it to him that morning. He had committed a fatal error
+in not examining it after he had received it from Webster's
+hand. The Law, in judging him, had removed his chance
+of life.</p>
+
+<p>But he smiled with bitter irony into Buck's eyes as the
+latter, still snarling and relentless, deliberately shot again;
+once, twice.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>According to the ancient custom&mdash;which has many
+champions&mdash;and to the conventions&mdash;which are not to
+be violated with impunity&mdash;Texas should have recovered
+from his wounds to return to Mary Jane and Socorro. No
+narrative is complete without the entire vindication of the
+brave and the triumph of the honorable. But to the chronicler
+belongs only the simple task of true and conscientious
+record.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore is the end written thus:</p>
+
+<p>Came to Jim Webster's home in Socorro a week later a
+babbler from San Marcial, who told a tale:</p>
+
+<p>"There was a man by the name of Texas Rankin came
+down to San Marcial last week an' went gunnin' for Buck
+Reible. Quickest thing you ever saw. Buck peppered him
+so fast you couldn't count; an' I'm told Texas wasn't no
+slouch with a gun, either."</p>
+
+<p>"Dead?" questioned Webster.</p>
+
+<p>"As a door nail," returned the babbler.</p>
+
+<p>"Socorro's bad man," said Webster, sententiously.
+"Wasn't a bit of good in him. Gamblin', shootin', outlaw.
+Best job Buck ever done."</p>
+
+<p>He found Mary Jane in the kitchen, singing over the supper
+dishes.</p>
+
+<p>"Texas Rankin is dead over at San Marcial," he said,
+with the importance of one communicating delectable news.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane continued with her dishes, looking at her
+father over her shoulder with a mild unconcern.</p>
+
+<p>"At San Marcial?" she said wonderingly. "I didn't
+know he had left Socorro!"</p>
+
+<p>"A week now," returned Webster with much complacence.
+"Fired him from Socorro for doin' that express job. Socorro's
+bad enough without Texas&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>His mouth opened with dumb astonishment as Mary
+Jane whirled around on him with a laugh on her lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, dad! Texas Rankin didn't do that job! It was
+Buck Reible. Texas told me the night it happened. We
+were walking down near the station and we heard some
+shooting. I wasn't close enough to see plainly, but Texas
+said he could recognize Buck by the flash of his gun. And
+so Texas is dead!"</p>
+
+<p>"I thought," said Webster feebly, "that you was pretty
+sweet on Texas."</p>
+
+<p>"Sweet!" said Mary Jane, blushing with maidenly modesty.
+"Socorro is so dull. A young lady must have some diversion."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you don't care&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, dad! You old sobersides. To think&mdash;why I
+was only fooling with him. It was fun to see how serious&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"In that case&mdash;&mdash;" began Webster. And then he went out
+and sat on the front stoop.</p>
+
+<p>Far into the night he sat, and always he stared in the
+direction of San Marcial.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>VII</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="BETWEEN_FRIENDS" id="BETWEEN_FRIENDS"></a>BETWEEN FRIENDS</h2>
+
+<h3>A Story of the Italian Quarter</h3>
+
+<h3>By ADRIANA SPADONI</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Vincenza</span> looked from the three crisp dollar bills to
+her husband, and back again, wonderingly and with
+fear in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I understand nothing, Gino, and I am afraid. Perhaps
+it will bring the sickness, the money&mdash;it is of the devil,
+maybe&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Luigi laughed, but a little uneasily. "It is time, then,
+that the devil went to paradise; he makes better for us than
+the saints, to whom you pray so&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"S-sh!" Vincenza crossed herself quickly. "That is a great
+wickedness."</p>
+
+<p>Luigi picked up the bills, examining them closely. Apparently
+they were good. Nevertheless he put them down
+again, and went on carving a wooden cow for the little
+Carolina, with a puzzled look in his black eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Gino," Vincenza stopped undressing the baby suddenly
+when the thought came to her. "Go thou and ask Biaggio.
+He has been many years in this country, and, besides, he is also
+a Genovese. He will tell thee."</p>
+
+<p>Luigi's eyes cleared, but he condescended to make no
+reply. It is not for a man to take the advice of a woman.
+But when it was dark, and Vincenza had gone to lie down
+with the Little One, Luigi took his hat and went over to the
+shop of Biaggio Franchini.</p>
+
+<p>Biaggio listened attentively; his pudgy hands, crossed on
+his stomach, rose and fell with the undulations of the rolls of
+flesh beneath. From time to time he ceased for a moment
+the contemplation of the strings of garlic and sausage that
+hung from the fly-specked ceiling of his diminutive shop,
+and turned his little black eyes sharply on Luigi.</p>
+
+<p>"So," he said at last, "to-day a lady came to thy house,
+and after to ask many questions left these three dollars.
+It was in this way?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just so," replied Luigi, "and questions the most marvelous
+I have ever heard. And in this country, where everyone
+asks the questions. How long that I do not work, and
+if we have to eat?" Luigi laughed; "of a surety, Biaggio,
+she asked that. She sees that we live&mdash;and she asks if we
+eat&mdash;<i>ma! ch&egrave;!</i> And then, if we have every day the meat?
+When I said once, sometimes twice in the week&mdash;thou
+knowest it is not possible to have more often, when one waits
+to buy the house&mdash;then it was she put on the table the three
+dollars, and gave me a paper to sign&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Thou didst sign nothing?" Biaggio spoke eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"No. Once I signed the paper in English and it cost
+me two dollars; not again. I said I could not write, and
+she wrote for me."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Bene</i>," Biaggio nodded approval. "It is not thy writing.
+It can do nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps it is because I voted twice at the election last
+week? But already I have taken the money for that. It
+was one only dollar. I&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Non, non, it is not that. Listen!" Slowly Biaggio
+shut both eyes, as if to keep out the tremendous light that
+had dawned upon him, and nodded his head knowingly.
+Then he opened them, shifted his huge bulk upright, and
+clapped Luigi on the knee.</p>
+
+<p>"Thou art in great luck friend," he cried, "and it is well that
+thou hast asked me. If thou hadst gone to another, to a man
+not honest, who knows? Listen. In our country when a rich
+man dies, he leaves always something for the poor, but he
+leaves it to the church and it is the fathers who give away
+the money. Corpo di Bacco! what that means thou knowest
+well. Sometimes a little gets to the poor. Sometimes&mdash;&mdash; But
+in this country it is not so. He leaves to a society. There
+are many. And they pay the women, and sometimes the
+men, to give away the money&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Santo Cristo," gasped Luigi, "they pay to give away the
+money?"</p>
+
+<p>"For them it is a job like any other. Didst think it was
+for love of thee or the red curls of thy Vincenza?"</p>
+
+<p>"Marvelous, most marvelous," murmured Luigi, "and it
+is possible then for all people to get&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Ma, that no one can explain," and Biaggio shrugged his
+shoulders; in a gesture of absolute inability to solve the
+problem.</p>
+
+<p>"She will come then again, this lady?" Luigi leaned forward
+eagerly. He was beginning to grasp it.</p>
+
+<p>"It is for thee to say stop, my son, if thou hast in thy head
+anything but fat. But thou art a Genovese. Only I say,"
+Biaggio laid a grimy thumb across his lips and winked knowingly&mdash;"Tell
+to none."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, many thanks friend," Luigi's voice was deeply
+grateful, "perhaps some day I can do for thee&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is nothing&mdash;nothing," insisted Biaggio, patting the
+air with his pudgy hands in a gesture of denial, "a little kindness
+between friends."</p>
+
+<p>At great inconvenience to himself, Biaggio held the door
+open to give Luigi more light in crossing the street. As he
+closed it and turned out the gas, he smiled to himself. "And
+each bottle of oil will cost thee ten cents more, friend. Business
+is business, and yesterday thy Vincenza returned the
+carrots because they were not fresh. Ecco!"</p>
+
+<p>Back in his own room, Luigi folded the three notes neatly,
+while Vincenza watched him, her gray eyes wide with wonder.</p>
+
+<p>"Marvelous, marvelous," she whispered just as Luigi had
+done, "to-night I thank the Virgin."</p>
+
+<p>As Biaggio had foretold, the Lady in Fur came every day.
+Luigi did not understand all that she said, but he always
+listened politely and smiled, with his dark eyes and his lips
+and his glistening white teeth. It made her feel very old to see
+Luigi smile like that, when he had to live in one room with a
+leaking water pipe and a garbage can outside the door.
+Sometimes she was almost ashamed to offer the three
+dollars, and she was grateful for the gentle, sweet way Luigi
+accepted it.</p>
+
+<p>Then one day when the air was thick with snow, and the
+air in the tenement halls cut like needles of ice and the lamps
+had to be lit at two o'clock, the Lady in Brown Fur came
+unexpectedly. She had found work for Luigi. She kissed
+the Little One, patted Vincenza's shoulder and shook hands
+with Luigi. Again and again she made him repeat the name
+and address to make sure he had it quite right. The Lady
+in Brown Fur was very happy. When she went Vincenza
+leaned far over the banisters with the lamp while Luigi called
+out in his soft, broken English, directions for avoiding the
+lines of washing below and the refuse piled in dark turns of
+the stairs. When the Lady in Brown Fur had disappeared
+Vincenza turned to Luigi.</p>
+
+<p>"Of a surety, cara, the saints are good. Never before didst
+thou work before April. In the new house we will keep for
+ourselves two rooms.</p>
+
+<p>"These people have the 'pull' even more than the alderman,
+Biaggio says," replied Luigi with a dreamy look in his eyes.
+"It may be that from this work I shall take three dollars
+each day."</p>
+
+<p>"Madonna mia," gasped Vincenza, "it is beyond belief."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>For five days Luigi stood four hours each afternoon, bent
+forward, to the lifting of a cardboard block, while Hugh
+Keswick painted, as he had not painted for months, the tense
+muscles under the olive skin, the strong neck and shoulders.
+The Building of the Temple advanced rapidly. And Luigi's
+arms and back ached so that each night Vincenza had to rub
+them with the oil which now cost ten cents more in the shop of
+Biaggio.</p>
+
+<p>On the Sixth day Luigi refused to go.</p>
+
+<p>"I tell thee it is a stupidness&mdash;to stand all day with the pain
+in the back. For what? Fifty cents. It is a work for old
+men and children&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But thou canst not make the money, sitting in thy chair,
+with thy feet on the stove, like now&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Dost thou wish then that I have every night the knives in
+my back? If so&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Not so, caro, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Listen. You understand nothing and talk as a woman.
+A lady comes to my house. She says&mdash;you have no work,
+here is money. Then she comes and says&mdash;here is work.
+But at this work I make not so much as before she gave; and
+in addition, I have the pain in the back. Ecco, when she comes
+again, I no longer have the work. It is her job to give away
+the money. She is not a fool, that Lady in Brown Fur. It is
+that I make her a kindness. Not so?"</p>
+
+<p>"As thou sayest," and Vincenza went on with her endless
+washing.</p>
+
+<p>But when the week passed and the Lady in Brown Fur did
+not come, Luigi's forehead wrinkled with the effort to understand.
+When the second had gone, Luigi was openly troubled.
+When the third was half over, he again took his hat and went
+over to the shop of Biaggio.</p>
+
+<p>As before Biaggio listened attentively, his eyes closed, until
+Luigi had finished. Then he opened them, made a clicking
+noise with his tongue, and laid one finger along the side
+of his nose.</p>
+
+<p>"Holy Body of Christ," he said softly, "in business thou
+hast the head like a rock. In one curl of thy Vincenza there
+is more sense than in all thy great body. Did I not tell thee
+to be careful, and it would stop only when thou didst wish.
+And now, without to ask my advice, you make the stupidness,
+bah&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Ma, Dio mio," Luigi's hands made angry protest against
+the invective of Biaggio, "I said only like a man of sense. It
+is her job, it make no difference&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Blood of the Lamb! Thou hast been in America eight
+months, and thou dost not know that they are mad, all quite
+mad, to work? Never do they stop. Even after to have fifty
+years, think, fifty years, still they work. They work even with
+the children old enough to keep them. For many months The
+Skinny One, she who gives milk to the baby of Giacomo, had
+the habit to find him such work, like the foolishness of your
+painter. And Giacomo has already three children more than
+fifteen. Ma&mdash;&mdash;" Biaggio snorted his contempt. Then suddenly
+his manner changed. He leaned back in his chair, and
+apparently dismissed the subject with a wave of his fat hand.</p>
+
+<p>"And the little Carolina she is well in this weather of the
+devil?" But Luigi did not answer. He was thinking with
+a pucker between his black eyes. Biaggio watched him narrowly.
+At last he spoke, looking fixedly at the sausages
+above his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course&mdash;it&mdash;is&mdash;possible&mdash;you have made a&mdash;mistake&mdash;but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Luigi leaned forward eagerly. "It is possible then to&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"All things are possible," Biaggio nodded his head at the
+sausages, blinking like a large, fat owl. Then he stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps, you will tell&mdash;to me," Luigi was forced to
+it at last.</p>
+
+<p>Biaggio gave a little grunt as if he were being brought back
+from a deep meditation. "There is a way," he said slowly.
+"If thou write to her of the Brown Fur that thou art sick and
+cannot do the work&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But never in my life was I better. Only last week Giacomo
+said I have grown fat. How the&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It is possible," replied Biaggio wearily, "to be sick of a
+sickness that makes one neither thin nor white. With a sickness&mdash;of
+the legs like the rheumatism, for example, one eats,
+one sleeps, only one cannot walk or stand for many hours."</p>
+
+<p>In spite of his efforts to the contrary, the wonder and admiration
+grew deeper in Luigi's eyes. "Thou thinkest the&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure," now that Luigi was reduced to the proper state
+of humility Biaggio gave up his attitude of distant oracle,
+and leaned close. "Thou hast made a mistake, but it is not
+too late. If thou dost wish I will write it for thee."</p>
+
+<p>"If thou sayest," replied Luigi and now it was his turn
+to gaze at the strings of garlic, "if you will do this favor."</p>
+
+<p>"With pleasure," Biaggio's fat hands made little gestures of
+willingness to oblige. "Of a truth it is not much, but when one
+wishes to buy the house, and already the family is begun, two
+dollars and a half each week&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Luigi glanced at him sharply. "Two and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Biaggio drew the ink to him and dipped his pen. "Two
+and a half for thee, and for me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Bene, bene," Luigi interrupted quickly, "it is only just."</p>
+
+<p>"Between friends," explained Biaggio as he began to write.</p>
+
+<p>"Between friends," echoed Luigi, and added to himself,
+"closer than the skin of a snake art thou&mdash;friend."</p>
+
+<p>The Lady in the Brown Fur came next day. She had been
+very angry and disappointed in Luigi, too angry and disappointed
+to go near him. Now she felt very sorry and uncomfortable
+when she saw his right leg stretched out before, so
+stiff that he could not bend it. He smiled and made the
+motion of getting up, but could not do it, and sank back again
+with a gesture of helplessness more eloquent than words.
+When the Lady in Brown Fur had gone, Vincenza found
+an extra bill, brand new, tucked into the pocket of the
+little Carolina.</p>
+
+<p>Luigi waited until he was quite sure that Biaggio would be
+alone. There was a look of real sorrow in his dark eyes as
+he slipped a shiny quarter across the counter. "She left only
+two," he explained, "the reason I do not know. Perhaps
+next time&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It is nothing, nothing between friends." Biaggio slipped
+the quarter into the cigar box under the counter and smiled
+a fat smile at Luigi. But he did not hold the door open when
+Luigi went, and his little eyes were hard like gimlet points.
+"So," he whispered softly. "So. One learns quickly, very
+quickly in this new country. Only two dollars this time. Bene,
+Gino mio, the price of sausage, as that of oil, goes up&mdash;between
+friends."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>VIII</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="THE_HAMMERPOND_BURGLARY" id="THE_HAMMERPOND_BURGLARY"></a>THE HAMMERPOND BURGLARY</h2>
+
+<h3>The Story of an Artist</h3>
+
+<h3>By H.G. WELLS</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is a moot point whether burglary is to be considered
+as a sport, a trade, or an art. For a trade the technique
+is scarcely rigid enough, and its claims to be considered
+an art are vitiated by the mercenary element that qualifies
+triumphs. On the whole it seems to be most justly
+ranked as sport, a sport for which no rules are at present
+formulated, and of which the prizes are distributed in an
+extremely informal manner. It was this informality of
+burglary that led to the regrettable extinction of two promising
+beginners at Hammerpond Park.</p>
+
+<p>The stakes offered in this affair consisted chiefly of diamonds
+and other personal <i>bric-&agrave;-brac</i> belonging to the newly
+married Lady Aveling. Lady Aveling, as the reader will
+remember, was the only daughter of Mrs. Montague Pangs,
+the well-known hostess. Her marriage to Lord Aveling
+was extensively advertised in the papers, the quantity and
+quality of her wedding presents, and the fact that the honeymoon
+was to be spent at Hammerpond. The announcement
+of these valuable prizes created a considerable sensation
+in the small circle in which Mr. Teddy Watkins was the
+undisputed leader, and it was decided that, accompanied
+by a duly qualified assistant, he should visit the village of
+Hammerpond in his professional capacity.</p>
+
+<p>Being a man of naturally retiring and modest disposition,
+Mr. Watkins determined to make his visit <i>incog</i>, and, after
+due consideration of the conditions of his enterprise, he
+selected the r&ocirc;le of a landscape artist, and the unassuming
+surname of Smith. He preceded his assistant, who, it was
+decided, should join him only on the last afternoon of his
+stay at Hammerpond. Now the village of Hammerpond
+is perhaps one of the prettiest little corners in Sussex;
+many thatched houses still survive, the flint-built church,
+with its tall spire nestling under the down, is one of the finest
+and least restored in the county, and the beech-woods and
+bracken jungles through which the road runs to the great
+house are singularly rich in what the vulgar artist and photographer
+call "bits." So that Mr. Watkins, on his arrival
+with two virgin canvases, a brand-new easel, a paint-boy,
+portmanteau, an ingenious little ladder made in sections;
+(after the pattern of that lamented master, Charles Peace),
+crowbar, and wire coils, found himself welcomed with effusion
+and some curiosity by half a dozen other brethren of
+the brush. It rendered the disguise he had chosen unexpectedly
+plausible, but it inflicted upon him a considerable
+amount of &aelig;sthetic conversation for which he was very
+imperfectly prepared.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you exhibited very much?" said young Porson
+in the bar-parlor of the "Coach and Horses," where Mr.
+Watkins was skilfully accumulating local information on
+the night of his arrival.</p>
+
+<p>"Very little," said Mr. Watkins; "just a snack here and
+there."</p>
+
+<p>"Academy?"</p>
+
+<p>"In course. <i>And</i> at the Crystal Palace."</p>
+
+<p>"Did they hang you well?" said Porson.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't rot," said Mr. Watkins; "I don't like it."</p>
+
+<p>"I mean did they put you in a good place?"</p>
+
+<p>"Whatyer mean?" said Mr. Watkins suspiciously. "One
+'ud think you were trying to make out I'd been put
+away."</p>
+
+<p>Porson was a gentlemanly young man even for an artist,
+and he did not know what being "put away" meant, but
+he thought it best to explain that he intended nothing of
+the sort. As the question of hanging seemed a sore point
+with Mr. Watkins, he tried to divert the conversation a little.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you do figure work at all?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, never had a head for figures," said Mr. Watkins.
+"My miss&mdash;Mrs. Smith, I mean, does all that."</p>
+
+<p>"She paints too!" said Porson. "That's rather jolly."</p>
+
+<p>"Very," said Mr. Watkins, though he really did not think
+so, and, feeling the conversation was drifting a little beyond
+his grasp, added: "I came down here to paint Hammerpond
+House by moonlight."</p>
+
+<p>"Really!" said Porson. "That's rather a novel idea."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Mr. Watkins, "I thought it rather a good
+notion when it occurred to me. I expect to begin to-morrow
+night."</p>
+
+<p>"What! You don't mean to paint in the open, by night?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do, though."</p>
+
+<p>"But how will you see your canvas?"</p>
+
+<p>"Have a bloomin' cop's&mdash;&mdash;" began Mr. Watkins, rising
+too quickly to the question, and then realizing this,
+bawled to Miss Durgan for another glass of beer. "I'm
+goin' to have a thing called a dark lantern," he said to
+Porson.</p>
+
+<p>"But it's about new moon now," objected Porson.
+"There won't be any moon."</p>
+
+<p>"There'll be the house," said Watkins, "at any rate.
+I'm goin', you see, to paint the house first and the moon
+afterward."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" said Porson, too staggered to continue the conversation.</p>
+
+<p>Toward sunset next day Mr. Watkins, virgin canvas,
+easel, and a very considerable case of other appliances in
+hand, strolled up the pleasant pathway through the beech-woods
+to Hammerpond Park, and pitched his apparatus
+in a strategic position commanding the house. Here he
+was observed by Mr. Raphael Sant, who was returning
+across the park from a study of the chalk-pits. His curiosity
+having been fired by Porson's account of the new arrival,
+he turned aside with the idea of discussing nocturnal art.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Watkins was mixing color with an air of great
+industry. Sant, approaching more nearly, was surprised
+to see the color in question was as harsh and brilliant an
+emerald green as it is possible to imagine. Having cultivated
+an extreme sensibility to color from his earliest years, he drew
+the air in sharply between his teeth at the very first glimpse of
+this brew. Mr. Watkins turned round. He looked annoyed.</p>
+
+<p>"What on earth are you going to do with that <i>beastly</i>
+green?" said Sant.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Watkins realized that his zeal to appear busy in
+the eyes of the butler had evidently betrayed him into some
+technical error. He looked at Sant and hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon my rudeness," said Sant; "but, really, that
+green is altogether too amazing. It came as a shock. What
+<i>do</i> you mean to do with it?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Watkins was collecting his resources. Nothing could
+save the situation but decision. "If you come here interrupting
+my work," he said, "I'm a-goin' to paint your face
+with it."</p>
+
+<p>Sant retired, for he was a humorist and a peaceful man.
+Going down the hill he met Porson and Wainwright. "Either
+that man is a genius or he is a dangerous lunatic," said he.
+"Just go up and look at his green." And he continued his
+way, his countenance brightened by a pleasant anticipation
+of a cheerful affray round an easel in the gloaming, and
+the shedding of much green paint.</p>
+
+<p>But to Porson and Wainwright Mr. Watkins was less
+aggressive, and explained that the green was intended to
+be the first coating of his picture. It was, he admitted,
+in response to a remark, an absolutely new method, invented
+by himself.</p>
+
+<p>Twilight deepened, first one then another star appeared.
+The rooks amid the tall trees to the left of the house had
+long since lapsed into slumberous silence, the house itself
+lost all the details of its architecture and became a dark
+gray outline, and then the windows of the salon shone out
+brilliantly, the conservatory was lighted up, and here and
+there a bedroom window burnt yellow. Had any one
+approached the easel in the park it would have been found
+deserted. One brief uncivil word in brilliant green sullied
+the purity of its canvas. Mr. Watkins was busy in the
+shrubbery with his assistant, who had discreetly joined him
+from the carriage-drive.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Watkins was inclined to be self-congratulatory upon
+the ingenious device by which he had carried all his apparatus
+boldly, and in the sight of all men, right up to the scene
+of operations. "That's the dressing-room," he said to
+his assistant, "and, as soon as the maid takes the candle
+away and goes down to supper, we'll call in. My! how
+nice the house do look, to be sure, against the starlight,
+and with all its windows and lights! Swop me, Jim, I almost
+wish I <i>was</i> a painter-chap. Have you fixed that there wire
+across the path from the laundry?"</p>
+
+<p>He cautiously approached the house until he stood below
+the dressing-room window, and began to put together
+his folding ladder. He was too experienced a practitioner
+to feel any unusual excitement. Jim was reconnoitring
+the smoking-room. Suddenly, close beside Mr.
+Watkins in the bushes, there was a violent crash and a stifled
+curse. Some one had tumbled over the wire which his
+assistant had just arranged. He heard feet running on
+the gravel pathway beyond. Mr. Watkins, like all true
+artists, was a singularly shy man, and he incontinently dropped
+his folding ladder and began running circumspectly through
+the shrubbery. He was indistinctly aware of two people
+hot upon his heels, and he fancied that he distinguished
+the outline of his assistant in front of him. In another
+moment he had vaulted the low stone wall bounding the
+shrubbery, and was in the open park. Two thuds on the
+turf followed his own leap.</p>
+
+<p>It was a close chase in the darkness through the trees.
+Mr. Watkins was a loosely built man and in good training,
+and he gained hand over hand upon the hoarsely panting
+figure in front. Neither spoke, but, as Mr. Watkins
+pulled up alongside, a qualm of awful doubt came over him.
+The other man turned his head at the same moment and
+gave an exclamation of surprise. "It's not Jim," thought
+Mr. Watkins, and simultaneously the stranger flung himself,
+as it were, at Watkins's knees, and they were forthwith
+grappling on the ground together. "Lend a hand,
+Bill," cried the stranger, as the third man came up. And
+Bill did&mdash;two hands, in fact, and some accentuated feet.
+The fourth man, presumably Jim, had apparently turned
+aside and made off in a different direction. At any rate,
+he did not join the trio.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Watkins's memory of the incidents of the next two
+minutes is extremely vague. He has a dim recollection
+of having his thumb in the corner of the mouth of the first
+man, and feeling anxious about its safety, and for some
+seconds at least he held the head of the gentleman answering
+to the name of Bill to the ground by the hair. He was
+also kicked in a great number of different places, and apparently
+by a vast multitude of people. Then the gentleman
+who was not Bill got his knee below Mr. Watkins's diaphragm
+and tried to curl him up upon it.</p>
+
+<p>When his sensations became less entangled he was sitting
+upon the turf, and eight or ten men&mdash;the night was
+dark, and he was rather too confused to count&mdash;standing
+around him, apparently waiting for him to recover.
+He mournfully assumed that he was captured, and would
+probably have made some philosophical reflections on the
+fickleness of fortune, had not his internal sensations disinclined
+him to speech.</p>
+
+<p>He noticed very quickly that his wrists were not handcuffed,
+and then a flask of brandy was put in his hands.
+This touched him a little&mdash;it was such unexpected kindness.</p>
+
+<p>"He's a-comin' round," said a voice which he fancied
+he recognized as belonging to the Hammerpond second
+footman.</p>
+
+<p>"We've got 'em, sir, both of 'em," said the Hammerpond
+butler, the man who had handed him the flask. "Thanks
+to <i>you</i>."</p>
+
+<p>No one answered his remark. Yet he failed to see how
+it applied to him.</p>
+
+<p>"He's fair dazed," said a strange voice; "the villain's
+half-murdered him."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Teddy Watkins decided to remain fair dazed until
+he had a better grasp of the situation. He perceived that
+two of the black figures round him stood side by side with
+a dejected air, and there was something in the carriage of
+their shoulders that suggested to his experienced eye hands
+that were bound together. In a flash he rose to his position.
+He emptied the little flask and staggered&mdash;obsequious
+hands assisting him&mdash;to his feet. There was a
+sympathetic murmur.</p>
+
+<p>"Shake hands, sir, shake hands," said one of the
+figures near him. "Permit me to introduce myself. I
+am very greatly indebted to you. It was the jewels of
+my wife, Lady Aveling, which attracted these scoundrels
+to the house."</p>
+
+<p>"Very glad to make your lordship's acquaintance," said
+Teddy Watkins.</p>
+
+<p>"I presume you saw the rascals making for the shrubbery,
+and dropped down on them?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's exactly how it happened," said Mr. Watkins.</p>
+
+<p>"You should have waited till they got in at the window,"
+said Lord Aveling; "they would get it hotter if they had
+actually committed the burglary. And it was lucky for
+you two of the policemen were out by the gates, and followed
+up the three of you. I doubt if you could have secured
+the two of them&mdash;though it was confoundedly plucky of
+you, all the same."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I ought to have thought of all that," said Mr. Watkins;
+"but one can't think of everything."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not," said Lord Aveling. "I am afraid they
+have mauled you a little," he added. The party was now
+moving toward the house. "You walk rather lame. May
+I offer you my arm?"</p>
+
+<p>And instead of entering Hammerpond House by the dressing-room
+window, Mr. Watkins entered it&mdash;slightly intoxicated,
+and inclined now to cheerfulness again&mdash;on the arm
+of a real live peer, and by the front door. "This," thought
+Mr. Watkins, "is burgling in style!" The "scoundrels,"
+seen by the gaslight, proved to be mere local amateurs unknown
+to Mr. Watkins, and they were taken down into
+the pantry and there watched over by the three policemen,
+two gamekeepers with loaded guns, the butler, an ostler,
+and a carman, until the dawn allowed of their removal to
+Hazelhurst police-station. Mr. Watkins was made much
+of in the salon. They devoted a sofa to him, and would
+not hear of a return to the village that night. Lady Aveling
+was sure he was brilliantly original, and said her idea of
+Turner was just such another rough, half-inebriated, deep-eyed,
+brave, and clever man. Some one brought up a remarkable
+little folding-ladder that had been picked up in the
+shrubbery, and showed him how it was put together. They
+also described how wires had been found in the shrubbery,
+evidently placed there to trip up unwary pursuers. It was
+lucky he had escaped these snares. And they showed him
+the jewels.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Watkins had the sense not to talk too much, and in
+any conversational difficulty fell back on his internal pains.
+At last he was seized with stiffness in the back and yawning.
+Everyone suddenly awoke to the fact that it was a shame
+to keep him talking after his affray, so he retired early to his
+room, the little red room next to Lord Aveling's suite.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The dawn found a deserted easel bearing a canvas with
+a green inscription, in the Hammerpond Park, and it found
+Hammerpond House in commotion. But if the dawn found
+Mr. Teddy Watkins and the Aveling diamonds, it did not
+communicate the information to the police.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>IX</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="A_FOCSLE_TRAGEDY" id="A_FOCSLE_TRAGEDY"></a>A FO'C'S'LE TRAGEDY</h2>
+
+<h3>An Ancient Mariner's Yarn</h3>
+
+<h3>By PERCY LONGHURST</h3>
+
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Yeh</span> may gas about torpedoes an' 'fernal machines
+an' such like, but yeh can't learn me nothin'; onct
+I had t' do wi' suthin' o' th' sort that turned th' heads o'
+a dozen men from black ter white in 'bout ten minutes,"
+and the ancient mariner looked at me with careful
+impressiveness.</p>
+
+<p>"Bad, eh?" I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Sh'd think it was&mdash;for them poor chaps."</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't turn your hair white, Uncle?"</p>
+
+<p>"Gue-e-ss not," and the ancient mariner had a fit of
+chuckling that nearly choked him.</p>
+
+<p>When he recovered he told me the yarn. I had heard
+several of old Steve's yarns, and I considered that his fine
+talents were miserably wasted; he ought to have been a
+politician or a real estate agent. This yarn, however, might
+very well have been true.</p>
+
+<p>"It was 'bout nineteen years ago," Steve commenced,
+"an' I'd jest taken up a job as cook on the <i>Here at Last</i>,
+a blamed old Noah's Ark of a wind-jammer from New
+York to Jamaica. She did th' trip in 'bout th' same time
+as yeh'd walk it. She was a beauty&mdash;an' th' crew 'bout
+fitted her. Where th' old man had gathered 'em from th'
+Lord on'y knows; but they was th' most difficult lot I've
+ever sailed with, which is sayin' a deal consid'rin' that,
+man an' boy, I've been a sailor for forty years. They was
+as contrairy as women, an' as stoopid as donkeys. I
+couldn't do nothin' right for 'em. They complained of
+the coffee, grumbled at th' biscuit, an' swore terrible at th'
+meat. But most of all they swore at me."</p>
+
+<p>"'It all lies in th' cookin',' an old one-eyed chap, named
+Barton, used ter say. 'Any cook that is worth his salt can
+do wonders wi' th' worst vittles'; an' he told me how he'd
+once sailed with a cook as c'd make a stewed cat taste better'n
+a rabbit. An', durn me, when I went ashore next, an' at
+great risk managed to lay holt of a big tom and cooked it for
+em, hopin' to please 'em, an' went inter th' fo'c's'le arter
+dinner an' told 'em what I'd done, ef that self-same chap,
+Barton, didn't hit me over th' head wi' his tin can for tryin'
+ter poison 'em, as he said. They complained to th' old
+man, too, which was worse; for when we got t' th'
+next port my leave ashore was stopped, an' all for tryin'
+to please 'em. Rank ingratitood, I call it.</p>
+
+<p>"Another time I tried to give the junk&mdash;it really was
+bad, but as I hadn't bought th' stores, that wasn't no fault
+o' mine&mdash;a bit of a more pleasant flavor by bilin' with it
+a packet o' spice I found in th' skipper's cabin. One
+o' th' sailors comes into my galley in a towerin' rage arter
+dinner.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yer blamed rascal,' he said, an' there was suthin' like
+murder in his starin' eyes. 'Yeh blamed rascal, whatcher
+been doin' ter our grub now?'</p>
+
+<p>"'What's th' trouble, Joe?' I asks quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"'Trouble, yeh skunk,' he howls; 'our throats is hot as
+hell, all th' skin's comin' off 'em; Bill Tomson's got his
+lips that blistered he can't hold his pipe between 'em.
+What yeh been doin?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Hold hard a jiffy,' I said, an' looks at what was left
+o' th' spice I'd used. I nearly had a fit.</p>
+
+<p>"'Go 'way,' I says, pullin' myself together; ''t ain't nuthin'.'</p>
+
+<p>"An' it wasn't nuthin'; but there was such an almighty
+run on th' water barrel that arternoon th' old man was
+beginnin' ter think a teetotal revival had struck th' <i>Here at
+Last</i>. But though cayenne pepper drives a chap ter water
+pretty often while th' effect lasts, it don't have no permanent
+result, as th' old man found out. Course it was a mistake
+o' mine; but ain't we all liable to go a bit astray?</p>
+
+<p>"I'm jest givin' yeh these few examples t' show yeh that
+things wasn't altogether O.K. 'tween me an' the crew.
+They was always swearin' at me, an' callin' of me names,
+an' heavin' things at me head, because I'd done or hadn't
+done suthin' or other. An angel from heaven wouldn't
+have pleased 'em; an' as I never held much stock in the
+angelic trust yeh kin easily understand we was most times
+very much at sixes an' sevens.</p>
+
+<p>"One evenin' I was sittin' in th' fo'c's'le patiently listenin'
+ter th' horrible language in which they reproached
+me because one o' 'em had managed t' break a front tooth
+in biting a bit o' th' salt pork they'd had for dinner, which
+was certainly no fault o' mine, when one of 'em, an English
+chap he was, an' the worst grumbler of all, suddenly cries:</p>
+
+<p>"'Jeerusalem, wouldn't I give somethin' fer a drop of
+beer just now. Strike me pink if I ain't a'most forgotten
+what the taste o' it's like.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Me, too,' said Harry Towers, the carpenter. 'A
+schooner o' lager an' ale! Sakes! Wouldn't it jest sizzle
+down a day like this?'</p>
+
+<p>"'My aunt! I'd give a month's pay f'r a quart,' the
+surly Britisher says fiercely.</p>
+
+<p>"'A quart, why don't yeh ask for a barrel while yeh're
+about it; then I'd help yeh drink it,' I says.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yer, yer blighted, perishin' idiot,' he shouts&mdash;it was
+him that'd broken his tooth. 'What, waste good beer on yer
+that's fit fer nothin' but cuttin' up into shark bait!'</p>
+
+<p>"'That ain't th' way t' talk to a man as is always ready
+an' willin' t' help yeh,' I says reproachfully.</p>
+
+<p>"The chap glares at me like a tiger with the colic. His
+language was awful. 'Lord 'elp us,' he finishes up with,
+'why, yer've done nuthin' but try ter pizen us ever since
+we come aboard. Ain't I right, mates?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Righto,' they choruses; an' I begin t' think they'd
+soon be gittin' up to mischief.</p>
+
+<p>"'P'raps I might help yeh t' git some beer if yer was more
+respectful,' I says hurriedly.</p>
+
+<p>"'Beer!' they all yells, an' looks up at me all to onct as
+if I was a dime museum freak.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes, beer,' I says quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"'An' where'd you be gittin' it from?' asks one.</p>
+
+<p>"'Never yeh mind that,' I answers. 'I've a dozen or
+two bottles of English stout I brought aboard, an' since
+yeh're so anxious to taste a drop o' beer, I don't mind
+lettin' yeh have some&mdash;at a price, o' course.'</p>
+
+<p>"'What's the figure?' Towers inquires suspiciously. He
+was a Michigan man.</p>
+
+<p>"'A dollar th' bottle.'</p>
+
+<p>"'What!' shouts th' man as was ready t' give a month's
+pay fer a quart. 'A dollar th' bottle! Why, yer miserable
+old skinflint!'</p>
+
+<p>"'A dollar th' bottle. That's the terms, take 'em or
+leave 'em,' says I, very firmly.</p>
+
+<p>"They talked a lot, and they swore a lot more, but finally
+seem' as I wasn't t' be moved, and that they couldn't get
+the beer except at my price, the hull ten of 'em agreed to
+have a bottle apiece.</p>
+
+<p>"'Money down,' I stipulates; an' after a lot o' trouble
+they collects seven dollars between 'em, an' tells me it's
+all they've got, an' if I didn't bring up th' ten bottles
+mighty quick they'd knock me on th' head an' drop me
+overboard.</p>
+
+<p>"'Mind,' I said, as I goes off to th' galley, money in my
+hand; 'don't yeh let th' officers see yeh drinkin' it or they'll
+think yeh've been broachin' cargo, an' that's little short o'
+mutiny.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Bring up that beer,' growls the Britisher, almost
+foamin' at th' mouth.</p>
+
+<p>"When I came back with th' ten bottles o' stout in a basket
+they all looked so pleased an' happy it did my heart good
+ter look at 'em.</p>
+
+<p>"'Hand it over,' they shouts impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"'I'm afraid it's gone a bit flat,' I said, as I handed th'
+bottles round. 'But I've tried to pull it round.'</p>
+
+<p>"Flat or not, they weren't goin' to kick; an' they was
+jest 'bout to unscrew the stoppers when the second mate
+suddenly shoves his head down the hatchway an' yells out:</p>
+
+<p>"'On deck, yer lazy, skulking, highly colored lubbers.
+Tumble up at once, an' git a lively move on, or I'll be down
+an' smarten ye up!'</p>
+
+<p>"McClosky, the second mate, was not a fellow who stood
+any nonsense, an' th' men weren't long before they was
+out o' th' fo'c's'le, grumblin' an' swearin' as only men
+who've lost their watch below can. They just stayed long
+enough t' shove th' unopened bottles o' stout well out o'
+sight underneath th' mattresses o' their bunks an' then they
+was up on deck working like niggers. A squall had struck
+the <i>Here at Last</i>; mighty inconvenient, these squalls in the
+Caribbean Sea are, an' th' <i>Here at Last</i> wasn't best calc'lated
+t' weather 'em. For two mortal hours everyone was
+hard at it, takin' in sail, doublin' ropes, an' makin' all ready
+for what promised t' be a dirty night. All thoughts o' beer
+was driven out o' their heads. An' when everythin' was
+ship-shape an' they came below again, soakin' wet an' dog-tired,
+they just climbed into their berths without stoppin'
+to think of th' precious bottles o' stout.</p>
+
+<p>"'Bout two o'clock in th' mornin', I was woke up by
+what sounded like a pistol shot in th' fo'c's'le, an' before
+I c'd rub th' sleep out er my eyes, there was another, an'
+another an' another, an' I saw four sailors tumble outer
+their bunks an' fall on th' floor shriekin' as if they'd been
+attacked by th' most awful pain. Everyone else in th'
+fo'c's'le sits up, wide awake, an' starin' at th' sufferin'
+wretches on th' floor.</p>
+
+<p>"'Wot th' 'ell's up?' asks th' Britisher; but no one knew,
+an' th' nex' second there was another explosion, an' he suddenly
+gave a scream that lifted th' hair on my scalp, an'
+leaps outer his bunk as if he'd been suddenly prodded in
+a tender spot wi' a red hot poker.</p>
+
+<p>"'My Gawd!' he screeches; 'th' bunk's exploded an'
+I'm bleedin' ter death;' an' he starts yellin' like a catamount,
+runnin' up an' down th' gangway, an' tramplin' upon th' four
+shriekin', cursin', prayin' sailors who'd been attacked fust.</p>
+
+<p>"'It's an infernal machine, an' it's blowed a hole in me
+back,' the Britisher yelled; an' we who was lookin' on c'd
+certainly hear suthin' drippin' from th' bunk he'd just got
+out of.</p>
+
+<p>"'Owch! I'm blowed t' bits. I'm bein' murdered.
+I'm dyin', Lord help me,' Harry Towers, the carpenter,
+wails; an' there was another terrific bang, an' outer his bunk
+Harry shot, landin', on th' chest o' one o' th' moanin' squirmin'
+sailors. Th' poor fellow, findin' himself thus flattened
+out, an' not knowin' what it was had fallen on him, gives a
+gaspin' sort er yell, an' drives Towers in th' back wi' his fist.</p>
+
+<p>"Th' row goin' on was suthin' terrible; a' 'sylum full o'
+ravin' lunatics on th' rampage couldn't have made more
+noise; an' them that hadn't been hurt was beginnin' t' feel
+as bad as them that was, when someone scrambles down th'
+companionway.</p>
+
+<p>"It was McClosky, th' second mate, whose watch on
+deck it was. He'd heard th' row&mdash;an' no wonder&mdash;an'
+thinkin', I dessay, that murder or mutiny was goin' on, came
+forward to investigate. He was a red-headed, hot-tempered
+Irishman, an' c'd handle a crew in rare style.</p>
+
+<p>"'What th' dickens&mdash;&mdash;' he commences, when one o'
+th' men on th' floor, seein' th' gun in his hand, an' not recognizin'
+him, shouted, 'They're comin' t' finish us,' an' grabs
+th' mate round th' legs wi' th' grip of a boa constrictor.</p>
+
+<p>"Th' mate, sure it was mutiny, lets off his gun permiscuous.
+A clip on the jaw made th' sailor let go, an' th' mate,
+seein' Towers groanin' on th' floor quite close, kicks him
+hard an' asks what's th' matter.</p>
+
+<p>"'We're blown up, sir,' Towers whimpers.</p>
+
+<p>"'Blown up, ye fool, what d' ye mean? Who's blowin'
+ye up?' demands McClosky.</p>
+
+<p>"'Dunno, sir,' Harry stammered; an' just then there was
+two more explosions, an' a couple more o' the seamen bundled
+headlong out er their berths, utterin' doleful shrieks
+that'd make yer heart stand still.</p>
+
+<p>"Th' mate was kickin', swearin', and shoutin' like a
+demon, th' men all th' while keepin' up their row as if they
+was bein' paid a dollar a minute to yell. Then th' skipper
+put in an appearance. His face was white as chalk, but
+his hands, in each o' which was a big Colt, were steady as
+rocks, an' he come down th' ladder like a man who reckons
+he's in for a good fight.</p>
+
+<p>"'What's all this mean, Mr. McClosky?' he asks, pausin'
+when he sees there's no fightin' goin' on.</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever th' mate said was drowned by th' row th'
+sailors was makin', though he bellowed like a frisky bull.
+Th' old man didn't seem a bit frightened; droppin' one o'
+th' Colts inter his pocket, he roars, 'Silence'; and steps over
+to th' berth where Joe Harper, th' bo'sun, was sittin' upright,
+stiff as a poker, an' his eyes fairly startin' out er his head
+wi' terror.</p>
+
+<p>"'Now, then, Harper,' he says, an' judgin' by his face
+th' skipper was 'bout as mad as a bear with a sore head.
+'What th' blazes does it mean? Have yeh all gone mad?'</p>
+
+<p>"But th' bo'sun, he was too scared to do more than gape
+at th' skipper like a codfish three days out er water, an th'
+old man gits a bit madder.</p>
+
+<p>"'Answer, yeh damn rascal,' he shouted; an' he grabs
+Harper by th' shoulder an' shakes him until his teeth fairly
+rattled. But th' bo'sun couldn't say a word.</p>
+
+<p>"'If this ain't enough t' drive a man crazy,' th' skipper
+yells; 'McClosky, have yeh lost yer senses like all these
+condemned rascals here? What's th' meanin' o' it?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Don't know, sir; I heard 'em ravin' an' screamin' like
+lunatics, but I can't get a word out of 'em. Think they
+must all have become mad,' an' th' mate kicked Towers
+again t' relieve his feelin's.</p>
+
+<p>"He'd just finished speakin' when suthin' busted underneath
+th' bo'sun. Harper screams, th' skipper gives a jump
+an' lets go of his arm, an' Harper falls out er his berth as if
+he'd been suddenly shot dead, only he was makin' a row
+like a man suddenly attacked wi' D.T.'s. And at that all
+th' other miserable wretches on th' floor starts worse than
+ever.</p>
+
+<p>"Th' skipper pulls himself together, an' goin' t' th' bo'sun's
+bunk, leans over an' examines it. He poked about f'r a
+bit, put his fingers into a stream of suthin' that was fallin'
+from th' bunk to th' floor, an' then by th' light o' th' swingin'
+oil lamp, I see his face turn a blazin' crimson. I see him
+take suthin' outer th' bed, an' then he swings round an'
+faces th' men.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yeh low down, thievin', chicken-hearted, blank, blank
+scoundrels,' he yells, an' his voice was that loud an' so full
+o' passion th' sailors were scared into quietness. 'Yeh
+miserable sneakin' apologies for men! So this is what's
+th' matter, is it? By gum! If I don't have every mother's
+son of ye clapped into jail soon as we reach Kingstown,
+call me a crimson Dutchman. Blown up, are ye? I wish
+t' th' Lord some of ye had been. Sailors, yeh calls yeh-selves!
+Why, by gosh! yeh haven't enough spirit t' rob
+a mouse. What's that yeh say, Towers? Infernal
+machines, eh? Dyin'! If yeh don't all get a move on ye
+in double quick time, some of yeh will be. Git out o' my
+sight, ye blubberin' babies; I'm sick an' ashamed of ye.'</p>
+
+<p>"A more sick an' unhappy lookin' drove I never saw
+when th' men got on their legs again an' found out they
+weren't hurt a little bit; an' discovered what it was had
+caused th' explosions. They wouldn't look at each other;
+an' they daren't speak or else there'd have been fightin'.</p>
+
+<p>"I went about in fear of my life for days, but they did
+nothin'; though if they'd known that I&mdash;quite innocent o'
+mischief, yeh understand&mdash;had put a dozen grains or so
+of rice inter every bottle o' stout&mdash;amazin' stuff rice for
+causin' fermentation in hot climates&mdash;they wouldn't
+have stopped short at mere profanity. My life wouldn't
+have been worth a moment's purchase."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>X</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="THE_ADOPTED_SON" id="THE_ADOPTED_SON"></a>THE ADOPTED SON</h2>
+
+<h3>A Tale of Peasant Life</h3>
+
+<h3>From the French of GUY de MAUPASSANT</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> two cottages stood side by side at the foot of a hill
+near a little seaside resort. The two peasants
+labored hard on the unproductive soil to rear their little
+ones, of which each family had four.</p>
+
+<p>In front of the adjoining doors the whole troop of urchins
+sprang and tumbled about from morning till night. The two
+eldest were six years old, and the two youngest were about
+fifteen months; the marriages, and afterward the births,
+having taken place nearly simultaneously in both families.</p>
+
+<p>The two mothers could hardly distinguish their own offspring
+among the lot, and as for the fathers, they were
+altogether at sea. The eight names danced in their heads;
+they were always getting them mixed up; and when they
+wished to call one child, the men often called three names
+before getting the right one.</p>
+
+<p>The first of the two dwellings, coming from the direction
+of the sea-bath, Belleport, was occupied by the Tuvaches,
+who had three girls and one boy; the other house sheltered
+the Vallins, who had one girl and three boys.</p>
+
+<p>They all subsisted with difficulty on soup, potatoes, and
+the open air. At seven o'clock in the morning, then at noon,
+then at six o'clock in the evening, the housewives got their
+nestlings together to give them their food, as the goose-herds
+collect their charges. The children were seated,
+according to age, before the wooden table, varnished by
+fifty years of use; the mouths of the youngest hardly reaching
+the level of the table. Before them was placed a deep
+dish filled with bread, soaked in the water in which the
+potatoes had been boiled, half a cabbage, and three onions;
+and the whole line ate until their hunger was appeased.
+The mother herself fed the smallest.</p>
+
+<p>A little meat, boiled in a soup, on Sunday, was a feast
+for all; and the father on this day sat longer over the repast,
+repeating: "I should like this every day."</p>
+
+<p>One afternoon, in the month of August, a light carriage
+stopped suddenly in front of the cottages, and a young woman,
+who was driving the horses, said to the gentleman sitting
+at her side:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, look, Henri, at all those children! How pretty
+they are, tumbling about in the dust, like that!"</p>
+
+<p>The man did not answer, being accustomed to these outbursts
+of admiration, which were a pain and almost a
+reproach to him. The young woman continued:</p>
+
+<p>"I must hug them! Oh, how I should like to have one
+of them&mdash;that one there&mdash;the little bit of a one!"</p>
+
+<p>Springing down from the carriage, she ran toward the
+children, took one of the two youngest&mdash;that of the Tuvaches,
+and lifting it up in her arms, she kissed him passionately
+on his dirty cheeks, on his frowzy hair daubed with earth,
+and on his little hands, which he swung vigorously, to get
+rid of the caresses which displeased him.</p>
+
+<p>Then she got up into the carriage again, and drove off
+at a lively trot. But she returned the following week, and
+seating herself on the ground, took the youngster in her arms,
+stuffed him with cakes, gave bon-bons to all the others,
+and played with them like a young girl, while the husband
+waited patiently in the frail carriage.</p>
+
+<p>She returned again; made the acquaintance of the parents,
+and reappeared every day with her pockets full of dainties
+and of pennies.</p>
+
+<p>Her name was Madame Henri d'Hubi&egrave;res.</p>
+
+<p>One morning, on arriving, her husband alighted with her,
+and without stopping with the children, who now knew her
+well, she entered the peasants' cottage.</p>
+
+<p>They were busy splitting wood to cook the soup. They
+straightened up, much surprised, offered chairs, and waited
+expectantly.</p>
+
+<p>Then the woman, in a broken, trembling voice, began:</p>
+
+<p>"My good people, I have come to see you, because I should
+like&mdash;I should like to take&mdash;your little boy with me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The country people, too stupefied to think, did not answer.</p>
+
+<p>She recovered her breath, and continued: "We are alone,
+my husband and I. We should keep it&mdash;Are you
+willing?"</p>
+
+<p>The peasant woman began to understand. She asked:</p>
+
+<p>"You want to take Charlot from us? Oh, no, indeed!"</p>
+
+<p>Then M. d'Hubi&egrave;res intervened:</p>
+
+<p>"My wife has not explained clearly what she means.
+We wish to adopt him, but he will come back to see you.
+If he turns out well, as there is every reason to expect, he
+will be our heir. If we, perchance, should have children,
+he will share equally with them; but if he should not reward
+our care, we should give him, when he comes of age, a sum
+of twenty thousand francs, which shall be deposited immediately
+in his name, with a notary. As we have thought also
+of you, we should pay you, until your death, a pension of
+one hundred francs a month. Have you quite understood
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>The woman had arisen, furious.</p>
+
+<p>"You want me to sell you Charlot? Oh, no, that's
+not the sort of thing to ask of a mother! Oh, no! That
+would be an abomination!"</p>
+
+<p>The man, grave and deliberate, said nothing; but approved
+of what his wife said by a continued nodding of his head.</p>
+
+<p>Mme. d'Hubi&egrave;res, in dismay, began to weep, and turning
+to her husband, with a voice full of tears, the voice of a child
+used to having all its wishes gratified, she stammered:</p>
+
+<p>"They will not do it, Henri, they will not do it."</p>
+
+<p>Then he made a last attempt: "But, my friends, think of
+the child's future, of his happiness, of&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The peasant woman, however, exasperated, cut him short:</p>
+
+<p>"It's all considered! It's all understood! Get out of
+this, and don't let me see you here again&mdash;the idea of wanting
+to take away a child like that!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Mme. d'Hubi&egrave;res bethought herself that there were
+two children, quite little, and she asked, through her tears,
+with the tenacity of a wilful and spoiled woman:</p>
+
+<p>"But is the other little one not yours?"</p>
+
+<p>Father Tuvache answered: "No, it is our neighbors'.
+You can go to them, if you wish." And he went back into
+his house whence resounded the indignant voice of his wife.</p>
+
+<p>The Vallins were at table, in the act of slowly eating slices
+of bread which they parsimoniously spread with a little
+rancid butter on a plate between the two.</p>
+
+<p>M. d'Hubi&egrave;res recommenced his propositions, but with
+more insinuations, more oratorical precautions, more guile.</p>
+
+<p>The two country people shook their heads, in sign of
+refusal, but when they learned that they were to have a
+hundred francs a month, they considered, consulting one
+another by glances, much disturbed. They kept silent
+for a long time, tortured, hesitating. At last the woman
+asked: "What do you think about it, man?" In a sententious
+tone he said: "I say that it's not to be despised."</p>
+
+<p>Then Mme. d'Hubi&egrave;res, trembling with anguish, spoke
+of the future of their child, of his happiness, and of the money
+which he could give them later.</p>
+
+<p>The peasant asked: "This pension of twelve hundred
+francs, will it be promised before a notary?"</p>
+
+<p>M. d'Hubi&egrave;res responded: "Why, certainly, beginning
+with to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>The woman, who was thinking it over, continued:</p>
+
+<p>"A hundred francs a month is not enough to deprive us
+of the child. That child would be working in a few years;
+we must have a hundred and twenty francs."</p>
+
+<p>Stamping with impatience, Mme. d'Hubi&egrave;res granted
+it at once, and as she wished to carry off the child with her,
+she gave a hundred francs as a present, while her husband
+drew up a writing. And the young woman, radiant, carried
+off the howling brat, as one carries away a wished-for knick-knack
+from a shop.</p>
+
+<p>The Tuvaches, from their door, watched her departure;
+mute, severe, perhaps regretting their refusal.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing more was heard of little Jean Vallin. The parents
+went to the notary every month to collect their hundred
+and twenty francs, and they were angry with their
+neighbors, because Mother Tuvache grossly insulted them,
+repeating without ceasing from door to door, that one must
+be unnatural to sell one's child; that it was horrible, nasty,
+and many other vile expressions. Sometimes she would
+take her Chariot in her arms with ostentation, exclaiming,
+as if he understood:</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't sell <i>you</i>, I didn't! I didn't sell <i>you</i>, my little
+one! I'm not rich, but I don't sell my children!"</p>
+
+<p>The Vallins lived at their ease, thanks to the pension.
+That was the cause of the inappeasable fury of the Tuvaches,
+who had remained miserably poor. Their eldest son went
+away into service; Charlot alone remained to labor with his
+old father, to support the mother and two younger sisters
+which he had.</p>
+
+<p>He had reached twenty-one years, when, one morning,
+a brilliant carriage stopped before the two cottages. A
+young gentleman, with a gold watch chain, got out,
+giving his hand to an aged, white-haired lady. The old
+lady said to him: "It is there, my child, at the second
+house." And he entered the house of the Vallins, as if he
+were at home.</p>
+
+<p>The old mother was washing her aprons; the infirm father
+slumbered at the chimney-corner. Both raised their heads,
+and the young man said:</p>
+
+<p>"Good morning, papa; good morning, mamma!"</p>
+
+<p>They both stood up, frightened. In a flutter, the peasant
+woman dropped her soap into the water, and stammered:</p>
+
+<p>"Is it you, my child? Is it you, my child?"</p>
+
+<p>He took her in his arms and hugged her, repeating: "Good
+morning, mamma," while the old man, all in a tremble, said,
+in his calm tone which he never lost: "Here you are, back
+again, Jean," as if he had seen him a month before.</p>
+
+<p>When they had got to know one another again the parents
+wished to take their boy out through the neighborhood,
+and show him. They took him to the mayor, to the deputy,
+to the cur&eacute;, and to the schoolmaster.</p>
+
+<p>Charlot, standing on the threshold of his cottage, watched
+him pass.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening, at supper, he said to the old people: "You
+must have been stupid to let the Vallins's boy be taken."</p>
+
+<p>The mother answered, obstinately: "I wouldn't sell <i>my</i>
+child."</p>
+
+<p>The father said nothing. The son continued:</p>
+
+<p>"It is unfortunate to be sacrificed like that." Then
+Father Tuvache, in an angry tone, said:</p>
+
+<p>"Are you going to reproach us for having kept you?"
+And the young man said, brutally:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I reproach you for having been such simpletons.
+Parents like you make the misfortune of their children.
+You deserve that I should leave you."</p>
+
+<p>The old woman wept over her plate. She moaned, as she
+swallowed the spoonfuls of soup, half of which she spilled:
+"One may kill one's self to bring up children."</p>
+
+<p>Then the boy said, roughly: "I'd rather not have been born
+than be what I am. When I saw the other my heart stood still.
+I said to myself: 'See what I should have been now!'" He
+arose: "See here, I feel that I would do better not to stay
+here, because I should bring it up against you from morning
+till night, and I should make your life miserable. I
+shall never forgive you that, you know!"</p>
+
+<p>The two old people were silent, downcast, in tears.</p>
+
+<p>He continued: "No, the thought of that would be too
+hard. I'd rather go look for a living somewhere else."</p>
+
+<p>He opened the door. A sound of voices entered. The
+Vallins were celebrating the return of their child.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>XI</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="PROVIDENCE_AND_MRS_URMY" id="PROVIDENCE_AND_MRS_URMY"></a>PROVIDENCE AND MRS. URMY</h2>
+
+<h3>The Story of an International Marriage</h3>
+
+<h3>By ARMIGER BARCLAY and OLIVER SANDYS</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lady Hartley</span> (<i>n&eacute;e</i> Miss Persis Van Ness) gave
+a little gasp. In her excitement the paper rustled
+noisily to her knee.</p>
+
+<p>"O-h! Have you seen this?" She shot the <i>Morning
+Post</i> across the breakfast table to Mrs. Rufus P. Urmy,
+with her finger marking a paragraph.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Urmy glanced at it. "I guess it ought to corral him
+right away," she said, with the merest suspicion of embarrassment.
+"You see, it's Jeannette's last chance. Two
+seasons in England and never a catch, so I&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>You</i> did it?" Lady Hartley looked at her friend in round-eyed
+wonder.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I had to do something," allowed Mrs. Urmy, with
+a dawning suspicion that perhaps she had, after all, run
+afoul of British conventions, which she found as difficult
+of comprehension as her regular morning study of Debrett.</p>
+
+<p>"But Jeannette!"</p>
+
+<p>"That's so. Jeannette'll raise Cain." Mrs. Urmy got
+up from the table. "It's this a-way, Persis. I reckon I
+fixed your little affair up with Lord Hartley to home, and
+you've got to thank me for it. Now, I'm trying to do the
+same for my girl. She can't, or she won't, play her own hand.
+Every chance she's had she's let slide, and I allow she's
+got to marry a title before I go back to the States. Some
+one's got to hustle when Providence isn't attending to
+business, and as there's nobody else to do it, I've taken
+on the contract." She pointed to the paragraph. "I
+own up I don't see just how, but there wasn't much
+time, and it was the best I could do."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Hartley slowly reread the incriminating paragraph:</p>
+
+<p>"A marriage has been arranged, and will shortly take
+place between the Earl of Chilminster, of Sapworth Hall,
+Wilts, and Miss Jeannette L. Urmy, of Boston, Massachusetts."</p>
+
+<p>"It knocks me out!" she murmured, lapsing into the
+Western idiom which a whole week spent in the society of
+her bosom friend was bound to call up. "But why Lord
+Chilminster?" She pronounced the name Chilster.</p>
+
+<p>"Why won't he do? Isn't he the real thing? I picked
+him out in my sample book of the aristocracy, and when I
+fitted the name on to Jeannette&mdash;the Countess of Chilminster&mdash;it
+sounded quite elegant."</p>
+
+<p>"Then it wasn't because you knew I knew him?" demanded
+Mrs. Urmy's hostess with growing amazement.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Urmy's face took on a blank expression.</p>
+
+<p>"You've heard me mention the name. That's how it's
+pronounced," explained Lady Hartley. "His place isn't
+far from here."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't say! The way these British titles are pronounced
+is enough to make you doubt your own eyesight.
+I didn't know. But if he's a friend of yours that'll
+likely make it all the easier."</p>
+
+<p>"Lord Chilminster!" Lady Hartley spoke in an awed tone.</p>
+
+<p>She felt it would be useless to make Mrs. Urmy understand
+the enormity of her offence against good taste, and
+presently her astonishment gave way to amusement.</p>
+
+<p>"Lavinia," she rippled, "as a matchmaker you take the
+cake! I don't believe&mdash;&mdash;" She paused, listening. "Hush!
+Here's Jeannette!"</p>
+
+<p>Miss Jeannette Urmy came in through the open French
+window. She was dressed in a natty little cotton frock,
+looked fresh and chic, and only pleasantly American. Perhaps
+she inherited her good looks and refined tastes from
+"popper" Urmy, deceased, in which case that gentleman
+must have committed one serious error of taste and judgment
+when he selected Jeannette's mother for his better half.</p>
+
+<p>"My! You're late, Jeannette!" observed Mrs. Urmy,
+shooting a quick glance at Lady Hartley.</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment, both ladies, by common consent,
+sauntered toward the door. They knew Jeannette's temperament.
+A crisis, such as the announcement in the <i>Morning
+Post</i> was sure to evoke, was one at which they were
+not anxious to assist.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I'm ahead of time," answered Jeannette. "I've
+been up since six looking for eggs."</p>
+
+<p>"Eggs?" echoed Lady Hartley.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; I collect birds' eggs." She picked up the newspaper
+and let her eye wander along the items in the Court
+Circular. "But getting up early makes me homesick. The
+best time of my life was when I was a kid, when I hadn't
+an idea beyond the woods on the old Massachusetts farm,
+when popper kept his store, and&mdash;Oh!"</p>
+
+<p>She had reached the fatal announcement, and sat with
+parted lips, rigid as stone, while the world seemed toppling
+about her ears. There was a long pause. Jeannette's lips
+gradually tightened, and her firm hand crumpled up the
+paper.</p>
+
+<p>"Mommer!" she exclaimed. "Here, Mommer!" But
+Mrs. Urmy and Lady Hartley had beaten a diplomatic retreat.
+Jeannette jumped to her feet, the color flaming in her face,
+her eyes snapping with indignation. "Oh!" she cried, impotently.
+"I'll&mdash;I'll&mdash;oh! what can I do? It must come
+out! He must apologize. Who did it? Oh, I don't even
+know him, the&mdash;wretch!"</p>
+
+<p>The "chuff-chuff" of a motor-car coming up the drive
+interrupted her outburst, and she looked up to see it being
+driven up and halted before the entrance. Lady Hartley
+had a perfect fleet of cars. Jeannette at once jumped to
+the conclusion that this was one of them. She had a sudden
+inspiration. It was running free&mdash;ready to start. There
+was temptation in the soft purr of its engine. The driver,
+quietly dressed, but not in livery, she appraised as one of
+Lady Hartley's motor-men.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I?" she whispered. "Dare I? I can set things
+straight at once if I do. Persis will be wild with me for
+going off without a word, but I'll&mdash;I'll chance it!"</p>
+
+<p>She ran into the hall, slipped into her motoring coat, and,
+throwing discretion to the winds, walked out to the front
+of the house and quickly up to the car.</p>
+
+<p>"How soon can you drive me to Sapworth Hall?" she
+asked, getting in and pulling the rug around her.</p>
+
+<p>The barefaced appropriation of his car by an unknown
+young woman almost took Lord Chilminster's breath away.
+He had, at much inconvenience to himself, motored all the
+way to Lady Hartley's to contradict and sift an amazing
+and annoying report that he had discovered in the <i>Morning
+Post</i>. He had heard Lady Hartley mention the name of
+Urmy as that of a friend of hers, and naturally decided that
+she was the proper person to consult. But before he had
+time to get out of his car and ring the bell here was a young
+person, springing from goodness knows where, mistaking
+him for a motor-man, and ordering him about. For a moment
+he was speechless. Then, as the humor of the situation
+began to appeal to him, so did the good looks of the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"Really," he began. "You see I&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't talk, get under way!" commanded Jeannette.
+"Quick! Her ladyship has altered her mind about going
+out. You've got to take me to Sapworth Hall. It's thirty
+miles. I want to be there by lunch-time. Do you know
+the way?"</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I think so," stammered Chilminster.</p>
+
+<p>Her bewildering eagerness to be off was infectious. The
+noble owner of the car felt it. But apart from that, he was
+quite ready for an adventure in such pleasant company.
+He forgot all about the object of his visit. Without another
+word he let in the clutch and started.</p>
+
+<p>Jeannette sank back with a sigh of relief. She credited
+herself with having secured Persis's car very neatly. The
+man might, perhaps, get into trouble, but she could make
+that up to him by a generous tip. Her one idea was to contradict
+and confute the disgraceful announcement at its
+fountain-head. It was providential that the unknown Lord
+Chilminster's place was so near; but had it been ten times
+as far off, Jeannette, boiling with justifiable indignation, and
+with her mind made up to exact reparation, would have gone
+there.</p>
+
+<p>"It's awful! It's unheard of! I&mdash;I won't have it!
+Who can have done it?" she kept repeating through white
+teeth set viciously. "I'll have it contradicted in large
+print by this time to-morrow, or the American Ambassador
+shall&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She was not quite sure what ambassadors did under similar
+circumstances, and she left the mental threat unfinished.
+Anyhow, it was a disgrace to herself, and her sex, if not a
+slight on her country, and it redoubled her determination
+to "get even" with the perpetrator of it. She leaned forward
+to make herself heard.</p>
+
+<p>"Set a killing pace," she called. "I'll make it up to you."</p>
+
+<p>Chilminster nodded, hid a smile, and let the car out to
+the top of its speed. It ate up mile after mile; and as it
+came to Jeannette that each one brought her nearer and
+nearer to the hateful person whose name had been so scandalously
+bracketed with her own, she experienced a feeling
+of nervousness. The boldness of her escapade began to
+alarm her. What should she say? How express in words
+her view of an intolerable situation which no self-respecting
+girl could even calmly think about?</p>
+
+<p>Lord Chilminster's mind was almost similarly engaged.
+He was wondering who Miss Jeannette L. Urmy could be,
+and whether she was aware of the obnoxious paragraph
+in the paper. He did not do her the injustice to suppose
+that she had inspired it (he had an open mind on that point),
+but as he was not responsible for it himself, he had a suspicion
+that she might be. Chilminster had met very few
+unmarried American girls, but like most Englishmen, he
+was aware of their capacity for resolution in most matters.
+Then, again, it was leap year. Suppose&mdash;&mdash; For a little
+while he did a lot of hard thinking.</p>
+
+<p>"I say," he called suddenly, looking over his shoulder.
+"Isn't there a Miss Urmy staying at the White House?"</p>
+
+<p>Jeannette drew herself up and fixed him with a stony stare.</p>
+
+<p>"I am Miss Urmy," she answered frigidly.</p>
+
+<p>The start that Chilminster gave unconsciously affected
+the steering-wheel, and the car swerved sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing? You're driving disgracefully!"
+exclaimed Jeannette.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I beg your pardon," faltered Chilminster. "I thought
+you were her lady's maid."</p>
+
+<p>He felt he owed her that one. A girl who could announce
+her approaching marriage with a stranger (Chilminster
+no longer gave her the benefit of the doubt) and follow up
+that glaring indiscretion by a visit to her victim, was&mdash;&mdash; The
+imminence of such a thing alarmed him. Was she coming
+to propose&mdash;to molest him? He got hot thinking of it.</p>
+
+<p>The situation had undergone a complete change since he
+had started out in a rage, and some trepidation, to confront
+Miss Urmy herself, if need be. Now trepidation over-balanced
+all his other emotions. Miss Urmy was behind
+him, in his own automobile, and he was meekly driving
+her at a cracking speed to his own house! It was too late
+to turn back now. The thing had to be seen through. Besides,
+he could not help feeling a curiosity to know what was
+in his passenger's mind, and to discover her bewildering
+plan of action.</p>
+
+<p>Neither spoke for the rest of the journey, and at length the
+car passed through the lodge gates, swept up the drive, and
+stopped at the entrance to Sapworth Hall. Jeannette got out.</p>
+
+<p>"You had better go round to the stables and ask for something
+to eat. I may be some time," was all she volunteered
+as she rang the bell.</p>
+
+<p>Rather staggered by the order, but foreseeing a bad quarter
+of an hour ahead of him, Chilminster was glad of the
+respite. He opened the throttle and slid out of sight as
+Jeannette was admitted.</p>
+
+<p>His lordship was out, the butler informed her. Then
+she would wait&mdash;wait all day, if necessary, she said decisively,
+following the man into the library. No, she was in
+no need of refreshment, but her <i>chauffeur</i>, who had gone
+round to the stables, might be glad of something in the servants'
+hall.</p>
+
+<p>With a foot impatiently tapping the polished floor, she
+sat summoning up all her determination whilst awaiting
+the ordeal before her. For, by this time had come the inevitable
+reaction, and the sudden impulse that had made her
+act as she had seemed, somehow, out of relation to the motive
+that had inspired it. Not that she regretted having come:
+her self-respect demanded that sacrifice; but she wished
+the unpleasant affair over.</p>
+
+<p>An intolerable ten minutes passed. The beautiful seventeenth
+century room, like a reflection on the spirit of democracy,
+was getting on Jeannette's nerves. The strain of
+listening, watching the big mahogany door for the expected
+entrance of Lord Chilminster, at last reduced her to a state
+of apathy, and when he did come quietly in she was taken
+by surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm so sorry to have kept you waiting," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Jeannette stared. Bareheaded, gaiterless, minus his driving
+coat, very self-contained and eminently aristocratic,
+the supposed motor-man advanced into the room.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, you told me to take the car round to the stables,"
+he proceeded, with a touch of apology in his tone.</p>
+
+<p>"You&mdash;you are the Earl of Chilminster?" she gasped.</p>
+
+<p>"Of Sapworth Hall, Wilts," he augmented, like one who
+quotes. "And you are Miss Jeannette L. Urmy, of Boston,
+Massachusetts, I believe."</p>
+
+<p>There was quite a long silence.</p>
+
+<p>"You knew all along," she flushed angrily.</p>
+
+<p>Chilminster raised a hand in protest. "Not until you
+told me."</p>
+
+<p>"Then why didn't you stop? You ought to have taken
+me back immediately you knew who I was."</p>
+
+<p>"So I would have if&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You mean you didn't believe me. You thought I was
+a lady's maid!" Jeannette interrupted indignantly.</p>
+
+<p>"That was an error of judgment for which I humbly
+apologize. We are all liable to make mistakes sometimes.
+You, Miss Urmy, for instance, took me for a motor-man.
+You also appropriated my car, and commanded me to bring
+you here at a murderous&mdash;no, a killing pace. And I think
+you added that you would make it up to me."</p>
+
+<p>Jeannette's face tingled. She had come to accuse, and,
+instead, found herself patiently listening to a recital of her
+indiscretions. But if Lord Chilminster was a strategist,
+Jeannette was a tactician. She appreciated the danger of
+a passive defense, and conversely, of the value of a vigorous
+aggression. Without a moment's hesitation she began
+a counter attack.</p>
+
+<p>"In to-day's <i>Morning Post</i>&mdash;&mdash;" she commenced.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, the <i>Morning Post</i>!" echoed Chilminster, also changing
+front.</p>
+
+<p>"There was a disgraceful announcement."</p>
+
+<p>"Half of it certainly was&mdash;irksome."</p>
+
+<p>"Which half?" asked Jeannette suspiciously.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no conscientious scruples about matrimony in
+the abstract," parried Chilminster.</p>
+
+<p>"But I have. I object altogether to the paragraph. I
+resent it."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you did not insert it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I insert it? <i>I?</i>" flamed Jeannette. She drew herself
+up as haughtily as a pretty woman can under the disadvantage
+of being seated in a yielding easy chair. "Do
+you mean to assert, Lord Chilminster, that I&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>She was interrupted by the entrance of the butler.</p>
+
+<p>"Luncheon is served, my lord," he announced.</p>
+
+<p>"You will take off your coat?"</p>
+
+<p>Lord Chilminster turned to Miss Urmy, and advanced a
+step in anticipation. The butler&mdash;with a well-trained
+butler's promptness&mdash;was behind her, and before she could
+frame a word of objection, the fur-lined garment had slipped
+from her shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>Thus must martyrs have marched to the stake, was one
+of Jeannette's bewildered reflections as she preceded her
+host out of the room, and, as in a dream, found herself a few
+minutes later facing him across the luncheon table. Outwardly,
+the meal proceeded in well-ordered calm. Lord
+Chilminster made no further reference to the debatable
+topic; only talked lightly and pleasantly on a variety of
+non-committal subjects.</p>
+
+<p>As the lady's host that, of course, was the only attitude
+he could adopt; but the fact remains that he did so <i>de bonne
+volont&eacute;</i>. Perhaps because, so far, he had scored more points
+than his opponent in the morning's encounter; perhaps,
+also, because of her undeniable good looks, his irritation,
+due to the circumstances that had prompted that encounter,
+began to lessen with <i>truites en papilotte</i>, was almost forgotten
+in face of a <i>mousse de volaille</i>, and entirely vanished among
+<i>asperges vertes mousseline</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Jeannette L. Urmy, with her veil lifted, and relieved
+of her voluminous coat, was, he had to admit, distractingly
+pretty; not at all the type he had pictured as the original
+of the name. Young, pretty, and charming women (he was
+convinced that <i>au fond</i> she was charming) ought to have
+no obstinate prejudices against marriage. He even ventured
+to think that Miss Urmy's mind had become obscured
+on that point by those&mdash;well, indiscreet lines in the <i>Morning
+Post</i>. They had upset him; then why not her? They were
+so&mdash;premature.</p>
+
+<p>As for Jeannette, in spite of Lord Chilminster's effortless
+ease, her powers of conversation were frozen. She was
+reduced to monosyllables, and she ate in proportion. It
+was a humiliating experience to be accepting the hospitality
+of the enemy; one, moreover, that made it awkward for her
+to prolong hostilities. Having broken bread in his tents
+(a Puritan strain was responsible for the illustration) she
+felt disarmed. Besides, she was rather ashamed of her
+maladroitness in mistaking Lord Chilminster for a common
+motor-man. It argued <i>gaucherie</i>. Perhaps he thought her
+unconventional call a violation of good taste&mdash;considered
+her forward! He had plainly shown his annoyance about
+that obnox&mdash;that embarrassing paragraph, and that fact
+spiked most of her batteries. He might, after all, prove to
+be quite&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mind if I smoke?"</p>
+
+<p>Lord Chilminster's voice startled her out of her reverie.
+The servants had noiselessly retired, and they were alone.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I feel ready to sink through the floor," she rejoined
+inconsequently.</p>
+
+<p>He returned his cigarette case to his pocket, looking quite
+concerned. "I'm so sorry. I ought not to have&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no. Please smoke. It isn't that," stammered Jeannette.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the <i>Morning Post</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>Jeannette evaded his eye.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; it does put us in rather a tight place," mediated
+Chilminster.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing was said for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"Engaged!" he murmured.</p>
+
+<p>Jeannette raised her eyes and noted his reflective attitude.</p>
+
+<p>"Who can have put it in?" he went on.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't imagine."</p>
+
+<p>"And why?"</p>
+
+<p>"It does seem strange," admitted Jeannette in a detached
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>"It's not as if we were&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No," she interposed hurriedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what ought we to do about it? Of course, we
+can contradict it, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But what?" she asked, filling his pause.</p>
+
+<p>"I hate advertisement&mdash;that is, <i>unnecessary</i> advertisement,"
+Chilminster corrected himself. "It would make
+us&mdash;I mean me&mdash;look so&mdash;so vacillating."</p>
+
+<p>He looked up rather suddenly, and just missed Jeannette's
+eyes by the thousandth of a second.</p>
+
+<p>What could he mean? she asked herself, while her heart
+pumped boisterously. Was he magnanimous enough to
+be thinking of accepting a compromising situation to save
+her? What he had said sounded very unselfish. Of course,
+she couldn't allow him to. What a pity he was not an
+American&mdash;or something quite ordinary. Then she might&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"There's nothing for it but to write to the paper, I suppose?"
+he said ruefully.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I suppose not." The comment was dragged from
+Jeannette in a tone as unconsciously reluctant as his was
+rueful.</p>
+
+<p>Chilminster sighed. "It's so rough on you."</p>
+
+<p>Jeannette felt a consuming anxiety to know whether
+his sympathy was occasioned by the announcement or the
+suggested denial of it.</p>
+
+<p>"And on you, too," she admitted. "What were you
+thinking&mdash;how did you propose to phrase it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I?" he asked apprehensively. "To be quite frank. I
+haven't got as far as that. Never wrote to the papers in
+my life," he added pusillanimously.</p>
+
+<p>"But <i>I</i> can't," argued Jeannette. Her determination
+of two hours ago had vanished into the Ewigkeit.</p>
+
+<p>Chilminster had an inspiration. "What do you say if
+we do it together?"</p>
+
+<p>While she digested this expedient he fetched paper and
+pencil, and then sat gazing at the ceiling for inspiration.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" she queried at the end of a minute.</p>
+
+<p>"How ought one to begin these things?" asked the desperate
+man.</p>
+
+<p>Jeannette cogitated deeply. "It's so difficult to say what
+one wants to a stranger in a letter, isn't it?" she hesitated.
+"Wouldn't a telegram do?"</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove! Yes; and simply say: 'Miss Urmy wishes
+to deny&mdash;&mdash;'"</p>
+
+<p>"In <i>my</i> name!" exclaimed Jeannette.</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;you are the person aggrieved."</p>
+
+<p>"I really don't think it's fair to put the whole of the responsibility
+on my shoulders," she demurred.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I suppose not," Chilminster admitted grudgingly.
+"How would this do: 'Miss Urmy and Lord Chilminster
+wish to contradict their engagement&mdash;&mdash;'"</p>
+
+<p>"But that implies that there <i>was</i> an engagement!"</p>
+
+<p>Chilminster pondered the deduction. "So it does. I see.
+People would jump to the conclusion that we were in a desperate
+hurry to alter our minds!"</p>
+
+<p>"And, of course, we haven't."</p>
+
+<p>"Y-es. I don't know how you feel about it, but if there's
+one thing I dislike it's tittle-tattle about my private affairs."</p>
+
+<p>"Horrid!" shivered Jeannette. "What <i>are</i> we to do?"</p>
+
+<p>Her tone was so hopeless, so full of tears, that it melted
+Chilminster. Susceptibilities that had been simmering within
+him for an hour past came unexpectedly to the boil; and
+as they did so the difficulty vanished.</p>
+
+<p>"Why need we bother at all about it?" he asked impulsively.</p>
+
+<p>For a world of moments, Jeannette stared at him, revolving
+the question. Then a faint radiance came into her
+face, and grew and grew until it burned. Jeannette bit
+her lip. Jeannette looked down.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" she asked in confusion.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't&mdash;don't you think we had better&mdash;take the
+consequences?" said Chilminster, as he reached across the
+table and let his hand fall on hers.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Mrs. Urmy stood at the window looking with lack-lustre
+eyes across the park. She had had six solid hours in which
+to reflect on that risky communication of hers to the
+<i>Morning Post</i>, and Jeannette's disappearance since breakfast
+time provided a gloomy commentary on it. She fidgeted
+uneasily as she recalled her daughter's scared look
+when reading the paper, and maternal forebodings discounted
+her interest in an automobile that showed at intervals between
+the trees of the drive as it approached the White House.</p>
+
+<p>But two moments later it occurred to her that it was Jeannette
+who sat on its front seat beside the driver; and, as the
+car drew up, her experienced eye detected something in the
+demeanor of the pair that startled but elated her.</p>
+
+<p>"Here's Jeannette!" she called over her shoulder to
+Lady Hartley. "In an auto with a young man. Say,
+Persis, who is he?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Hartley hurried to the window, gave one look, and
+doubted the evidence of her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Lavinia, it's Lord Chilminster!" she cried, with a catch
+in her voice.</p>
+
+<p>The two women flashed a glance brimful of significance
+at one another. Lady Hartley's expressed uncertainty;
+Mrs. Urmy's triumph&mdash;sheer, complete, perfect triumph.</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't I say it was a sure thing?" she shrilled excitedly.
+"It's fixed them up! Come right ahead and introduce me
+to my future son-in-law!"</p>
+
+<p>As she raced to the door she added half to herself: "I
+don't want to boast, but, thank the Lord, I've got Jeannette
+off this season!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>XII</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="THE_MILLION_DOLLAR_FREIGHT_TRAIN" id="THE_MILLION_DOLLAR_FREIGHT_TRAIN"></a>THE MILLION DOLLAR FREIGHT TRAIN</h2>
+
+<h3>The Story of a Young Engineer</h3>
+
+<h3>By FRANK H. SPEARMAN</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It was</span> the second month of the strike, and not a pound
+of freight had been moved. Things did look smoky on
+the West End. The General Superintendent happened to
+be with us when the news came. "You can't handle it, boys,"
+said he nervously. "What you'd better do is to turn it over
+to the Columbian Pacific."</p>
+
+<p>Our contracting freight agent on the Coast at that time
+was a fellow so erratic that he was nicknamed "Crazy-horse."
+Right in the midst of the strike Crazy-horse wired that he
+had secured a big silk shipment for New York. We were
+paralyzed. We had no engineers, no firemen, and no motive
+power to speak of. The strikers were pounding our men,
+wrecking our trains, and giving us the worst of it generally;
+that is, when we couldn't give it to them. Why the fellow
+displayed his activity at that particular juncture still remains
+a mystery. Perhaps he had a grudge against the road; if
+so, he took an artful revenge. Everybody on the system with
+ordinary railroad sense knew that our struggle was to keep
+clear of freight business until we got rid of our strike. Anything
+valuable or perishable was especially unwelcome. But
+the stuff was docked, and loaded, and consigned in our care
+before we knew it. After that, a refusal to carry it would be
+like hoisting the white flag; and that is something which
+never yet flew over the West End.</p>
+
+<p>"Turn it over to the Columbian," said the General Superintendent;
+but the General Superintendent was not looked
+up to on our division. He hadn't enough sand. Our head
+was a fighter, and he gave tone to every man under him.
+"No," he thundered, bringing down his fist. "Not in a
+thousand years. We'll move it ourselves. Wire Montgomery
+(the General Manager) that we will take care of it.
+And wire him to fire Crazy-horse&mdash;and to do it right off."
+And before the silk was turned over to us Crazy-horse was
+looking for another job. It is the only case on record where
+a freight hustler was discharged for getting business.</p>
+
+<p>There were twelve carloads; it was insured for $85,000 a
+car; you can figure how far the title is wrong, but you never
+can estimate the worry the stuff gave us. It looked as big as
+twelve million dollars' worth. In fact, one scrub car-link,
+with the glory of the West End at heart, had a fight over
+the amount with a skeptical hostler. He maintained that
+the actual money value was a hundred and twenty millions;
+but I give you the figures just as they went over the wire,
+and they are right.</p>
+
+<p>What bothered us most was that the strikers had the tip
+almost as soon as we had it. Having friends on every road
+in the country, they knew as much about our business as we
+ourselves. The minute it was announced that we should
+move the silk, they were after us. It was a defiance; a last
+one. If we could move freight&mdash;for we were already moving
+passengers after a fashion&mdash;the strike might be well accounted
+beaten.</p>
+
+<p>Stewart, the leader of the local contingent, together with
+his followers, got after me at once. "You don't show much
+sense, Reed," said he. "You fellows here are breaking
+your necks to get things moving, and when this strike's over,
+if our boys ask for your discharge, they'll get it. This road
+can't run without our engineers. We're going to beat you.
+If you dare try to move this silk, we'll have your scalp when
+it's over. You'll never get your silk to Zanesville, I'll
+promise you that. And if you ditch it and make a million-dollar
+loss, you'll get let out anyway, my buck."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm here to obey orders, Stewart," said I. What was
+the use of more? I felt uncomfortable; but we had determined
+to move the silk; there was no more to be said.</p>
+
+<p>When I went over to the round-house and told Neighbor
+the decision, he said never a word; but he looked a great
+deal. Neighbor's task was to supply the motive power.
+All that we had, uncrippled, was in the passenger service,
+because passengers should be taken care of first of all. In
+order to win a strike, you must have public opinion on
+your side.</p>
+
+<p>"Nevertheless, Neighbor," said I, after we had talked
+awhile, "we must move the silk also."</p>
+
+<p>Neighbor studied; then he roared at his foreman. "Send
+Bartholomew Mullen here." He spoke with a decision that
+made me think the business was done. I had never happened,
+it is true, to hear of Bartholomew Mullen in the department
+of motive power; but the impression the name gave
+me was of a monstrous fellow, big as Neighbor, or old man
+Sankey, or Dad Hamilton. "I'll put Bartholomew ahead
+of it," said Neighbor tightly.</p>
+
+<p>I saw a boy walk into the office. "Mr. Garten said you
+wanted me, sir," said he, addressing the Master Mechanic.</p>
+
+<p>"I do, Bartholomew," responded Neighbor.</p>
+
+<p>The figure in my mind's eye shrunk in a twinkling. Then
+it occurred to me that it must be this boy's father who was
+wanted.</p>
+
+<p>"You have been begging for a chance to take out an engine,
+Bartholomew," began Neighbor coldly; and I knew it was on.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"You want to get killed, Bartholomew."</p>
+
+<p>Bartholomew smiled as if the idea was not altogether
+displeasing.</p>
+
+<p>"How would you like to go pilot to-morrow for McCurdy?
+You to take the 44 and run as first Seventy-eight. McCurdy
+will run as second Seventy-eight."</p>
+
+<p>"I know I could run an engine all right," ventured Bartholomew,
+as if Neighbor were the only one taking the chances in
+giving him an engine. "I know the track from here to Zanesville.
+I helped McNeff fire one week."</p>
+
+<p>"Then go home, and go to bed; and be over here at six
+o'clock to-morrow morning. And sleep sound, for it may be
+your last chance."</p>
+
+<p>It was plain that the Master Mechanic hated to do it;
+it was simply sheer necessity. "He's a wiper," mused
+Neighbor, as Bartholomew walked springily away. "I took
+him in here sweeping two years ago. He ought to be firing
+now, but the union held him back; that's why he don't like
+them. He knows more about an engine now than half the
+lodge. They'd better have let him in," said the Master
+Mechanic grimly. "He may be the means of breaking their
+backs yet. If I give him an engine and he runs it, I'll never
+take him off, union or no union, strike or no strike."</p>
+
+<p>"How old is that boy?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Eighteen; and never a kith or a kin that I know of.
+Bartholomew Mullen," mused Neighbor, as the slight figure
+moved across the flat, "big name&mdash;small boy. Well, Bartholomew,
+you'll know something more by to-morrow night
+about running an engine, or a whole lot less: that's as it
+happens. If he gets killed, it's your fault, Reed."</p>
+
+<p>He meant that I was calling on him for men when he
+couldn't supply them.</p>
+
+<p>"I heard once," he went on, "about a fellow named Bartholomew
+being mixed up in a massacre. But I take it
+he must have been an older man than our Bartholomew&mdash;nor
+his other name wasn't Mullen, neither. I disremember
+just what it was; but it wasn't Mullen."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, don't say I want to get the boy killed, Neighbor,"
+I protested. "I've got plenty to answer for. I'm here to
+run trains&mdash;when there are any to run; that's murder
+enough for me. You needn't send Bartholomew out on my
+account."</p>
+
+<p>"Give him a slow schedule, and I'll give him orders to
+jump early; that's all we can do. If the strikers don't ditch
+him, he'll get through somehow."</p>
+
+<p>It stuck in my crop&mdash;the idea of putting that boy on a
+pilot engine to take all the dangers ahead of that particular
+train; but I had a good deal else to think of besides. From
+the minute the silk got into the McCloud yards, we posted
+double guards around. About twelve o'clock that night
+we held a council of war, which ended in our running the
+train into the out freight-house. The result was that by morning
+we had a new train made up. It consisted of fourteen
+refrigerator cars loaded with oranges which had come in
+mysteriously the night before. It was announced that the
+silk would be held for the present and the oranges rushed
+through at once. Bright and early the refrigerator train was
+run down to the icehouses, and twenty men were put to work
+icing the oranges. At seven o'clock, McCurdy pulled in the
+local passenger with engine 105. Our plan was to cancel the
+load and run him right out with the oranges. When he got in,
+he reported that the 105 had sprung a tire; this threw us out
+entirely. There was a hurried conference in the round-house.</p>
+
+<p>"What can you do?" asked the Superintendent in
+desperation.</p>
+
+<p>"There's only one thing I can do. Put Bartholomew
+Mullen on it with the 44, and put McCurdy to bed for Number
+Two to-night," responded Neighbor.</p>
+
+<p>It was eight o'clock. I looked into the locomotive stalls.
+The first&mdash;the only&mdash;man in sight was Bartholomew
+Mullen. He was very busy polishing the 44. He had good
+steam on her, and the old tub was wheezing away as if she
+had the asthma. The 44 was old; she was homely; she was
+rickety; but Bartholomew Mullen wiped her battered nose
+as deferentially as if she had been a spick-span, spider-driver,
+tail-truck mail-racer. She wasn't much&mdash;the 44. But in
+those days Bartholomew wasn't much: and the 44 was
+Bartholomew's.</p>
+
+<p>"How is she steaming, Bartholomew?" I sang out; he
+was right in the middle of her. Looking up, he fingered
+his waste modestly and blushed through a dab of crude-petroleum
+over his eye. "Hundred and thirty pounds, sir.
+She's a terrible free steamer, the old 44. I'm all ready to
+run her out."</p>
+
+<p>"Who's marked up to fire for you, Bartholomew?"</p>
+
+<p>Bartholomew Mullen looked at me fraternally. "Neighbor
+couldn't give me anybody but a wiper, sir," said Bartholomew,
+in a sort of a wouldn't-that-kill-you tone.</p>
+
+<p>The unconscious arrogance of the boy quite knocked me:
+so soon had honors changed his point of view. Last night a
+despised wiper; at daybreak, an engineer; and his nose
+in the air at the idea of taking on a wiper for fireman. And
+all so innocent.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you object, Bartholomew," I suggested gently,
+"to a train-master for fireman?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't&mdash;think so, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you; because I am going down to Zanesville this
+morning myself, and I thought I'd ride with you. Is it all
+right?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, sir&mdash;if Neighbor doesn't care."</p>
+
+<p>I smiled: he didn't know whom Neighbor took orders
+from; but he thought, evidently, not from me.</p>
+
+<p>"Then run her down to the oranges, Bartholomew, and
+couple on, and we'll order ourselves out. See?"</p>
+
+<p>The 44 looked like a baby-carriage when we got her in
+front of the refrigerators. However, after the necessary
+preliminaries, we gave a very sporty toot, and pulled out. In
+a few minutes we were sailing down the valley.</p>
+
+<p>For fifty miles we bobbed along with our cargo of iced silk
+as easy as old shoes; for I need hardly explain that we had
+packed the silk into the refrigerators to confuse the strikers.
+The great risk was that they would try to ditch us.</p>
+
+<p>I was watching the track as a mouse would a cat, looking
+every minute for trouble. We cleared the gumbo cut west of
+the Beaver at a pretty good clip, in order to make the grade
+on the other side. The bridge there is hidden in summer by
+a grove of hackberries. I had just pulled open to cool her a
+bit when I noticed how high the back-water was on each side
+of the track. Suddenly I felt the fill going soft under the
+drivers; felt the 44 wobble and slew. Bartholomew shut
+off hard, and threw the air as I sprang to the window. The
+peaceful little creek ahead looked as angry as the Platte in
+April water, and the bottoms were a lake.</p>
+
+<p>Somewhere up the valley there had been a cloudburst,
+for overhead the sun was bright. The Beaver was roaring
+over its banks, and the bridge was out. Bartholomew
+screamed for brakes: it looked as if we were against
+it&mdash;and hard. A soft track to stop on; a torrent of storm-water
+ahead, and ten hundred thousand dollars' worth of
+silk behind, not to mention equipment.</p>
+
+<p>I yelled at Bartholomew, and motioned for him to jump;
+my conscience is clear on that point. The 44 was stumbling
+along, trying like a drunken man to hang to the rotten track.</p>
+
+<p>"Bartholomew!" I yelled; but he was head out and looking
+back at his train while he jerked frantically at the air-lever.
+I understood: the air wouldn't work; it never will
+on those old tubs when you need it. The sweat pushed out
+on me. I was thinking of how much the silk would bring
+us after the bath in the Beaver. Bartholomew stuck to his
+levers like a man in a signal-tower, but every second brought
+us closer to open water. Watching him intent only on saving
+his first train&mdash;heedless of his life&mdash;I was actually ashamed
+to jump. While I hesitated he somehow got the brakes
+to set; the old 44 bucked like a bronco.</p>
+
+<p>It wasn't too soon. She checked her train nobly at the
+last, but I saw nothing could keep her from the drink. I
+gave Bartholomew a terrific slap, and again I yelled; then
+turning to the gangway, I dropped into the soft mud on my
+side: the 44 hung low, and it was easy lighting.</p>
+
+<p>Bartholomew sprang from his seat a second later; but his
+blouse caught in the teeth of the quadrant. He stooped
+quick as thought, and peeled the thing over his head. Then
+he was caught fast by the wristbands, and the ponies of the
+44 tipped over the broken abutment. Pull as he would he
+couldn't get free. The pilot dipped into the torrent slowly.
+But losing her balance, the 44 kicked her heels into the air
+like lightning, and shot with a frightened wheeze plump into
+the creek, dragging her engineer with her.</p>
+
+<p>The head car stopped on the brink. Running across the
+track, I looked for Bartholomew. He wasn't there; I knew
+he must have gone down with his engine. Throwing off my
+gloves, I dived, just as I stood, close to the tender, which hung
+half submerged. I am a good bit of a fish under water, but
+no self-respecting fish would be caught in that yellow mud.
+I realized, too, the instant I struck the water, that I should
+have dived on the upstream side. The current took me
+away whirling; when I came up for air, I was fifty feet below
+the pier. I scrambled out, feeling it was all up with Bartholomew;
+but to my amazement, as I shook my eyes open
+the train crew were running forward, and there stood Bartholomew
+on the track above me, looking at the refrigerator. When
+I got to him, he explained how he was dragged under and had
+to tear the sleeve out of his blouse under water to get free.</p>
+
+<p>The surprise is how little fuss men make about such things
+when they are busy. It took only five minutes for the conductor
+to hunt up a coil of wire and a sounder for me, and
+by the time he got forward with it, Bartholomew was half-way
+up a telegraph pole to help me cut in on a live wire. Fast as
+I could, I rigged a pony, and began calling the McCloud despatcher.
+It was rocky sending, but after no end of pounding,
+I got him and gave orders for the wrecking gang, and for one
+more of Neighbor's rapidly decreasing supply of locomotives.</p>
+
+<p>Bartholomew, sitting on a strip of fence which still rose
+above water, looked forlorn. To lose in the Beaver the first
+engine he ever handled was tough, and he was evidently
+speculating on his chances of ever getting another. If there
+weren't tears in his eyes, there was storm-water certainly.
+But after the relief engine had pulled what was left of us back
+six miles to a siding, I made it my first business to explain to
+Neighbor, who was nearly beside himself, that Bartholomew
+not only was not at fault, but that by his nerve he had actually
+saved the train.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tell you, Neighbor," I suggested, when we got
+straightened around. "Give us the 109 to go ahead as pilot,
+and run her around the river division with Foley and the 216."</p>
+
+<p>"What'll you do with Number Six?" growled Neighbor.
+Six was the local passenger west.</p>
+
+<p>"Annul it west of McCloud," said I instantly. "We've
+got this silk on our hands now, and I'd move it if it tied up
+every passenger train on the division. If we can get the stuff
+through, it will practically beat the strike. If we fail, it will
+beat the company."</p>
+
+<p>By the time we had backed to Newhall Junction, Neighbor
+had made up his mind my way. Mullen and I climbed into
+the 109, and Foley, with the 216, and none too good a grace,
+coupled on to the silk, and flying red signals, we started again
+for Zanesville over the river division.</p>
+
+<p>Foley was always full of mischief. He had a better engine
+than ours, and he took great satisfaction the rest of the afternoon
+in crowding us. Every mile of the way he was on our
+heels. I was throwing the coal, and have reason to remember.
+It was after dark when we reached the Beverly Hill, and we
+took it at a lively pace. The strikers were not on our minds
+then; it was Foley who bothered.</p>
+
+<p>When the long parallel steel lines of the upper yards spread
+before us, flashing under the arc lights, we were away above
+yard speed. Running a locomotive into one of those big yards
+is like shooting a rapid in a canoe. There is a bewildering
+maze of tracks, lighted by red and green lamps, which must
+be watched the closest to keep out of trouble. The hazards
+are multiplied the minute you pass the throat, and a yard
+wreck is a dreadful tangle; it makes everybody from road-master
+to flagman furious, and not even Bartholomew wanted
+to face an inquiry on a yard wreck. On the other hand, he
+couldn't afford to be caught by Foley, who was chasing him
+out of pure caprice.</p>
+
+<p>I saw the boy holding the throttle at a half and fingering the
+air anxiously as we jumped over the frogs; but the roughest
+riding on track so far beats the ties as a cushion, that when
+the 109 suddenly stuck her paws through an open switch we
+bounced against the roof of the cab like footballs. I grabbed
+a brace with one hand, and with the other reached instinctively
+across to Bartholomew's side to seize the throttle. But as
+I tried to shut him off, he jerked it wide open in spite of me,
+and turned with lightning in his eye. "No!" he cried, and
+his voice rang hard. The 109 took the tremendous shove
+at her back, and leaped like a frightened horse. Away we
+went across the yard, through the cinders, and over the ties;
+my teeth have never been the same since. I don't belong on
+an engine, anyway, and since then I have kept off. At the
+moment, I was convinced that the strain had been too much,
+that Bartholomew was stark crazy. He sat clinging like a
+lobster to his levers and bouncing clear to the roof.</p>
+
+<p>But his strategy was dawning on me; in fact, he was pounding
+it into me. Even the shock and scare of leaving the track
+and tearing up the yard had not driven from Bartholomew's
+noddle the most important feature of our situation, which
+was, above everything, to <i>keep out of the way of the silk train</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I felt every moment more mortified at my attempt to shut
+him off. I had done the trick of the woman who grabs the
+reins. It was even better to tear up the yard than to stop for
+Foley to smash into and scatter the silk over the coal chutes.
+Bartholomew's decision was one of the traits which make the
+runner: instant perception coupled to instant resolve. The
+ordinary dub thinks what he should have done to avoid
+disaster after it is all over; Bartholomew thought before.</p>
+
+<p>On we bumped, across frogs, through switches, over splits,
+and into target rods, when&mdash;and this is the miracle of it all&mdash;the
+109 got her forefeet on a split switch, made a contact, and
+after a slew or two, like a bogged horse, she swung up sweet
+on the rails again, tender and all. Bartholomew shut off with
+an under cut that brought us up stuttering, and nailed her
+feet with the air right where she stood. We had left the track
+and plowed a hundred feet across the yards and jumped on
+to another track. It is the only time I ever heard of its happening
+anywhere, but I was on the engine with Bartholomew
+Mullen when it was done.</p>
+
+<p>Foley choked his train the instant he saw our hind lights
+bobbing. We climbed down, and ran back. He had stopped
+just where we should have stood if I had shut off.</p>
+
+<p>Bartholomew ran to the switch to examine it. The contact
+light (green) still burned like a false beacon; and lucky it
+did, for it showed that the switch had been tampered with and
+exonerated Bartholomew Mullen completely. The attempt
+of the strikers to spill the silk in the yards had only made the
+reputation of a new engineer. Thirty minutes later, the
+million-dollar train was turned over to the East End to wrestle
+with, and we breathed, all of us, a good bit easier.</p>
+
+<p>Bartholomew Mullen, now a passenger runner who ranks
+with Kennedy and Jack Moore and Foley and George Sinclair
+himself, got a personal letter from the General Manager complimenting
+him on his pretty wit; and he was good enough
+to say nothing whatever about mine.</p>
+
+<p>We registered that night and went to supper together:
+Foley, Jackson, Bartholomew, and I. Afterward we dropped
+into the despatcher's office. Something was coming from
+McCloud, but the operator to save his life couldn't catch it.
+I listened a minute; it was Neighbor. Now, Neighbor isn't
+great on despatching trains. He can make himself understood
+over the poles, but his sending is like a boy's sawing
+wood&mdash;sort of uneven. However, though I am not much
+on running yards, I claim to be able to take the wildest ball
+that ever was thrown along the wire, and the chair was tendered
+me at once to catch Neighbor's extraordinary passes at the
+McCloud key. They came something like this:</p>
+
+<p>"To Opr. Tell Massacree"&mdash;that was the word that stuck
+them all, and I could perceive that Neighbor was talking
+emphatically. He had apparently forgotten Bartholomew's
+last name, and was trying to connect with the one he had
+"disremembered" the night before. "Tell Massacree,"
+repeated Neighbor, "that he is al-l-l right. Tell hi-m I give
+him double mileage for to-day all the way through. And
+to-morrow he gets the 109 to keep.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Neighb-b-or</span>."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="THE_BULLDOG_BREED" id="THE_BULLDOG_BREED"></a>THE BULLDOG BREED</h2>
+
+<h3>A Story of the Russo-Japanese War</h3>
+
+<h3>By AMBROSE PRATT</h3>
+
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">What</span> do you make of her, Maclean?" asked Captain
+Brandon anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>First mate Hugh Maclean did not reply at once. Embracing
+a stanchion of the S.S. <i>Saigon's</i> bridge in order to steady
+himself against the vessel's pitching, he was peering with
+strained eyes through the captain's binoculars at two small
+brown needle-points, set very close together, that stabbed
+the northeastern horizon.</p>
+
+<p>At length, however, he lowered the glass, and resumed
+the perpendicular.</p>
+
+<p>"You were right, sir," he declared. "She has altered
+her course, and our paths now converge."</p>
+
+<p>"Which proves that she is one of those d&mdash;&mdash;d Russian
+volunteer pirates."</p>
+
+<p>"Or else a Japanese cruiser, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense! The Jap cruisers have only one mast."</p>
+
+<p>"So they have, sir. I was forgetting that."</p>
+
+<p>"What to do!" growled the captain, and he fell to frowning
+and cracking his long fingers&mdash;his habit when perplexed.
+He was a short, thick-set man, with a round, red face, keen
+blue eyes, and strong, square jaws: a typical specimen of
+the old-time British sailor. Hugh Maclean, on the other
+hand, was a lean and lank Australian, of evident Scottish
+ancestry. His long, aquiline nose and high cheek-bones
+were tightly covered with a parchment-like skin, bronzed
+almost to the hue of leather. He wore a close-cropped,
+pointed beard, and the deep-set gray eyes that looked out
+from under the peak of his seaman's cap twinkled with good
+health and humor.</p>
+
+<p>"We might alter our course, too, sir," he suggested.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay!" snapped the other, "and get pushed for our pains
+on to the Teraghlind Reef. We are skirting those rocks
+more closely than I like already."</p>
+
+<p>"You know best, sir, of course. But I meant that we
+might slip back toward Manila, and try the other channel
+after we have given that fellow the go-by."</p>
+
+<p>"What!" snorted the captain, his blue eyes flashing fire,
+"run from the Russian! I'll be &mdash;&mdash; first. We haven't
+a stitch of contraband aboard," he added more calmly a
+moment later. "He daren't do more than stop and
+search us."</p>
+
+<p>But Maclean shook his head. "One of them took and
+sunk the <i>Acandaga</i> last month, sir, and she carried no contraband
+either."</p>
+
+<p>"Russia will have to foot the bill for that."</p>
+
+<p>"May be, sir. But Captain Tollis&mdash;as fine a chap as
+ever breathed, sir&mdash;has lost his ship, and the Lord knows
+if he'll ever get another."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you trying to frighten me, Maclean?" asked Captain
+Brandon, stormily.</p>
+
+<p>The mate shrugged his shoulders. "No, sir; but I am
+interested in this venture, and if the <i>Saigon</i> gets back all
+right to Liverpool I'm due to splice Mr. Keppel's niece, and
+the old gentleman, as you know, has promised me a ship."</p>
+
+<p>"And hasn't it entered your thick skull that to return as
+you suggest would cost fifty pounds' worth of coal? How
+do you suppose old Kep would like that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Better burn a few tons of coal than risk losing the <i>Saigon</i>,
+sir, and mark time till God knows when in a Russian prison."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Brandon shut his mouth with a snap, and muttered
+something about Scottish caution that was distinctly uncomplimentary
+to the Caledonian race. Then, to signify the
+end of the argument, he strode to the ladder, and prepared
+to descend. Maclean, however, was of an equally stubborn
+character. "About the course, sir?" he demanded, touching
+his cap with ironical deference.</p>
+
+<p>"Carry on!" snarled the captain, and he forthwith
+disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>Two hours afterward Hugh Maclean knocked at the door
+of the captain's cabin, and was hoarsely bidden enter. Captain
+Brandon was seated before a bottle of whisky, which
+was scarce half full.</p>
+
+<p>"Have a nip?" he hospitably inquired.</p>
+
+<p>Maclean nodded, and half filled a glass.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir. Queer thing's happened," he observed,
+as he wiped his lips. "The Russian&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I know," interrupted the captain. "I've been watching
+her through the port. She's the <i>Saigon's</i> twin-sister ship,
+that was the <i>Saragossa</i> which old Kep sold to Baron Dabchowski
+six months ago. Much good it would have done us
+to run. She has the heels of us. Old Kep had just put new
+triple-expansion engines into her before she changed hands.
+But they've killed the look of her, converting her into a
+cruiser. She's nothing but a floating scrap-heap now."</p>
+
+<p>"But she has six guns," observed Maclean. "Don't you
+think you'd better come up, sir? She is almost near enough
+to signal."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," said the captain, and putting away the
+whisky bottle, he led the way to the bridge.</p>
+
+<p>Some half-dozen miles away, steaming at an angle to meet
+the <i>Saigon</i> at a destined point, there plowed through the
+sea a large iron steamer of about three thousand tons' burden.
+She exactly resembled the <i>Saigon</i> in all main points of build,
+and except for the fact that two guns were mounted fore and
+aft on her main deck above the line of steel bulwarks, and
+that her masts were fitted with small fighting tops, she might
+very well have passed for an ordinary merchantman.</p>
+
+<p>For twenty minutes or thereabouts the two officers watched
+her in silence, taking turn about with the binoculars; then,
+quite suddenly, the vessel, now less than two miles distant,
+luffed and fell slightly away from her course.</p>
+
+<p>"She is going to speak," said Captain Brandon, who held
+the glasses. "Look out!"</p>
+
+<p>Maclean smiled at the caution; but next instant a bright
+flash quivered from the other vessel's side, and involuntarily
+he ducked his head, for something flew dipping and shrieking
+over the <i>Saigon</i>. In the following second there was heard
+the clap of the distant cannon and the splash of a shell striking
+the sea close at hand. Invisible hands unfolded and
+shook out three balls of bunting at the truck of the war-ship's
+signal boom. They fluttered for awhile, and then spread out
+to the breeze. The arms of Russia surmounted two lines of
+symbolic letters.</p>
+
+<p>"Quartermaster!" shouted Captain Brandon.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, sir!" rang out a sailor's voice, and the <i>Saigon's</i>
+number raced a Union Jack to the mast-head.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mac?" cried the captain, with his hand on the
+engine-room signal-bell.</p>
+
+<p>Maclean looked up from the book. "His Imperial Majesty
+of Russia, by the commander of the converted cruiser <i>Nevski</i>,
+orders us to stop."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Brandon pressed the lever, and before ten might
+be counted the shuddering of the <i>Saigon's</i> screw had ceased.</p>
+
+<p>"What next?" he muttered.</p>
+
+<p>As if in answer, another flag fluttered up the <i>Nevski's</i>
+halliards.</p>
+
+<p>"He will send a boat," interpreted Maclean.</p>
+
+<p>A short period of fret and fume ensued, then a small steam
+launch rounded the <i>Nevski's</i> bows, and sped like a gray-hound
+across the intervening space. The <i>Nevski</i> now presented
+her broadside to the <i>Saigon</i>, and all of her six guns were
+trained upon the English steamer's decks. The launch was
+crammed with men. Captain Brandon ordered a gangway
+to be lowered, and although the tars sprang to the task with
+great alacrity, it was hardly completed before the launch
+touched the <i>Saigon's</i> side. An officer, bedizened with gold
+lace, and accompanied by two glittering subordinates, climbed
+aboard, and Captain Brandon met him on the main deck.
+Hugh Maclean, from the bridge, watched them file into the
+captain's cabin. Ten minutes later they emerged, and without
+waiting a moment the Russians hurried back into the launch.
+Captain Brandon's face was purple. He hurriedly mounted
+to the bridge, and leaning over the rail cursed the departing
+launch at the top of his voice in five different languages.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the trouble, sir?" asked Maclean when his
+superior appeared at last to be exhausted.</p>
+
+<p>"They want our coal. C&mdash;&mdash;t them to &mdash;&mdash; for all
+eternity," gasped the frenzied captain. "And they'll blow
+us out of the water if we don't follow them to Tramoieu."</p>
+
+<p>"Where is that?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's a little island off the Cochin coast, a hundred miles
+from anywhere, with a harbor. By &mdash;&mdash; they'll smart for this!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not they," said Maclean. "That is, if you obey. They'll
+gut and scuttle the <i>Saigon</i>, and then kill every mother's son
+of us. Dead men tell no tales. We'll be posted at Lloyds
+as a storm loss."</p>
+
+<p>"But what can we do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Full speed ahead, and ram her while she's picking up the
+launch! Chance the guns!"</p>
+
+<p>"By &mdash;&mdash;! I'll do it!" shrieked the captain, and he
+sprang to the signal-bell. But even as he grasped the lever
+with his hand, he paused.</p>
+
+<p>"What now?" demanded the mate, his face tense with
+passion. "Hurry's the word, sir. Hurry!"</p>
+
+<p>The captain, however, turned and looked him in the eye.
+"You've counseled me to murder&mdash;wholesale murder,
+Maclean. Avast there, man! Keep your mouth shut. This
+is my bridge, and I'll not hear another word from you."</p>
+
+<p>The mate bit his lips and shrugged his shoulders. His
+eyes were blazing with contempt and rage, but he kept his
+self-control, and was rewarded by a dozen sympathetic
+glances from those of the crew grouped upon the deck who
+had heard the controversy. From that moment he was their
+idol. The second mate, too, who was standing by the wheel,
+turned and nodded to him as he passed.</p>
+
+<p>The captain, who missed nothing of this by-play, felt himself
+to have been absolutely isolated. But he was a strong
+man, and he knew that he acted rightly. Five minutes later
+four thunderous reports rang out, and shells splashed the sea
+on all sides of the <i>Saigon</i>. Then the machine-guns began to
+speak, and a perfect storm of bullets tore through the vessel's
+rigging, some directed so low that they pierced the top rim of
+the funnel smoke-stack. The display lasted sixty seconds.
+When it was over, a very sheepish looking lot of men arose
+from the recumbent attitudes they had assumed. Of the
+whole ship's company on deck, Captain Brandon, Hugh
+Maclean, and the chief engineer had alone remained
+standing.</p>
+
+<p>There was a new flag at the <i>Nevski's</i> truck. "Follow at
+full speed!" it commanded. The <i>Saigon</i> instantly obeyed.
+Before night fell, the moon rose, three-quarters full. It
+lighted the procession into dawn. Sunrise brought them to
+a rock-bound coast, and so nicely had the <i>Nevski's</i> navigator
+steered, that the first headland circumvented made room
+for the revelation of a little bay. It was enclosed on three
+sides with gray hills, and across the mouth was stretched a
+broken line of hungry-looking surf-crowned reefs. The
+<i>Nevski</i> steamed boldly through the first opening, and dropped
+her anchor in smooth water three-quarters of a mile beyond.
+The <i>Saigon</i>, currishly obedient to the Russian's signals, followed
+suit, bringing up within a biscuit cast of her consort
+and captor. An hour later Hugh Maclean, the engineer, and
+the lesser officers and thirty-two men of the <i>Saigon's</i> company
+and some two score of Russian sailors were working like
+slaves transferring, under the supervision of a strong guard,
+the <i>Saigon's</i> coal and cargo into the <i>Nevski's</i> boats.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Brandon was not among the toilers. He would
+have been, perhaps, but for the circumstance that he had
+permitted himself the liberty of striking a Russian officer in
+the face. A marine having retorted with the butt end of a
+carbine, the Englishmen had helplessly watched their captain
+being carried off, bleeding and insensible, and dumped with
+a sickening thud into the Russian launch. The incident
+encouraged them so much that they worked without complaint
+throughout the day, and they did not even grumble at
+the rations which their taskmasters served out to them.
+Shortly before dusk the breeze that had been blowing died
+away, and the Russians took advantage of the calm to warp
+the vessels together. After that the business in hand proceeded
+at such a pace that by dawn the <i>Saigon</i> was completely
+gutted, and she rode the water like a swan, the greater part
+of her bulk in air. The weary Englishmen were thereupon
+driven like sheep upon the <i>Nevski's</i> deck, and forced to descend
+the small after-hold, which was almost empty. The hatches
+were then fastened over them for their greater security, and
+they were left in darkness. But they were too worn out to
+care. Within five minutes every man of them was sleeping
+dreamlessly, lying listlessly stretched out upon the ship's
+false bottom, excepting only Hugh Maclean. He was too
+tired to sleep. He was, therefore, the only one who heard an
+hour later the muffled boom of a distant explosion and a
+faint cheer on deck.</p>
+
+<p>"They have sunk the poor old <i>Saigon</i>," muttered Maclean.
+"There goes the last hope of my captaincy and Nellie Lane."
+He uttered a low groan, and covered his face with his grimy
+paws. Maclean was very much in love, but he was too young
+and of too strenuous a temperament to rest for long the
+victim of despair. Moreover, contempt for foreigners, particularly
+Russians, served him instead of a religion, when not
+ashore, and he soon fell to wondering just where was the weak
+spot in his captor's armor, and how he could find and put
+his finger on it. That there was a weak spot he did not doubt
+at all. He searched his pockets and found half a plug of
+tobacco, but not his meerschaum. A Russian sailor had
+confiscated that some hours before. Maclean consigned the
+thief to perdition, and with some trouble bit off a plug. Then
+he lay back to chew and think. "There's only one thing
+to do," was the result of his reflections. "We'll have to
+take this boat from the Russians somehow."</p>
+
+<p>But exhausted nature would not be denied, and before he
+knew it Maclean was in the land of dreams. He was awakened
+by the noisy removal of a portion of the hatch. He looked
+up and saw the moon, also a couple of bearded faces looking
+down at him.</p>
+
+<p>"Good Lord!" he groaned, "I've slept the day out."</p>
+
+<p>"You hingry&mdash;men&mdash;like&mdash;eat?" observed a hoarse
+voice. And Maclean saw an immense steaming pan descending
+toward him on a line. He caught it deftly. A can of water
+and a tin of biscuits followed. He was instantly surrounded
+by the <i>Saigon's</i> company, who attacked the contents of the
+pan like wolves. He seized a lump of fat meat from the mess,
+also a couple of biscuits, and retired apart. The darkness
+renewed itself a second later, and for some time the hold
+buzzed with the noise of crunching jaws and guttural
+exclamations.</p>
+
+<p>Of a sudden someone near him struck a match, and Maclean
+looked over the flame into the eyes of Robert Sievers, the
+<i>Saigon's</i> chief engineer.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello, Mac," said Sievers.</p>
+
+<p>"Good evening, Sievers," replied Maclean politely.
+"We're still at anchor."</p>
+
+<p>"I've remarked it. What do you suppose they intend to
+do with us?"</p>
+
+<p>"Maroon us, likely, if we let them, on the island yonder."</p>
+
+<p>"How can we prevent them? But I think not. It's
+my belief this meat is poisoned!"</p>
+
+<p>"Tastes vile enough," agreed Maclean, but he went on
+eating, and Robert Sievers, after a momentary hesitation,
+followed suit.</p>
+
+<p>"We're in the devil of a hole!" he muttered, his mouth
+full of biscuit. Then he swore horribly, for the match had
+burned his fingers.</p>
+
+<p>Maclean stood up. "Any of you men happen to have a bit
+of candle in your pockets?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>Silence for a minute, then a Norwegian fireman spoke up.
+"Bout dree inches," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"He eats 'em," cried another voice, and a roar of laughter
+greeted the announcement.</p>
+
+<p>"Pass it here," commanded Maclean.</p>
+
+<p>Sievers struck another match, and presently the steady
+flame of a candle stump showed Maclean a picture such as
+Gustave Dor&eacute; would have loved to paint. He glanced at the
+begrimed faces of the <i>Saigon's</i> wild and ghastly looking
+company, and beyond them for a moment, then stumbled over
+the coal, followed by Sievers, until he was brought up by the
+iron partition of the hold. He made, however, straight for
+the bulkhead, and stooping down, held the candle close to
+the line of bolts covering the propeller's tunnel.</p>
+
+<p>"By Jingo!" cried Sievers. "I see your game. Let me
+look, Maclean! This is my trade."</p>
+
+<p>He bent forward, wrenched at a shoot-bolt, and with a cry
+of satisfaction threw back a plate. The <i>Saigon's</i> company
+crowded round the man-hole thus revealed, muttering with
+excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"One moment, Sievers!" cried Maclean, for the engineer
+had one leg already in the tunnel. Then he turned to the
+men. "My lads," he said, "it's a case of our lives or the
+Russians', for I firmly believe the accursed pirates mean to
+kill us. We must take this ship by hook or by crook, and
+I think I see the way to do it!" He concluded with some precise
+instructions, and a few savage sentences, in which he
+promised an unmentionable fate to the unfortunate who made
+a sound or failed to follow to the letter his instructions.</p>
+
+<p>A second later, in a silence that could be felt, he blew out
+the light, and followed Sievers into the tunnel. A few cave-black
+yards, crawled painfully on hands and knees, slipping
+and slithering along the propeller shaft, brought the leaders
+to the edge of a wider space. Sievers struck a match, and
+a well-like, vertical opening was revealed. High overhead
+towered and threatened an enormous steel crank. Before
+their feet lay a deep pool of slime. The heat was horrible.</p>
+
+<p>"It should be hereabouts," whispered Sievers, and his
+fingers searched the wall. For a moment nothing could be
+heard but the deep breathing of the <i>Saigon's</i> company. Then
+came a slight but terrifying clang.</p>
+
+<p>"I've got it!" whispered Sievers. "Are you ready?"</p>
+
+<p>"Right!"</p>
+
+<p>Maclean's eyes were dazzled of a sudden with a hot flare of
+light, and the deafening thud of the condensers smote in his
+ears. He never quite coherently remembered that which
+immediately ensued, for something struck him on the head.</p>
+
+<p>When he came to his full senses again he was lying on a
+grating beside the body of the Russian cleaner he had strangled.
+The <i>Saigon's</i> men were all around him. He arose, gasping
+for breath. Sievers thrust a bar into his hand and pointed to
+a line of ladders. Maclean nodded, crossed the grating, and
+began to climb. Sievers, armed with a hammer, followed
+at his heels.</p>
+
+<p>There were three men in the engine-room, an engineer
+and two cleaners. They took the climbers for stokers, and
+went on with their occupations. Maclean sidled to the door
+across the grating and closed it in the twinkling of an eye.
+The engineer, who was reading a newspaper, heard the noise
+and looked up. Sievers struck him with the hammer and
+flew at one of the cleaners. Maclean rushed at the other with
+his spade. It was all over in a moment, and without any
+noise that the thudding of the donkey-engine did not drown.
+Maclean changed coats and caps with the insensible Russian
+engineer, while Sievers called the <i>Saigon's</i> men from below.
+He then strapped on the man's dirk, and put his revolver in
+his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"What next?" asked Sievers.</p>
+
+<p>Maclean glanced at the engine-room clock. The hands
+pointed to seven-fifteen. "Captain and officers are just about
+half through their dinner," he reflected.</p>
+
+<p>"Wait here," he said aloud: "I'm going to reconnoitre.
+Just keep the door ajar when I leave. Let anyone come in
+that wants to, but crack him over the skull once he gets inside."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>Maclean opened the door and stepped out leisurely upon
+the deck. Before him rose the captain's cabin, the officers'
+quarters, and the bridge above. Beyond that stretched the
+main deck, with the forecastle far forward. An officer paced
+the bridge; some two score sailors were grouped about the
+forecastle door drinking tea, and the rattle of knives and
+forks, the clink of glasses, and sounds of talk and laughter
+proceeding from the saloon astern sufficiently located the
+leaders of his enemies. Maclean thought hard for a moment,
+then pulling his cap over his eyes walked underneath the
+bridge and looked up. As he had expected, and ardently
+hoped, he perceived the muzzle of a machine-gun protruding
+from the very centre of the iron rampart. Thanking Providence
+for two years spent in the service of the New South
+Wales Naval Brigade in his younger days, he returned to the
+engine-room door, and after a cautious whisper stepped inside.</p>
+
+<p>"Sievers," said he, "the officers are all at dinner astern.
+Take this revolver, and when you hear me knock three times
+on the railing of the bridge, sneak out with all the men and
+rush the cabin. Most of the crew are forward. I'll look
+after them; there's a Nordenfeldt on the bridge."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>"Give me your hammer!"</p>
+
+<p>"Good luck to you, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>Maclean took the hammer, slipped it under his jacket,
+and once more sought the deck. A steward passed him at
+a run, and two stokers proceeding toward the engine-house
+saluted his uniform. He pulled his cap over his eyes, and
+began to climb the ladder. The <i>Nevski</i> was swinging softly
+at her anchor, her nose pointing to the land. On the distant
+beach a small fire was burning, and at this the officer of the
+watch was gazing through his telescope. He was quite alone,
+and standing in a shaded corner of the bridge. "What sort
+of a watch can one man keep?" muttered Maclean who had
+served on an Australian gunboat. He stepped to the officer's
+side, seized the telescope in his left hand, and as the startled
+man turned, he dealt him a terrible blow on the nape of his
+neck with the hammer. The officer fell into his arms sighing
+out his breath. Maclean laid him gently on the floor, and
+relieved him of his revolver. Then he slid softly to the machine-gun,
+and uttered a low, irrepressible cry of joy to find that it
+was stored with cartridges and prepared for action. A moment
+later its muzzle commanded the deck before the forecastle.
+One of the sailors had just commenced a song. He had a
+fine tenor voice, and the others listened entranced. Maclean,
+however, rapped three times very loudly on the railing with his
+hammer, and the song ceased.</p>
+
+<p>Someone called to him in Russian, but he would not have
+answered even if he understood. His every sense was strained
+to listen. He counted twenty, the song commenced again.
+Thirty, forty. Then a wild scream resounded through the
+vessel.</p>
+
+<p>"Sievers is dealing with the watch on the after-hold,"
+muttered Maclean. "Hurry!" he whispered. "Hurry!
+Sievers, hurry!"</p>
+
+<p>The sailors forward were now afoot, exclaiming aloud
+and glancing questioningly at one another. A great many
+more, too, poured out every second from the forecastle, made
+curious by the noise. Maclean grasped the crank firmly and
+gave them every scrap of his attention. There woke an
+increasing buzz of shouts and cries astern. It culminated
+presently in the crack of a revolver, a shriek of pain, and a
+wild British cheer. Then all over the din a loud, insistent
+whistle shrilled. The sailors forward rushed for their stacked
+arms, and formed in ranks with the speed of magic. A petty
+officer shouted a command, and down the deck they started
+at the double.</p>
+
+<p>"Halt!" Maclean shouted, and he turned the crank of the
+Nordenfeldt. The effect was horrible. A dozen fell at the
+first discharge. The rest halted, and after one dazed instant's
+wavering, threw down their arms, broke and fled for the cover
+of the forecastle. The air was filled with the sound of groans.
+The deck was like a shambles. Maclean watched three or
+four poor wounded creatures crawl off on their hands and
+knees for shelter and he shuddered violently.</p>
+
+<p>He was already sick to death of war. But the fight was
+not yet over. He heard footsteps on the ladder behind him,
+and turned just in time to escape a sweeping sword stroke.
+Next instant he was locked in a deadly struggle with the
+captain of the <i>Nevski</i>, a brave man, who, it seems, had refused
+to surrender, and had cut his way through all Sievers's men in
+the desperate resolve to retrieve the consequences of his own
+carelessness. Maclean, however, was a practised wrestler,
+and although lean almost as a lath, the muscles he possessed
+were as strong as steel bands. Even as they fell he writhed
+uppermost, and baffling with an active elbow the captain's
+last effort to transfix him, he dashed his adversary's head
+upon the boards. A second later he arose, breathless, but
+quite uninjured.</p>
+
+<p>Sievers was calling to him: "Maclean! Maclean! I say!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hallo, there!" he gasped back, hoarsely.</p>
+
+<p>"Look out for the captain. He escaped us!"</p>
+
+<p>"I've got him!" croaked Maclean, with a grim glance at
+his unconscious foe. "How about the rest?"</p>
+
+<p>"All sigarnio! What shall I do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Drive them forward to the foc'sle."</p>
+
+<p>Sievers obeyed, and very soon five splendidly upholstered,
+but shamefaced-looking gentlemen, three stewards, and four
+sailors were standing underneath the beacon light before the
+forecastle companion. Maclean noted that already many of
+the <i>Saigon's</i> men carried swords and carbines. He watched
+the rest arm themselves with the <i>Nevski</i> sailors' discarded
+weapons as they marched their prisoners along the deck.
+His breast began to swell with pride.</p>
+
+<p>"Any casualties?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Two of ours have crossed over," replied Sievers, "and
+some of us are hurt a bit. But we can't grumble. There are
+four Russian corpses aft, and I see you've bagged seven."</p>
+
+<p>"Damned pirates!" commented Maclean. "I've a mind
+to shoot the rest of them out of hand."</p>
+
+<p>"Just give the word, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Maclean, "we'll maroon them instead. Lower
+away all the boats but one, Sievers, and bring them under
+the bows. I can look after these dogs!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, sir. But first three cheers for Captain Maclean,
+lads!"</p>
+
+<p>The cheers were given with hearty good-will, and then the
+men tramped off to carry out their new task.</p>
+
+<p>Maclean, whose face was still flushed from the compliment
+that had been paid him, leaned over the machine-gun and
+surveyed the prisoners.</p>
+
+<p>"Can any of you pirate scum speak English?" he demanded
+truculently.</p>
+
+<p>"I have that privilege, sir," replied a swart-faced lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>"Then kindly inform your friends that at the first sign of
+any monkey trick I'll send you all to kingdom come."</p>
+
+<p>The officer complied presumably with this command,
+and when he had finished, addressed Maclean:</p>
+
+<p>"You cannot intend to maroon us, sir?" he cried. "The
+island yonder is totally uninhabited."</p>
+
+<p>"You're a liar!" retorted Maclean. "Fires don't light
+themselves. Look yonder."</p>
+
+<p>The officer choked back an oath. "Have a care what
+you are doing, sir," he muttered in a strangled voice. "This
+will lead to a war between your country and mine."</p>
+
+<p>"I guess not&mdash;not even if I hanged the lot of you&mdash;you
+dirty pirates. But if it did, what then?"</p>
+
+<p>"You should see, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"And so would you&mdash;see that Englishmen can fight a
+durned sight better than the Japs. I guess you know how
+<i>they</i> fight by this."</p>
+
+<p>"I have always heard that the English are generous foes,
+sir&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"None of your blarney," interrupted Maclean. "Short
+shrift to pirates, is an English motto. You sank our ship:
+we take yours. Fair exchange is no robbery. You should
+be thankful to get off with your skins."</p>
+
+<p>"At least permit us to take with us our personal belongings."</p>
+
+<p>"Not a match."</p>
+
+<p>"Some provisions?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a biscuit."</p>
+
+<p>"Some arms, then, to defend ourselves against the natives,
+if we are attacked?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a penknife."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir, you condemn us to death!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sir, we have but forestalled your intention in regard
+to us!"</p>
+
+<p>"As God hears me, sir&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Shut up!" cried Maclean, "your voice hurts my ears."</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, when all was ready, Maclean commanded
+Sievers to stock the boats with water and provisions, and
+to throw some fifty swords and bayonets aboard. Then
+began the debarkation. Using the officer who could speak
+English as his mouthpiece, Maclean commanded the crew of
+the <i>Nevski</i> to file out one by one from the forecastle, and slide
+down a rope over the vessel's bows into the waiting boats.
+They numbered one hundred and thirty-three all told, but not
+a man offered to resist, and within an hour the last boat had
+sheered off, carrying with its hale company the still unconscious
+bodies of the Russian captain and the officer of the
+watch. Maclean's next business was to bury the dead, which
+done, he searched the ship. He made two discoveries: He
+found in the captain's cabin a chest containing no less than
+fifteen thousand golden rubles; and locked away in one
+of the disused bathrooms astern, inhumanly disposed of in
+a tub, the silent form of Captain Brandon. But the tough
+little bulldog of an Englishman was by no means dead, and
+when some three days later the ghost of what had been the
+<i>Nevski</i> steamed out of the bay of Tramoieu, he was already
+so far recovered from the terrible blow that had laid him low,
+but which had, nevertheless, failed to shatter his hard skull,
+as to be engaged in a confused but constant effort to remember.
+On the following morning he insisted upon getting up, and
+was helped afterward by a steward to the bridge.</p>
+
+<p>Maclean greeted him with a genial smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Well done, sir," he cried heartily. "Glad to see you up
+again and looking so fit. The old <i>Saigon</i> has been as dull as
+a coffin-ship without you."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Brandon nodded, frowned, and glanced around
+him. A carpenter close by was busily at work painting
+<i>S.S. Saigon</i> upon a row of virgin-white life buoys. The
+captain wondered and glanced up at the masts. They were
+just ordinary masts in the sense that they had no fighting tops,
+but they gleamed with wet paint. He frowned again, and,
+wondering more and more, looked forward. There was not
+the slightest trace of a cannon to be seen&mdash;but the deck
+in one place had a canvas covering. He began to crack
+his fingers, his old habit, but a moment later he abruptly
+turned and faced the mate.</p>
+
+<p>"Maclean," said he.</p>
+
+<p>The eyes of the two men met.</p>
+
+<p>"This is not the <i>Saigon</i>, Maclean," said Captain Brandon.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll see it in iron letters on her bows, sir, if you look."</p>
+
+<p>"Come into the chart-room."</p>
+
+<p>Maclean obeyed, chuckling under his breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me how you did it," commanded the captain as he
+took a chair.</p>
+
+<p>"It was as easy as rolling off a log, sir," replied the first
+mate. "The blighters clapped us into the small after-hold,
+but totally forgot there was such a thing there as a propeller
+tunnel. We got into the stoke-hole and collared the engine-room
+while the Russians were at dinner. Then, while I
+covered the sailors forward with the machine-gun on the
+bridge, Sievers took the gold-laced crowd aft with a rush.
+The rest is not worth telling, for you know it. All that is to
+say, barring the fact that we're the richer by 15,000 rubles
+and triple-expansion engines, and the poorer by two of our
+crew the Russian captain killed."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Brandon drew a deep breath.</p>
+
+<p>"What course are we steering," he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Straight for Kobe, sir, to carry out our charter. We've
+every stick of the old cargo aboard&mdash;the pirates saw to that&mdash;also
+our books and papers. The guns are all at the
+bottom of the sea. We'll be a bit late, but we can easily
+rig up a yarn to explain."</p>
+
+<p>"But the Russians will talk."</p>
+
+<p>"No fear, sir: they'd be too ashamed to own up the truth;
+ay, and afraid as well, for what they did was piracy on the high
+seas&mdash;nothing less. You take my tip for it, sir, one of these
+days we'll hear that the <i>Nevski</i> struck a reef."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll have to tell the owners, though&mdash;what will they
+say?"</p>
+
+<p>Maclean closed one eye. "The new <i>Saigon</i> has triple-expansion
+engines, sir. If I know anything of Mr. Keppel,
+he'll be better pleased with a ship in the hand than a cause
+of action against the Russian Government."</p>
+
+<p>"But our own men?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, sir, we have 7,000 rubles to share among them.
+They'll be made for life."</p>
+
+<p>"But I thought you said just now there were 15,000?"</p>
+
+<p>"So I did, sir; but there's only you and Sievers and myself
+know how much there is exactly: there was no call to shout
+it all over the ship. And I've figured it out this way: You,
+as captain, are entitled to the most, and you'll want all of
+four thousand to heal up the memory of that crack you got
+on your skull properly. That'll leave two for Sievers to do
+with as he likes, and two for me to buy Nellie&mdash;that's
+Mrs. Maclean that is to be&mdash;just the sort of house she's set
+her heart on these ages back. What do you say, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"What do I say, Maclean?" cried Captain Brandon, his
+eyes big with excitement and surprise, too, perhaps. "Why,
+I say this: You are that rare thing, a sensible, honest man!
+Tip us your flipper!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="ICE_IN_JUNE" id="ICE_IN_JUNE"></a>ICE IN JUNE</h2>
+
+<h3>A Playwright's Story</h3>
+
+<h3>By FRED M. WHITE</h3>
+
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">That</span>," said Ethel Marsh judicially, "is the least stupid
+remark you have made during our five weeks'
+acquaintance."</p>
+
+<p>"Which means that I am improving," John Chesney
+murmured. "There is hope even for me. You cannot
+possibly understand how greatly I appreciate&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The sentence trailed off incoherently as if the effort had
+been all too much. It was hard to live up to the mental
+brilliance of Ethel Marsh. She had had the advantage,
+too, of a couple of seasons in town, whilst Chesney was of the
+country palpably. She also had the advantage of being distractingly
+pretty.</p>
+
+<p>Really, she had hoped to make something of Chesney. It
+seemed to her that he was fitted for better things than tennis-playing
+and riding and the like. It seemed strange that
+he should prefer his little cottage to the broader delights of
+surveying mankind from China to Peru.</p>
+
+<p>The man had possibilities, too. For instance, he knew
+how to dress. There was an air about his flannels, a suggestion
+in his Norfolk suits. He had the knack of the tie
+so that it sat just right, and his boots.... A clean-cut
+face, very tanned; deep, clear gray eyes, very steady. He
+was like a dog attached very much to a careless master. The
+thing had been going on for five weeks.</p>
+
+<p>Ethel was staying with the Frodshams. They were poor
+for their position, albeit given to hospitality&mdash;at a price.
+Most people call this kind of thing taking in paying guests.
+It was a subject delicately veiled. Ethel had come down for
+a fortnight, and she had stayed five weeks. Verily the education
+of John Chesney was a slow process. Chesney was
+a visitor in the neighborhood, too; he had a little furnished
+cottage just by the Goldney Park lodge gates, where a house-keeper
+did for him. As for the rest he was silent. He was
+a very silent man.</p>
+
+<p>It was too hot for tennis, so the two had wandered into
+the woods. A tiny trout stream bubbled by, the oak and
+beech ferns were wet with the spray of it. Between the trees
+lances of light fell, shafts of sunshine on Ethel's hair and
+face. It was at this point that Chesney made the original
+remark. It slipped from him as naturally as if he had been
+accustomed to that kind of thing.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid you got that from Mr. John Kennedy," Ethel
+said. "I am sure that you have seen Mr. Kennedy's comedy
+'Flies in Ointment.' Confess now!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I have," Chesney confessed accordingly. "I&mdash;I
+saw it the night it was produced. On the whole it struck me
+as rather a feeble thing."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, really? We are getting on, Mr. Chesney. Let me
+tell you that I think it is the cleverest modern comedy I have
+ever seen."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! In that case you like the part of 'Dorothy Kent?'"</p>
+
+<p>Ethel's dainty color deepened slightly. She glanced suspiciously
+at the speaker. But he was gazing solidly, stolidly,
+into space&mdash;like a man who had just dined on beef. The
+idea was too preposterous. The idea of John Chesney chaffing
+her, chaffing anybody.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought perhaps you did," Chesney went on. "Mr.
+Kent is a bit of a butterfly, a good sort at the bottom, but
+decidedly of the species lepidopter&aelig;&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Stop!" Ethel cried. "Where did you get that word
+from? Whence comes it in the vocabulary of a youth&mdash;a
+youth? Oh, you know what I mean."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe it is a general name for insects," Chesney said
+humbly. "Mrs. Kent is a good sort, but a little conceited.
+Apt to fancy herself, you know. Young widows of her type
+often do. She is tired of the artificial existence of town, and
+goes off into the country, where she leads the simple life. She
+meets a young man there, who, well, 'pon my word, is rather
+like me. He was a bit of an ass&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He was nothing of the kind," Ethel cried indignantly.
+"He was splendid. And he made that woman love him, he
+made her acknowledge that she had met her match at last.
+And he turned out to be one of the most brilliant&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Miss Ethel, after all it was only a play. You
+remind me of 'Mrs. Kent,' and you say that I remind you of
+the hero of the play who&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't, Mr. Chesney. I said nothing of the kind. It
+is unfair of you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"When the likeness is plain enough," Chesney said stubbornly.
+"You are 'Mrs. Kent,' and I am the hero of the
+comedy. Do you think that there is any possibility that
+some day you and&mdash;of course not yet, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Miss Marsh sat there questioning the evidence of her coral-pink
+ears. She knew that she was furiously angry because
+she felt so cool about it. She knew that the more furious one
+was, the more calm and self-contained the senses become.
+The man meant nothing, either&mdash;one could see that by the
+respectful expression of his eye. Still&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You are quite wrong," Ethel said. "You have altogether
+misunderstood the <i>motif</i> of the play. I presume you
+know what a <i>motif</i> is?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think so," Chesney said humbly. "It is a word they
+apply in music when you don't happen to understand what the
+composer&mdash;especially the modern composer&mdash;is driving at."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, let it pass," Ethel said hopelessly. "You have
+misunderstood the gist of the play, then! 'Walter Severn' in
+the comedy is a man of singular points. He is a great author.
+Instead of being that woman's plaything, he is her merciless
+analyst. The great scene in the play comes when she finds
+this out. Now, you do not for a moment presume to put
+yourself on a level with 'Walter Severn,' do you?"</p>
+
+<p>Chesney was bound to admit the height of his audacity.
+His eyes were fixed humbly on his Minerva; he was Telemachus
+seated at the feet of the goddess. And even yet he did not
+seem really cognizant of the enormity of his offence. He saw
+the sunlight on that sweetly serious face, he saw the beams
+playing with the golden meshes of her hair. No doubt he
+was fully conscious of his own inferiority, for he did not speak
+again. It was for him to wait. The silence deepened; in
+the heart of the wood a blackbird was piping madly on a
+blackthorn.</p>
+
+<p>"Before you go away," Chesney hazarded, "I should very
+much like&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But I am not going away, at least not yet. Besides, I
+have a purpose to serve. I am waiting until those impossible
+people leave Goldney Park. I understand that they have
+already gone, but on that head I am not sure. I want to go
+over the house. The late owner, Mr. Mainbrace, was a great
+friend of my family. Before he died he was so good as to
+express a wish that the heir to the property should come and
+see us and&mdash;but that part is altogether too ridiculous. And
+as an only daughter&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I see," Chesney said reflectively. "The heir and yourself.
+It sounds ridiculous. Now, if you had been in the least like
+the romantic type of young woman, perhaps&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"How do you know that I am not? Am I like Byron's
+woman: 'Seek roses in December, ice in June'? Well, perhaps
+you are right. After all, one doesn't find ice in June. However,
+the heir to the Goldney Park estate and myself never
+met. He let the place to those awful Gosway people for three
+years and went abroad. There was not even the suspicion
+of a romance. But I am curious to see the house, all the same."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing easier, Miss Marsh. Let us go and see it after
+luncheon. The Gosways have gone, you may take my word
+for that, and only a caretaker is in possession. Will you
+come with me this afternoon?"</p>
+
+<p>The prospect was not displeasing. Miss Marsh poised
+it in her mind for a few moments. There was Chesney's
+education to be thought of as well. On the whole, she decided
+that there might be less pleasant ways of spending a hot
+August afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>"I think I'll come," she said. "I want to see the old
+furniture and the pictures. I love old furniture. Perhaps
+if the heir to the property had gone on his knees whilst I was
+seated on a priceless Chippendale settee, I might&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You might, but I don't think you would," Chesney
+interrupted. "Whatever your faults may be I am sure you
+are not mercenary."</p>
+
+<p>"Really! How good of you! The thing that we are apt to
+call depravity&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Is often another name for the promptings of poor human
+nature."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Marsh turned and stared at the speaker. Really,
+his education was progressing at a most amazing rate. Without
+the least sign of mental distress he had delivered himself
+of an epigram. There was quite a flavor of Piccadilly about
+it. And Chesney did not appear in the least conscious of his
+achievement. Ethel rose and shook out the folds of her
+dainty muslin dress.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it getting late?" she asked. "I'm sure it is lunch
+time. You can walk as far as the gate with me, and I will
+meet you here at three o'clock."</p>
+
+<p>She passed thoughtfully across the lawn to the house, her
+pretty brows knitted in a thoughtful frown. Was she giving
+her pupil too much latitude? Certainly he had begun to
+show symptoms of an audacious presumption, which in the
+earlier days had been conspicuous by its absence. Whereupon
+Miss Marsh sighed three times without being in the least
+aware of the painful fact.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>"This," said Chesney, "is the Norman Tower, built by
+John Mainbrace, who was the original founder of the family.
+The first two trees in the avenue of oaks that leads up to the
+house were planted by Queen Elizabeth. She also slept on
+several occasions in the house; indeed, the bedroom she occupied
+is intact to this day. The Virgin Queen seemed to pass most
+of her time, apart from affairs of state, in occupying bedrooms,
+so that the descendants of her courtiers might be able to boast
+about it afterward. Those who could not give the royal
+lady a shakedown had special bedrooms fitted up and lied
+about them. It was an innocent deception."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Marsh eyed her pupil distrustfully. The educational
+progress was flattering, and at the same time a little disturbing.
+She had never seen Chesney in this gay and frivolous, not to
+say excited, mood before. The man was positively glib.
+There were distinct flashes of wit in his discourse, too. And
+where did he get so close and intimate a knowledge of the
+old house from?</p>
+
+<p>He knew every nook and corner. He took her through
+the grand old park where the herd of fallow deer were grazing;
+he showed her the Dutch and Italian gardens; he knew even
+the history of the sundial on the terrace. And yet they had
+not been within the house, though the great hall door stood
+hospitably open. They moved at length out of the glare of
+the sunshine into the grateful shadows. Glint of armor
+and gleam of canvas were all there. Ethel walked along in
+an ecstasy of quiet enjoyment. Rumor had not lied as to
+the artistic beauties of Goldney Park. The Mainbraces must
+have been a tasteful family. They had it all here, from the
+oaken carvings of the wandering monks down through Grinling
+Gibbons and Pugin, and away to Chippendale and Adam,
+and other masters of the Georgian era. They came at length
+to the chamber sacred to the Virgin Queen; they contemplated
+the glorious view from the window in silent appreciation
+tinged with rapture.</p>
+
+<p>"It's exquisite," Ethel said in a low voice. "If this were
+my house I should be very much tempted to commit an act
+of sacrilege. I should want this for my own room. I'm
+afraid I could not resist such an opportunity."</p>
+
+<p>"Easily done," said Chesney. "No trouble to discover
+from the family archives that a mistake had been made, and
+that Elizabeth of blessed memory had not slept in this room.
+Being strong-minded she preferred a north aspect, and this
+is due south. You would get a reputation for sound historical
+knowledge as well."</p>
+
+<p>Certainly the education was progressing. But Ethel let
+it pass. She was leaning out of the latticed windows with
+the creamy roses about her hair; she was falling unconsciously
+under the glamour of the place.</p>
+
+<p>"It is exquisite," she sighed. "If this were only mine!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it is not too late. The heir will be here before long,
+probably. You have only to introduce the name of Mr.
+Mainbrace and say who you are, and then&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no. If I happened to be in love with a man&mdash;what
+am I saying? Of course, no girl who respects herself could
+possibly marry a man for the sake of his position. Even
+'Mrs. Dorothy Kent,' to whom you compared me this morning,
+was above that kind of thing. She married the man she
+loved after all, you know. But I forget&mdash;you did not think
+much of the comedy."</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't. I thought it was vague and incomplete.
+I am certain of it now. This is the real thing; the
+other was merely artificial. And when the hero brought
+'Dorothy Kent' to the home of his ancestors he already
+knew that she loved him. And I am glad to know that
+you would never marry a man like that because it gives
+me courage&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Gives you courage! Whatever for?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, to make a confession. You laughed at me just now
+when I presumed to criticize your favorite modern comedy.
+As a matter of fact, I have every right to criticize it. You see,
+I happen to be the author. I am 'John Kennedy'! I have
+been writing for the stage, or trying to write for the stage, for
+years. I got my new idea from that old wish of my uncle's
+that you and I should come together. It struck me as a pretty
+suggestion for a comedy."</p>
+
+<p>"Stop, stop," Ethel cried. "One thing at a time, if you
+please. Positively you overwhelm me with surprise. In one
+breath you tell me you are 'John Kennedy,' and then, without
+giving a poor girl a chance, you say you are the owner of Goldney
+Park."</p>
+
+<p>"But I didn't," Chesney protested. "I never said anything
+of the kind."</p>
+
+<p>"No, but you inferred it. You say you got the idea from
+your uncle&mdash;I mean the suggestion that you and I&mdash;oh, I
+really cannot say it."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I'm but a poor dramatist after all," Chesney
+said lamely. "I intended to keep that confession till after
+I had&mdash;but no matter. At any rate, there is no getting away
+from the fact that my pen name is 'John Kennedy.'"</p>
+
+<p>"And you wrote 'Flies in Ointment'? And you have been
+laughing at me all this time? You were amused because I
+took you for a simple countryman, you whom men call the
+Sheridan of to-day! After all the pains I took with your
+education."</p>
+
+<p>Ethel's voice rose hysterically. Points of flame stood out
+from the level of her memory of the past five weeks and
+scorched her. How this man must have been amused, how
+consumedly he must have laughed at her! And she had never
+guessed it, never once had she had an inkling of the truth.</p>
+
+<p>"You have behaved disgracefully, cruelly," she said
+unsteadily.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think so," Chesney said coolly. "After all is
+said and done, we were both posing, you know. You were
+playing 'Mrs. Kent' to my hero. It seemed a pity to disturb
+so pleasant a pastoral. And no harm has been done."</p>
+
+<p>Ethel was not quite so sure of that. But then for the nonce
+she was regarding the matter from a strictly personal point of
+view.</p>
+
+<p>"I hardly think you were playing the game," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Why not? I come down here where nobody knows me.
+It is my whim to keep quiet the fact that Goldney Park belongs
+to me. As to my dramatic tastes, they don't concern anybody
+but myself. I take a cottage down here until those tenants
+of mine are ready to go. They are such utter bounders that
+I have no desire to disclose my identity to them. And so it
+falls about that I meet you. Then I recollect all that my
+uncle has said about you. I cultivate your acquaintance. It
+wasn't my fault that you took me for a countryman with
+no idea beyond riding a horse and shooting a pheasant. Your
+patronage was very pretty and pleasing, and I am one of
+those men who always laugh or cry inside. It is perhaps
+a misfortune that I can always joke with a grave face. But
+don't forget that the man who laughs inside is also the man
+who bleeds inside, and these feel the worst. Come, Ethel,
+you are not going to be angry because you have lost the game
+playing with your own weapons."</p>
+
+<p>The education was finished, the schoolmaster was abroad&mdash;very
+much abroad. In his cool, masterful way Chesney
+had taken matters into his own hands. He was none
+the less handsome because he looked so stern, so sure
+of his ground.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a man and I am a woman," she faltered.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course. How could the comedy proceed otherwise?
+Now where shall we move these Elizabethan relics? After
+what you said just now they could not possibly remain here.
+Among the family archives I dare say&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Chesney paused; he was conscious of the fact that two large
+diamond drops were stealing down Ethel's cheeks. It seemed
+the most natural thing in the world for him to cross over and
+take her hands in his.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child, what have I said to pain you," he said.
+"I am truly sorry."</p>
+
+<p>"You&mdash;you take too much for granted," Ethel sobbed.
+"You make me feel so small and silly. And you have no
+right to assume that I&mdash;I could care for anybody simply
+because he happens to possess a p&mdash;p&mdash;place like Goldney
+Park."</p>
+
+<p>"But, my darling, I didn't. I was delighted when you said
+just now that you would never marry a man you did not care
+for, even if he could give you Chippendale for breakfast, so
+to speak. I watched your face then. I am sure that you
+were speaking from the bottom of your heart. I have been
+watching you for the last five weeks, my sweetheart. And
+they have been the happiest weeks in my life.</p>
+
+<p>"Laughing at me, I suppose! It's all the same if you do
+laugh inside."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I don't think I laughed," Chesney said thoughtfully.
+"I only know that I have been very much charmed. And
+besides, see how useful it has been to me to be in a position
+to hear all the weak points in my literary armor. When I
+come to write my next comedy, it will be far in advance of
+'Flies in Ointment.' I have learned so much of human
+nature, you see."</p>
+
+<p>Ethel winked the tears from her lids; her eyes were all the
+brighter for the passing shower, like a sky in April, Chesney
+thought. A smile was on her face, her lips were parted. As
+a lover Chesney was charming. She wondered how she was
+playing her part. But she need not have had any anxiety.
+There was nothing wanting in the eyes of the man opposite,
+and his face said so.</p>
+
+<p>"You are going to put me into it?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, of course. There is no other woman so far as I can
+see. Why are you pulling my roses to pieces like that? Do
+you know that that rose tree was planted a hundred years
+ago by Thomas &agrave; Becket after the battle of Agincourt? My
+dear, I am so happy that I could talk nonsense all day. And
+I say, Ethel&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The girl broke off one of the creamy roses and handed
+it shyly to Chesney.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>V&aelig; victis</i>," she said with a flushing smile. "It is yours.
+You have conquered."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but I want all the fruits of victory. I ask for a hand
+and you give me&mdash;a rose. Am I not going to have the hand
+as well as the rose, dear?"</p>
+
+<p>He had the hand and the rose and the slender waist; he drew
+her toward him in his strong, masterful way, and his lips lay
+on hers in a lingering pressure. It was a long time before the
+girl looked up; then her eyes were full of shy happiness.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="THE_DITTY-BOX" id="THE_DITTY-BOX"></a>THE DITTY-BOX</h2>
+
+<h3>A Pawnbroker's Story</h3>
+
+<h3>By OWEN OLIVER</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">In the</span> course of our dealings over the curiosities that
+my brother sent home from Burma, Mr. Levy and I
+became very good friends. When we had finished one of
+our deals we generally had a chat in the quaint little room
+behind his queer little shop in the old-world alley frequented
+by sailormen. On one of these occasions he mentioned that
+the cigar which he had given me was the brand which he
+always smoked; and the quality of the cigar suggested
+opulence.</p>
+
+<p>"If you can afford cigars like this," I remarked, "you
+must make some pretty good bargains with your curiosities!"</p>
+
+<p>"Good and bad," he said. "That's the way in business&mdash;in
+life, if you come to that!" He was a bit of a philosopher.</p>
+
+<p>"You make more good bargains than bad ones, I'll be
+bound," I asserted.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he agreed; "but it isn't so much that. The bad
+aren't very bad, as a rule; and some of the good are very
+good. That's where I get my profit."</p>
+
+<p>"What was the best bargain you ever made?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>He filled his glass and pushed the decanter toward me.</p>
+
+<p>"The best bargain I ever made," he said, "was over a
+ditty-box."</p>
+
+<p>I helped myself to a little whiskey.</p>
+
+<p>"A ditty-box? I thought they were ordinary sailors' chests
+that they keep their clothes in?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not exactly chests," he corrected. "They're smallish
+boxes that they keep their needles and thread in, and their
+money, and anything else that they set store by&mdash;their letters
+or their sweethearts' photos, or their wives'&mdash;or other
+people's! There's no profit in them, and I don't deal in them
+in a general way. I got my gain out of this one in a roundabout
+fashion; but it was handsome. If you've got half an
+hour to spare I'll tell you about it."</p>
+
+<p>This was his story:</p>
+
+<p>It was eight years ago, and I'd had Isaac for seven years,
+and concluded that he was to be trusted. So I took it into
+my head to have a fortnight's holiday and leave him in
+charge of the shop. Everything was in order when I came
+back, and the books balanced to a penny. Business had
+been pretty good, he told me, but nothing out of the ordinary.</p>
+
+<p>"Unless," he said, "I've stumbled on a good thing by
+accident. It's a ditty-box; rather a superior one, and a good
+bit bigger than usual; almost a chest; brass bound and a
+nice bit of poker-work on it; a girl's head. I've put it in
+your bedroom."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" I said. "Ah-h!" He wouldn't make this fuss
+over a bit of poker-work, I knew.</p>
+
+<p>"The mate of the <i>Saucy Jane</i> brought it here," he went on.
+"It belonged to the captain. George Markby, the name was;
+and that's poker-work on it, too. He sickened of a fever
+over at Rotterdam and died at sea; and they sold off his things
+to send the money to his widow. I gave a sovereign for it.
+There's a tray inside with a lock-up till. Keys all complete.
+Ought to fetch thirty-five shillings."</p>
+
+<p>"As much as that?" I said. I knew there must be a good
+deal more in it than appeared, but it's no use hurrying Isaac.
+He likes to tell things his own way.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought it might suit you to lock up your books and
+papers. That was all&mdash;till the day before yesterday. Then
+a ginger-haired sailor came in. North countryman. Wanted
+a ditty-box, he said. I told him we weren't marine outfitters,
+and he'd better try Barnard's, round the corner. He
+said he didn't want the ordinary sort, but something out of
+the common; extra large size; brass-bound; tray with a lock-up
+till. 'Mind if it was a trifle old?' I asked. 'Carved or cut
+about a bit? You know how some chaps use their knives on
+them, just to pass the time.' He said he didn't care for
+things that were hacked about, but he wouldn't object to a
+bit of poker-work on it. I told him I'd look through the
+warehouse and let him know in the morning, and he went.
+Byles, the dock policeman, was standing outside. I went
+and asked him who the chap was. He said he was cook on
+the <i>Anne Traylor</i>, just come in, and he believed he'd done
+time. If he hadn't I'll swear he ought to have, from the
+look of him.</p>
+
+<p>"About half an hour afterward in walks an oldish chap with
+a stoop and a gray goat's beard. He wanted a ditty-box, too;
+something extra large and old, and strong, and a tray with
+a lock-up till in it. He was a fireman on the <i>Anne Traylor</i>,
+I found; a shifty sort of chap that couldn't look you in the
+face. He offered to go to a couple of pounds for the right
+thing. I told him I'd look through our stuff and let him
+know if we had one of the sort.</p>
+
+<p>"Just as I was closing, a smart young fellow swaggered in.
+He was second mate of the <i>Anne Traylor</i>, and he'd heard
+of the death of her old captain on the <i>Saucy Jane</i>, and that
+we'd bought some of his effects, and he'd like to have a
+memento; just a matter of sentiment, he explained. I asked
+him what form the sentiment took, and he said a ditty-box;
+and if we had the one that belonged to the old man he'd
+give two pounds five for it. I put him off like the others.</p>
+
+<p>"Two Swedish sailors came in after the shutters were up,
+while the door was still open. They wanted a ditty-box of
+the identical description. I told them I'd look for it, same
+as I told the rest. You always brought me up not to close too
+soon with a customer who was keen on a thing."</p>
+
+<p>"Very good, Isaac," I said. "Very good! Go on!"</p>
+
+<p>"In the evening I made inquiries at the 'Duke of Wellington,'
+where the dock policemen go, and the two-penny-halfpenny
+money lenders and such; and old Mrs. Higgins, the
+landlady, knows more about the crews that come here than
+anyone. Lots of them knew old Markby, it seemed; a very
+respectable old chap and a favorite with his men, but a bit
+of a miser, and a trifle queer in his ways. He boasted that
+he didn't believe in banks and such things, and he'd got his
+money hidden where even his wife didn't know. And the
+conclusion I've come to is that those chaps believe it's in the
+ditty-box, and they mean to have it."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" I said. "We'll have something to say to that,
+Isaac! You told them we hadn't got it, of course."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," he said; "and of course they didn't believe
+me! I had a rare bother with the ginger-haired man yesterday
+morning, and had to send the boy for a policeman before he'd
+go. And in the afternoon the Swedes tried to sneak through
+the shop into the warehouse, but I jumped out of the shop
+parlor and hustled them off. I've put longer screws in the
+bars to the windows; but I'd be easier if you'd let me sleep
+here."</p>
+
+<p>Isaac always thought that he could look after me better
+than I could look after myself!</p>
+
+<p>"I'm all right, Isaac," I said; "but we'll have a look at the
+box before you go. It might be worth a bit more if it had a
+secret drawer, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>When the shop was closed we went upstairs and laid the
+box on my bed, and turned it over and tapped it, and put a
+lamp inside, and examined every inch. We couldn't find a
+trace of a secret drawer, or anything scratched on it to say
+where the old captain had hidden his long stocking. So I
+concluded that the talk was the usual nonsense, and I daresay
+I'd have sold it and thought no more about it, if the goat's-beard
+man hadn't come in the first thing the next morning.
+He didn't beat about the bush, but said he wanted Captain
+Markby's ditty-box that we'd bought, and he'd give two
+pounds ten for it. I told him I wished I'd got it to sell, since
+he was so generous, but ditty-boxes weren't in my line.</p>
+
+<p>The others that Isaac had spoken of came in too. I was
+tempted to sell it to the mate for three pounds, but I couldn't
+quite make up my mind, and told him to come again the next
+morning. That very night the two Swedes broke into the
+shop. The police caught them. They're always on the
+look-out round my place, knowing that it's a fiver to them on
+the quiet if they catch anyone breaking in. The Swedes got
+three months apiece.</p>
+
+<p>That made up my mind. I showed the mate an ordinary
+box when he called, and he went off grumbling that it was
+nothing like the one he'd asked about, and I'd played the
+fool with him. I never saw him again, or the Swedes either;
+but the old man and the ginger-headed chap were always
+looking in the window. They seemed to have chummed up.
+I had an anonymous letter that I put down to them&mdash;written
+in red ink that I suppose they meant me to take for blood.
+It warned me against keeping "a ditty-box that others have
+a better claim to, and is like to cost you dear." D-e-r-e they
+spelt it, and one t in ditty.</p>
+
+<p>Two days later they called to ask if the box had come my
+way yet. "Yes," I said, "and I'm going to keep it. It's
+got two blackguards three months, and it will get two others
+a good hiding if they don't mind. Clear out, and don't come
+here again." They didn't, but we often saw them hanging
+round, and when I went out one of them generally followed
+me. I didn't worry about that, for I could have settled the
+two of them easily if I wasn't taken unaware. I was always
+a bit obstinate, and I'd sooner have chopped the chest up
+for firewood than have been bullied into letting them have
+it; but I was sorry that I hadn't taken the mate's offer, for
+Isaac and I had measured it all over inside and out, and
+calculated that there wasn't space anywhere for a secret
+drawer.</p>
+
+<p>I'd had it about three months; and then a young girl,
+about twenty, came into the shop one afternoon, when Isaac
+was at tea. She was a pale slip of a young thing, and her
+clothes looked as if they'd been worn all through the summer,
+and it was autumn then; and she hesitated as if she was half
+afraid of me.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, little missie," I said. "What is it?" I spoke to
+her with the smooth side of my tongue uppermost, as a big,
+rough chap generally does to a girl of that sort, if there's
+anything decent about him.</p>
+
+<p>"My father was Captain Markby," she said, and I liked
+the way she spoke. "He died at sea, and they sold his things
+here. I want to find something of his, and I thought that perhaps
+you might have bought it?"</p>
+
+<p>I knew directly what she meant, but I looked very innocent.</p>
+
+<p>"If it was anything in the curiosity line, I might have," I
+answered. "You see the sort of things I deal in." I waved
+my hand round the place.</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said. "It wasn't a curiosity. It was an oak
+chest with brass corners. I think they call it a ditty-box."</p>
+
+<p>"A ditty-box," I said. "They're too common to be
+curious. Was there anything special about it?"</p>
+
+<p>"It had a tray in it, and he'd drawn a head on it with a
+red-hot iron; a girl's head. He meant it for me; but I don't
+expect you'd recognize me by it. I hope not!" She smiled
+faintly.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope not," I agreed, "judging from what I've seen of
+such figures." I laughed, and she laughed a little, too. "And
+you want to buy it, if you can find it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ye-es," she said. "At least&mdash;I haven't very much
+money; but I would pay you as soon as I could, if&mdash;I suppose
+you wouldn't be so kind&mdash;so very kind&mdash;as to agree
+to that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Umph!" I said. "I don't generally give credit; but as
+it was your father's, I might stretch a point for once if I should
+find that I have it."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, <i>thank</i> you!" she said with a flush. "It is a kindness
+that I have no right to expect. <i>Thank</i> you!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll have a look round among my things," I promised.
+"I haven't bought such a box myself; but my assistant
+might have; or I might be able to find it for you in
+some of the shops round here. I'll see what I can do."
+I meant to let her have it, but I wanted to find out more
+about it first.</p>
+
+<p>"How kind you are!" she cried. "I&mdash;you see I want it
+very particularly, Mr. Levy."</p>
+
+<p>"Being associated with your father," I said, "naturally you
+would. Perhaps if I don't come across the ditty-box, I might
+find something else of his that would do, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"No-o," she said. "It wouldn't. You see we&mdash;my
+mother and I&mdash;aren't well off. We knew that father had
+some money, but we couldn't find it, or learn anything
+about it; and we think it must be in the box, or a paper
+telling us about it."</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head.</p>
+
+<p>"There's no paper in any box that I have," I assured her.
+"We always go through the things that we buy very carefully."</p>
+
+<p>"You wouldn't find it," she explained eagerly. "There
+was a secret place. He showed it to me when I was a little
+girl. I don't expect he thought I would remember, but I
+did. You take off the brass corners on top, and then the
+lower part of the lid drops out. The lid's in two pieces and
+you could put papers&mdash;or bank notes&mdash;in between."</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't help smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"Aren't you rather foolish to tell me?" I suggested.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me appealingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Am I?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"No," I said. "As it happens, you aren't; but I wouldn't
+tell anyone else, if I were you. They <i>might</i> think they'd
+like those bank notes for themselves. <i>I</i> might if&mdash;well, if
+you weren't a good deal younger and more in need of them
+than I am."</p>
+
+<p>"I think you are a very good and kind man, Mr. Levy,"
+she said solemnly.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid not, little missie," I told her; "but there are
+some a good deal worse; and some of them have an inkling of
+what may be in that box, if I'm not mistaken. They've
+been inquiring after it."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" She started. "There were two horrid men who
+seemed to be watching me when I came in here. I half
+thought I remembered one of them: an old man with a stoop.
+I believe I must have seen him aboard my father's ship. I
+felt rather nervous&mdash;because it's such a dark alley." She
+looked anxiously at the door.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a bit dark," I agreed. "Would you feel safer if I
+saw you to a main thoroughfare?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should feel <i>quite</i> safe then," she declared, and she smiled
+like a child does. "I really don't know <i>how</i> to thank you
+enough for your goodness to me."</p>
+
+<p>I called Isaac to look after the shop, and put on my hat and
+walked off with her. She was a bright little creature to talk
+to, and when she was excited she looked very pretty. I found
+that she was going to walk all the way, so I said that I would
+see her right to her road. She seemed pleased to have my
+company, and jabbered nineteen to the dozen. It was such
+a change to have someone to talk to, she said, because they
+had moved and knew nobody here. She told me that she
+tried to earn money by teaching music and by painting.
+I said that I was badly in want of a few little sketches, and
+she promised to bring some for me to look at.</p>
+
+<p>"I would ask you to accept them," she said, with a flush,
+"if we weren't so poor."</p>
+
+<p>"If it weren't for that," I said, "I should ask you to have
+some tea before I leave you, without fear that you would be
+too proud to accept. It would be a pleasure to me. Will
+you?" We were just outside a good place, and I stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"It is very kind of you," she said, "but I don't think&mdash;I
+suppose I <i>am</i> foolishly proud." She laughed an uneasy
+laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"You mustn't let your pride spoil my pleasure," I told her,
+and grinned at myself for talking like a book. "You can
+repay me when you find your fortune, if you insist; but I hope
+you won't."</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at me quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said. "I couldn't treat your kindness like
+that. Thank you, Mr. Levy."</p>
+
+<p>So we went in, and I ordered tea and chicken and cakes.
+The poor little thing was positively hungry, I could see; and
+when she mentioned her mother the tears came into her eyes.
+I understood what she was thinking, and I had some meat
+patties put up in a package. When I left her at the corner
+of her road I put the package into her hands, and boarded
+a 'bus with a run before she had time to object. She shook
+her head at me when I was on top of the 'bus; but when I
+took off my hat she waved her hand, and laughed as if she was
+a great mind to cry. It's hard for an old woman and a
+young girl when they're left like that.</p>
+
+<p>I had the corners of that ditty-box off as soon as Isaac had
+gone for the night. The lid was double, as she had said.
+Between the two boards I found a portrait of an elderly
+woman&mdash;her mother, no doubt&mdash;and three photos of herself;
+two in short frocks and one with her hair in a plait when
+she was about seventeen. She looked stouter and jollier
+then, poor girl. There was one other thing: a half sheet of
+note-paper. "Memo in case of accident. Money up chimney
+in best bedroom. Geo. Markby, sixth of April, 1897."</p>
+
+<p>I started to change my clothes to go there and tell them;
+but just as I had taken off my waistcoat I altered my mind.
+The money wouldn't be in the rooms where they lived then,
+but in their old house; and that was probably occupied by
+someone else now, and even if the money was still there she
+would not be able to get it. It was no use raising her hopes,
+just to disappoint her. I would try to get the money before
+I spoke, I decided.</p>
+
+<p>She came at eleven the next morning, and timidly produced
+a few little sketches, mostly copies of things. I'd like to say
+that they were good, but I can't. It was just schoolgirl
+painting, nothing else. She wanted to give me some, but
+I wouldn't hear of that. She had sold a few for eighteenpence
+apiece, she said. I said that I wanted four to frame for ships'
+cabins, and I'd give twelve-and-six for them, and that would
+leave me a fair margin. I was afraid to offer more, for fear
+she would suspect me; and as it was she was dubious.</p>
+
+<p>"You're sure you <i>will</i> get a profit?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"You ask anyone round here about me," I said. "They'll
+soon tell you that I look out sharp for that. They'll look
+very nice when they're framed; and I make a good bit out
+of the frames, you see. Now about this ditty-box. I've
+got on the track of one that might turn out right; but there's
+a difficulty that I'd like to put to you. Suppose that there's
+no money in it, only a clue to where your father hid it.
+Wouldn't that be likely to be somewhere where you can't
+get at it? On board his ship, for example? Or in your old
+house?</p>
+
+<p>"If it's in the house," she said, "I could get in. At least
+it was empty a week ago. Mother heard from an old neighbor.
+But perhaps it would be better to get someone else to
+go, and say that they wanted to look at the house?" She
+glanced at me doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean me?" She nodded slowly. "You are afraid
+that I might keep some of it?"</p>
+
+<p>She stared at me in sheer amazement.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, of course not!" she cried. "I was only thinking
+that it was a long way to ask you to go; and that I must not
+impose on your kindness."</p>
+
+<p>"Give me the address," I said, "in case I should want it
+any time."</p>
+
+<p>She gave me an address in Andeville. Then I changed
+the subject. I walked part of the way home with her. Then
+I had my dinner and went off to Andeville.</p>
+
+<p>It was about an hour by train. By the time that I had
+found the agent and got the key it was growing dusk. I was
+some time arguing with him, because he wanted to send a
+man with me to lock up afterward. "We've had tramps get
+in several times," he explained, "and they've done a lot of
+damage; torn up the flooring and such senseless mischief."
+It occurred to me directly that the tramps were some of the
+men who had come after the ditty-box.</p>
+
+<p>I persuaded him at last that I'd lock up all right and he
+let me go alone. I soon spotted what would be the best
+bedroom. I fumbled up the chimney and lit a match or two,
+and found a heavy canvas bag and a smaller one that rustled
+like notes. I was just looking for the last time when I heard
+soft steps behind me. I glanced round and saw two men
+before the match flickered out. The light caught the face of
+the foremost. It was the old man with the goat's beard.
+Then I was struck on the head and knocked senseless.</p>
+
+<p>It was about six when I came to and lit another match
+and looked at my watch. The bags were gone, of course.
+I never saw them again or the two men. It was as well for
+them I didn't!</p>
+
+<p>It was no use telling the agent or anybody. I never thought
+about that, only what I was to do about the girl and her
+mother. I didn't think very much about the mother, if you
+come to that. It seemed to me that I'd made a mess of it
+and lost their money, and I couldn't bear to think of the
+girl's disappointment. What upset me most was that I
+knew she'd believe every word of my story, and never dream
+that I'd taken the money myself, as some people would.
+She was such a trusting little thing, and&mdash;well, I may as well
+own up that I liked her. If I hadn't been fifteen years older
+than she was, and felt sure that she'd never look at a Jew&mdash;and
+a much rougher chap then than I am now&mdash;I should
+have had serious thoughts of courting her. And so&mdash;well,
+I knew that a hundred pounds was what they hoped for;
+and it didn't make very much odds to me. I took out the
+paper that night and put in twenty five-pound notes, and did
+it up again. A bit of folly that you wouldn't have suspected
+me of, eh? Then you think me a bigger fool than most
+people do! At the same time, it was only fair and honest.
+I'd had her money and lost it, you see.</p>
+
+<p>I was going to take the chest to their lodgings in a cab the
+next morning, but she called in early to ask if I had found it.
+I had an unhappy sort of feeling when I saw her come smiling
+into the shop, thinking that she wouldn't need to come any
+more. It's queer how a man feels over a little slip of a girl
+when he's knocked about all over the world and known
+hundreds of women and thought nothing of them!</p>
+
+<p>I'd carried it down into this room, and I took her in and
+showed it. Her delight was pretty to see. She fidgeted
+about at my elbow like a child while I was taking the corners
+off; and when she saw the notes she danced and clapped her
+hands; and when I gave them to her she sat down and hugged
+them and laughed and cried.</p>
+
+<p>"If you knew how poor we've been!" she said, wiping
+her eyes. "How lonely and worried and miserable! Your
+kindness has been the only nice thing ever since father died.
+Twenty times five! That's a hundred. They're real notes
+aren't they? I haven't seen one for ages."</p>
+
+<p>"They're real enough," I told her. "I'll give you gold
+for them, if you like."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd rather have their very selves," she said with a laugh.
+She studied one carefully; and suddenly she dropped them
+with a cry and sprang to her feet. Her face had gone white.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Levy!" she cried. "Oh, Mr. Levy! <i>You put them
+there!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>I told her a lie right out; and I'm not ashamed of it. I was
+a hard man of business, I said; and a Jew; and she was a
+silly sentimental child, or she'd never take such an idea into
+her head; and she needn't suppose I kept my shop for charity,
+and she'd know better when she was older. She heard me
+out. Then she put her hand on my shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear kind friend," she said, "father died in May this
+year. The note that I looked at was dated in June!" And
+I stood and stared at her like a fool. I suppose I looked a bit
+cut up, for she stroked my arm gently.</p>
+
+<p>"You dear, good fellow!" she said. She seemed to have
+grown from a child into a woman in a few minutes. "I can't
+take them, but it will help me to be a better girl, to have
+known someone like you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Like me!" I said, and laughed. "I'm just&mdash;just a
+rough, money-grubbing Jew. That's all I am."</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head like mad.</p>
+
+<p>"You may say what you like," she told me; "but you can't
+alter what I think. You're good&mdash;good&mdash;good!"</p>
+
+<p>Then I told her just what had happened.</p>
+
+<p>"So, you see, you owe me nothing," I wound up.</p>
+
+<p>She wiped her eyes and took hold of me by the sleeve.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you what I owe you," she said. "Food when I
+was hungry; kindness when I was wretched; your time, your
+care&mdash;yes, and the risk of your life. If you had had your
+way you would have given me all that money. You&mdash;Mr.
+Levy, you say that it is just a matter of business. What
+profit did you expect to make?"</p>
+
+<p>"I expected&mdash;to make you happy," I said; and she looked
+up at me suddenly; and I saw what I saw. "Little girl!"
+I cried. "May I try? In another way."</p>
+
+<p>I held out my arms, and she dropped into them.</p>
+
+<p>"My profits!" I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" she cried. "I hope so. I will try&mdash;try&mdash;try!"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Levy offered me a fresh cigar and took another himself.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a class of profit that's difficult to estimate," he
+remarked. "I had a difficulty with Isaac over the matter.
+You see he has 5 per cent. over the business that he introduces,
+but that was only meant for small transactions, I argued.
+He argued that there were no profits at all; not meaning any
+disrespect to her, but holding that there was no money in it;
+or, if there was, it was a loss because I'd have to keep her,
+and nobody knew how a wife would turn out. She held much
+the same, except that she was sure she was going to turn out
+good; but she thought I ought to find some plan of doing
+something for Isaac. We settled it that way. He wanted
+to get married, so I gave him a rise and let them have the rooms
+over the shop to live in; and there they are now."</p>
+
+<p>"And how do you reckon the profits yourself?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," he said "in these last eight years I've cleared
+forty thousand pounds, though you wouldn't think it in this
+little shop. I reckon that I cleared a good bit more over
+that ditty-box. Come round to my house one evening, and
+I'll introduce you to her."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="THE_YELLOW_CAT" id="THE_YELLOW_CAT"></a>THE YELLOW CAT</h2>
+
+<h3>An Idyll of the Summer</h3>
+
+<h3>By ANNIE E.P. SEARING</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> minister of Blue Mountain Church, and the minister's
+wife, were enjoying their first autumn fire, and the
+presence of the cat on the hearth between them.</p>
+
+<p>"He came home this afternoon," the minister's wife was
+saying, "while I was picking those last peppers in the garden,
+and he jumped on my shoulder and purred against my ear as
+unconcernedly as if he'd only been for a stroll in the lower
+pasture, instead of gone for three months&mdash;the little wretch!"</p>
+
+<p>"It does seem extraordinary"&mdash;the minister unbent his
+long legs and recrossed them carefully, in order to remove
+his foot from the way of the tawny back where it stretched
+out in blissful elongation&mdash;"very extraordinary, that an
+animal could lead that sort of double life, disappearing completely
+when summer comes and returning promptly with
+the fall. I daresay it's a reversion to the old hunting instinct.
+No doubt we could find him if we knew how to trail him on
+the mountains."</p>
+
+<p>"The strangest thing about it is that this year and last he
+came back fat and sleek&mdash;always before, you know, he has
+been so gaunt and starved looking in the fall." She leaned
+over and stroked the cat under his chin; he purred deeply
+in response, and looked up into her eyes, his own like wells
+of unfathomed speech. "I have an eerie feeling," she said,
+"that if he could talk he'd have great things to tell."</p>
+
+<p>The minister laughed, and puffed away at his corncob
+pipe. "Tales of the chase, my dear, of hecatombs of field-mice
+and squirrels!"</p>
+
+<p>But she shook her head. "Not this summer&mdash;that cat has
+spent these last two summers with human beings who have
+treated him as a kind of fetich&mdash;just as we do!" As she
+rubbed his ear she murmured regretfully: "To think of all
+you've heard and seen and done, and you can't tell us one
+thing!"</p>
+
+<p>The Yellow Cat's eyes narrowed to mere slits of black
+across two amber agates; then he shook his ears free, yawned,
+and gave himself up to closed lids and dreams. If he could
+have told it all, just as it happened, not one word of it could
+those good souls have comprehended&mdash;and this was the
+way of it.</p>
+
+<p>It was near the close of a June day when the cat made his
+entrance into that hidden life of the summers from which his
+exits had been as sudden, though less dramatic. In the
+heart of the hills, where a mountain torrent has fretted its way
+for miles through a rocky gorge, there is a place where the
+cleft widens into a miniature valley, and the stream slips
+along quietly between banks of moss before it plunges again
+on its riotous path down the mountain. Here the charcoal-burners,
+half a century ago, had made a clearing, and left
+their dome-shaped stone kiln to cover itself with the green
+velvet and lace of lichen and vine. The man who was stooping
+over the water, cleaning trout for his supper, had found
+it so and made it his own one time in his wandering quest
+for solitude. The kiln now boasted a chimney, a door, and
+one wide window that looked away over the stream's next
+plunge, over other mountains and valleys to far horizons of
+the world of men. This was the hermitage to which he
+brought his fagged-out nerves from the cormorant city that
+feeds on the blood and brains of humans. Here through
+the brief truce of summer he found time to fish and hunt
+enough for his daily wants, time to read, to write, time to
+dream and to smoke his evening pipe, to think long thoughts,
+and more blessed than all&mdash;to sleep! When autumn came
+he would go back with renewed life and a pile of manuscript
+to feed to his hungry cormorant. He was chewing the cud
+of contentment as he bent to his fish cleaning, when, glancing
+to one side where the fire, between stones, was awaiting his
+frying-pan, he caught sight among the bushes of two gleaming
+eyes, and then the sleek back and lashing tail of the Yellow
+Cat. The man, being a cat lover was versed in their ways, so
+for a time he paid no attention, then began to talk softly.</p>
+
+<p>"If you'd come out of that," he said, as he scraped the
+scales, "and not sit there watching me like a Comanche
+Indian, I'd invite you to supper!"</p>
+
+<p>Whether it was the tone of his voice or the smell of the fish
+that conquered, the tawny creature was suddenly across the
+open with a rush and on the stooping shoulders. That was
+the beginning of the companionship that lasted until fall.
+The next season brought the animal as unexpectedly, and
+they took up the old relation where it had left off the previous
+summer. They trudged together through miles of forest,
+sometimes the cat on the man's shoulder, but often making
+side excursions on his own account and coming back with
+the proud burden of bird or tiny beast. Together they
+watched the days decline in red and gold glory from the
+ledge where the stream drops over the next height, or when
+it rained, companioned each other by the hearth in the hut.
+There was between them that satisfying and intimate communion
+of inarticulate speech only possible between man
+and beast.</p>
+
+<p>There came a day when the man sat hour after hour over
+his writing, letting the hills call in vain. The cat slept himself
+out, and when paws in the ink and tracks over the paper
+proved of no avail, he jumped down and marched himself
+haughtily off through the door and across the clearing to
+the forest, tail in air. Late that afternoon the man was
+arrested midway of a thought rounding into phrase by the
+sudden darkness. There was a fierce rush of wind, as if
+some giant had sighed and roused himself. The door of
+the hut slammed shut and the blast from the window scattered
+the papers about the floor. As he went to pull down the
+sash the cat sprang in, shaking from his feet the drops of
+rain already slanting in a white sheet across the little valley.
+At the same moment there was a "halloo" outside, and a
+woman burst open the door, turning quickly to shut out
+behind her the onrush of the shower and the biting cold of the
+wind. She stood shaking the drops from her hair, and then
+she looked into the astonished face of the man and laughed.</p>
+
+<p>She was as slim and straight as a young poplar, clad in
+white shirt-waist and khaki Turkish trousers with gaiters
+laced to the knee. Her hair was blown about in a red-gold
+snarl, and her eyes looked out as unabashed as a boy's. The
+two stared at each other for a time in silence, and finally it
+was the woman who spoke first.</p>
+
+<p>"This isn't exactly what I call a warm welcome&mdash;not
+just what the cat led me to expect! It was really the cat who
+brought me&mdash;I met him over on Slide Mountain&mdash;he fled
+and I pursued, and now here we are!"</p>
+
+<p>She made a hasty survey of the hut, and then of its owner,
+putting her head on one side as she looked about her with a
+quick, bird-like movement, he still staring in stupefaction.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course you detest having me here, but you won't put
+me out in the rain, again, will you?"</p>
+
+<p>At once he was his courteous self. With the same motion
+he dumped the astonished cat from the cushioned chair by
+the writing table, and drew it forward to the fire. Then he
+threw on a fresh stick of pine that flared up in a bright blaze,
+and with deferring gentleness took the sweater that hung from
+her shoulders and hung it to dry over a section of tree-trunk
+that served as a chimney seat.</p>
+
+<p>"You are as welcome to my hut as any princess to her
+palace," he smiled on her, "indeed, it is yours while you choose
+to stay in it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you think," she made reply, as he drew another
+chair up opposite to her, "that under the circumstances we
+might dispense with fine speeches? It is hardly, I suppose,
+what one would call a usual situation, is it?"</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her as she stretched her small feet comfortably
+to the blaze, her face quite unconcerned.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he acquiesced, "it certainly is not usual&mdash;or I
+should hate it&mdash;the 'usual' is what I fly from!"</p>
+
+<p>She threw back her head, clasping her hands behind it as
+she laughed. She seemed to luxuriate as frankly in the heat
+and the dryness as the cat between them.</p>
+
+<p>"And I"&mdash;she turned the comprehension of her eyes upon
+him&mdash;"I cross the ocean every year in the same flight!"</p>
+
+<p>The storm drove leaves and flying branches against the
+window, while they sat, for what seemed a long time, in contented
+silence. He found himself as openly absorbing her
+charm as if she had been a tree or a mountain sunset, while
+she was making further tours of inspection with her eyes
+about the room.</p>
+
+<p>"It is entirely adorable," she smiled at him, "but it piques
+my curiosity!'</p>
+
+<p>"Ask all the questions you wish&mdash;no secrets here."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what, if you please, is the object I see swung aloft
+there in the dome?"</p>
+
+<p>"My canvas hammock which I lower at night to climb into
+and go to bed, and pull up in the daytime to clear the decks."</p>
+
+<p>"And the big earthen pot in the fireplace&mdash;it has gruesome
+suggestions of the 'Forty Thieves!'"</p>
+
+<p>"Only a sort of perpetual hot-water tank. The fire never
+quite goes out on this domestic hearth, and proves a very
+acceptable companion at this high altitude. There is always
+the kettle on the crane, as you see it there, but limitless hot
+water is the fine art of housekeeping&mdash;but, perhaps you
+don't know the joy there is to be found in the fine art
+of housekeeping?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I do not," her eyes took on a whimsical expression,
+"but I'd like to learn&mdash;anything in the way of a new
+joy! In the way of small joys I am already quite a
+connoisseur, indeed I might call myself a collector in that
+line&mdash;of <i>bibelot</i> editions, you understand, for thus far I
+seem to have been unable to acquire any of the larger
+specimens! Would you be willing to take me on as a
+pupil in housekeeping?"</p>
+
+<p>"It would add to my employment a crowning joy&mdash;not a
+<i>bibelot</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"Pinchbeck fine speeches again," she shrugged. "Do
+you stop here all the long summer quite alone?"</p>
+
+<p>"All the 'short summer,'" he corrected, "save for the
+society of the cat, who dropped down last year from nowhere.
+He must have approved of the accommodations, for he has
+chosen me, you see, a second time for a summer resort."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;I think he was trying to protest about you being
+his exclusive find, when I invited myself to follow him down the
+mountain&mdash;leading and eluding are so much alike, one is
+often mistaken, is it not so?"</p>
+
+<p>She was sitting forward now, chin in hands, elbows on her
+knees, gazing into the flames where a red banner waved
+above the back log. When she turned to him again the
+westering sun had broken through the clouds and was sending
+a flare of rosy light in at the window. Studying her face
+more fully, he saw that she was years&mdash;fully ten years&mdash;older
+than he had supposed. The boyish grace that sat so lightly
+was after all the audacious ease of a woman of the world, sure
+of herself.</p>
+
+<p>"I, too, am living the hermit life for the summer. I am the
+happy possessor of a throat that demands an annual mountain-cure.
+Switzerland with its perpetual spectacular note gets
+on my nerves, so last year we found this region&mdash;I and my
+two faithful old servitors. Do you know the abandoned
+tannery in the West Branch Clove? That has been fitted
+up for our use, and there we live the simple life as I am able
+to attain it&mdash;but you have so far outdone me that you have
+filled my soul with discontent!"</p>
+
+<p>"Alas," said the man, "you have served me the very same
+trick! I could almost wish&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That I had not come!"</p>
+
+<p>"Say, rather, that you would come again!"</p>
+
+<p>She stood up and reached for her sweater, waiting for him
+to open the door. The round of the little valley was a glittering
+green bowl filled with pink cloud scuds. They stepped
+out into a jubilant world washed clean and freshly smiling.
+She put out her hand in good-bye.</p>
+
+<p>"I almost think I shall come again! If you were a person
+with whom one could be solitary&mdash;who knows!"</p>
+
+<p>When she appeared the next time she found him by the
+noise of his chopping. They climbed to the top of the moss-covered
+boulder that hangs poised over the ledge where the
+stream leaps into the abyss. Below them the hills rolled in
+an infinite recession of leaf-clad peaks to the sky line, where
+they melted to a blur of bluish-green mist.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, these mountains of America!" she cried, "their
+greenness is a thing of dreams to us who know only bare
+icy and alps!"</p>
+
+<p>"Far lovelier," he said, "to look down upon than to look
+up to, I think. To be a part of the height comes pretty near
+to being happy, for the moment."</p>
+
+<p>She turned from the view to study her companion. The
+lines in the corners of his kind, tired eyes, the lean, strong
+figure, hair graying about the temples. He grew a little
+impatient under it before she spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know," she said slowly, "I am going to like you!
+To like you immensely&mdash;and to trust you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, I shall try to be worthy"&mdash;even his derision
+was gentle&mdash;"I seem to remember having been trusted
+before by members of your sex&mdash;even liked a little, though
+not perhaps 'immensely'! At any rate this certainly promises
+to be an experience quite by itself!"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite by itself," she echoed.</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't it be as well for you to know my name, say, as
+a beginning?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," she nodded, "that's just what I don't want! I
+only want to know you. Names are extraneous things&mdash;tags,
+labels&mdash;let us waive them. If I tell you how I feel
+about this meeting of ours will you try to understand me?"</p>
+
+<p>The answer was less in words than in the assent of his
+honest gray eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been surfeited all my life," she went on, "with
+love&mdash;I want no more of it! The one thing I do want,
+more than anything else, is a man friend. I have thought a
+great deal about such a friendship&mdash;the give and take on
+equal terms, the sexless companionship of mind&mdash;what it
+could be like!"</p>
+
+<p>He brushed the twigs from the lichens between them and
+made no answer.</p>
+
+<p>"Fate&mdash;call the power what you will"&mdash;she met the
+disclaimer that puckered the corners of his mouth&mdash;"fate
+brought us together. It was the response to my longing for
+such a friendship!"</p>
+
+<p>"It was the Yellow Cat!"</p>
+
+<p>"The Yellow Cat plus fate! While I sat there by your
+fire I recognized you for that friend!"</p>
+
+<p>Far below over the tree tops cloud shadows and sunlight
+were playing some wonderful game of follow-my-leader; a
+hawk hung poised on tilting wings; and on the veil of mist
+that was the spirit of the brook where it cast itself from the
+ledge curved the arch of a rainbow. The man pointed to
+the augury.</p>
+
+<p>"You might try me," he said, and they shook hands on the
+compact, laughing half shamefacedly at their own solemnity.</p>
+
+<p>"As woman to woman," he offered.</p>
+
+<p>"Let it be rather as man to man," she shrugged.</p>
+
+<p>"As you like&mdash;as women we should have to begin by
+explaining ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely, and men companion each other on impersonal
+grounds."</p>
+
+<p>"Then it is a man's friendship?"</p>
+
+<p>"Better still," she mused, "we'll pattern it after the ideals
+of the disembodied! We'll make this summer, you and I
+together, a gem from the heart of life&mdash;I will have it so!"</p>
+
+<p>So it came about that like two children they played together,
+worked, walked, or read and talked by the open fire when cold
+storms came. Every morning she came over the wood-road
+that led by winding ways from her valley, and at sunset she
+went back over the trail alone. He might go as far as the
+outlook half way over the mountain where the path begins
+to go down, but no farther; as for any fear, she seemed to know
+nothing of its workings, and the revolver she wore in a case that
+hung from her belt was a mere convention.</p>
+
+<p>One morning she came with eyes dancing&mdash;it was to be
+an especial day&mdash;a f&ecirc;te&mdash;and the gods had smiled on her
+planning and given them perfect weather. Never such sunshine,
+such crystal air, such high-hung clouds! Breakfast
+over, they hurried about the miniature housework, and
+packed the kit for a long day's tramp. Then they started
+forth, the cat following, tail aloft. Beyond a dim peak, where
+the clove opens southward, by the side of a tiny lake they
+lunched and took their noonday rest. She watched the
+smoke curl up from his pipe where he lay at peace with the
+scheme of things.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know, Man, dear," she said, "I am glad I don't
+in the least guess who you are! I have no doubt you write
+the most delightful stories in the world&mdash;but never put me in
+one, please!"</p>
+
+<p>He took the pipe out of his mouth and looked at her long
+before he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Woman, dear," he said, "I have put you in a place&mdash;your
+own place&mdash;and it is not in my novels!"</p>
+
+<p>She scrambled to her feet laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"It's very well to make stories, but it is really more diverting
+to live them! Come, I must lead you now with your
+eyes shut tight to my surprise!"</p>
+
+<p>So hand in hand they went along a smooth green wood-road
+until she stopped him.</p>
+
+<p>"Look," she cried, "now look!"</p>
+
+<p>Straight away till the road narrowed to a point of light
+against the sky where the mountain dipped down, banks of
+mountain laurel rose on either side in giant hedges of rose
+and white, while high above them waved the elms and beeches
+of the forest.</p>
+
+<p>"It is the gardening of the gods!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is my own treasure-trove! I found it last year and I
+have been waiting to bring you to it on my f&ecirc;te&mdash;what you
+call birthday! And now wish me some beautiful thing&mdash;it
+may come true! There is a superstition in my country&mdash;but
+I shall not tell you&mdash;unless the wish comes true!"</p>
+
+<p>He broke off a spray of the waxen buds and crowned her
+solemnly where she stood.</p>
+
+<p>"I have already wished for you&mdash;the most beautiful thing
+in the world!"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head, sorrowful. "Man, dear, the only
+thing in all the world I still want is the impossible!"</p>
+
+<p>"Only the impossible is worth while&mdash;and I have
+wished!"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head again, laughing a little ruefully. "It
+could not arrive&mdash;my impossible&mdash;and yet you almost
+tempt me to hope!"</p>
+
+<p>"Anything&mdash;everything may arrive! You once thought
+that such a friendship as this of ours could not, and lo, we
+have achieved it!"</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder"&mdash;her eyes seemed fixed on some far prospect,
+a world beyond the flowery way&mdash;"I wonder if we have!
+And I wonder why you have never made a guess about my world
+when you have at least let me get a peep now and then into
+yours?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care a rap about your 'world,'" he smiled into her
+eyes, "while I have you!"</p>
+
+<p>"No curiosity about my&mdash;my profession?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit&mdash;though it was clear enough from the first
+that it was the stage!"</p>
+
+<p>She made an odd little outcry at his powers of divination.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I must look it&mdash;before the footlights from my
+birth! Since you are so clever, Mr. Man, will you also be
+merciful when you come to weigh me in those scales you try
+to hide beneath the garment of your kindness? Think, when
+you judge me, what it is for a woman never to be herself&mdash;always
+to have to play a part!"</p>
+
+<p>He reached and took her hand suddenly, drawing her to
+him with a movement that was almost rough.</p>
+
+<p>"This is no play acting&mdash;this is real! No footlights&mdash;no
+audience&mdash;only you and me in all this world!"</p>
+
+<p>But she drew away, insistently aloof. She would have
+none of his caresses.</p>
+
+<p>"This, too," she said, as she moved apart and stood waiting
+for him to follow, "is a part of the play&mdash;I do not deceive
+myself! When I go back to my world&mdash;my trade, I
+shall remember this little time that you and I have
+snatched from the grudging grasp of life as an act&mdash;a
+scene only! It's a perfect pastoral, Man, dear, but unreal&mdash;absurdly
+unreal&mdash;and we know it ourselves while we
+play the game!"</p>
+
+<p>Down through the flower-bordered vista the cat went
+stalking his prey, his sinuous body a tawny streak winding
+along the green path. These trivial humans, with their
+subtle attractions and compunctions, were as though they
+never had been when the chase was on&mdash;the real business
+and purpose of life!</p>
+
+<p>For the rest of the time they were together they avoided
+the personal. Each felt the threat in the air and tacitly averted
+it. For that one perfect day there should be no past, no future,
+nothing but the golden present.</p>
+
+<p>Swinging in his breeze-rocked hammock between door and
+window the man lay awake through the long watches of the
+night, thinking, thinking, while his heart sang. Toward
+dawn he fell into a deep sleep from which he was only awakened
+by the cat springing up to lick his face in reminder of
+breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>It was when he came back from his plunge in the pool
+that he first noticed a paper pinned to his door-post. Within
+its folds his doom was penned!</p>
+
+<p>"Even you, dear Man, could not wish me the impossible!
+That superstition of my country is that to come true it must
+be the first wish of your f&ecirc;te day&mdash;and by one who loves you!
+Alas, my old servant had already wished&mdash;that he might get
+me started for home to-day! Clever Friedrich&mdash;for he had
+also packed! When you read this I shall be far on my way.
+You could never find me though you searched the earth&mdash;but
+you will never try! It is well as it is, for you see&mdash;it
+was not friendship after all!"</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>And yet there was a sequel. During the following year there
+dropped to the man in his hard-pressed literary life, one of
+those errant plums from the political tree that now and then
+find their way to the right basket. He was named for an
+excellent diplomatic post. His friends congratulated him
+and talked a good deal about "material" and opportunities
+for "unique local color;" his wife chattered unceasingly
+about gowns and social details, while he armed himself, with
+the listless reticence that was become habit, to face new
+responsibilities and rather flavorless experiences. He had
+so withdrawn himself of late to the inner creative life that he
+moved in a kind of phantasmagoria of outer unrealities. It
+was the nearest to a comfortable adjustment for the mis-mating
+of such a marriage as his, but it was not the best of
+preparations for the discharge of public duties, and he walked
+toward his new future with reluctant feet, abstractedly. In
+some such mood as this, his mind bent on a problem of arrangement
+of fiction puppets, seeing "men as trees walking," he
+found himself one day making his bows at a court function.
+Along the line of royal highnesses and grand duchesses with
+his wife he moved, himself a string-pulled puppet, until&mdash;but
+who, in heaven's name is this?</p>
+
+<p>For one mad moment, as he looked into her eyes, he thought
+the tightened cord he sometimes felt tugging at his tired brain
+had snapped, and the images of sight and memory gone hopelessly
+confused. She stood near the end of the line with the
+princesses of secondary rank, and the jewels in her hair were
+not more scintillant than her eyes as he bent over her hand.
+She went a little pale, but she greeted him bravely, and when
+they found themselves unobserved for a moment she spoke
+to him in her soft, careful English:</p>
+
+<p>"You recognized me, you remember, for a play actor, and
+now you are come from the world's end to see me perform
+on my tiny stage! Alas, dear critic, since my last excursion,
+I am no longer letter perfect in my part!"</p>
+
+<p>They met but once again. It was in the crush of guests
+in the great hall where her old Prince, in the splendor of his
+decoration-covered coat, was waiting to hand her to her
+carriage. There was a brief time in which to snatch the doubtful
+sweetness of a few hurried words. She was leaving in the early
+morning for the petty Balkan province where her husband
+held a miniature sway, over a handful of half-savage subjects.
+Hardly more than a renewal of greeting and a farewell, and
+she was gone!</p>
+
+<p>As the old Prince wrapped her more carefully in her furs,
+and the carriage rolled away in the darkness, he spoke to her,
+somewhat puzzled:</p>
+
+<p>"I should be sorry to think the American Ambassador has
+been taking too much wine&mdash;as you well know, my knowledge
+of the barbarous English tongue is but limited, and yet&mdash;I
+thought, as I joined you, he was talking some farrago of
+nonsense about a <i>Yellow Cat</i>!"</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>That year the Yellow Cat came home lean and gaunt, a
+chastened, humble creature, as one who has failed in a long
+quest, and is glad to stretch his weary length before the hearth
+and reap the neglected benefits of the domestic life.</p>
+
+<p>"It is really very odd" said the minister, quite as if he were
+saying something he had never thought of saying before,
+"where that cat goes in the summer!"</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it?" responded the minister's wife&mdash;just as she
+always did. "It fires the imagination! He walks off some
+fine morning and completely shuts the door on our life here&mdash;as
+if he gave us notice not to pry into his movements. But
+this time"&mdash;she was leaning to stroke the tawny sides with a
+pitying touch&mdash;"this time you may be sure something very sad
+and disappointing happened to him&mdash;something in that
+other life went quite wrong! How I wish we could understand
+what it was!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>V</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="A_COCK_AND_POLICEMAN" id="A_COCK_AND_POLICEMAN"></a>A COCK AND POLICEMAN</h2>
+
+<h3>A Tale of Rural England</h3>
+
+<h3>By RALPH KAYE ASSHETON</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It happened</span> up in Lancashire, and the truth can be
+vouched for by at least half a hundred spectators. It
+fell in this wise: Bob O' Tims owned a game-cock which
+was the envy of the whole street for lustre of coloring and
+soundness of wind. Its owner was almost unduly proud of
+his possession, and would watch it admiringly as it stalked
+majestically about among its family of hens.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a cock for you!" he would say, with a little wave
+of his pipe. "There's not many cocks like that one. The
+king himself has got nothing like it down at Windsor Castle."</p>
+
+<p>Now, Jimmy Taylor had always been a rival of Bob O'
+Tims's. Jimmy's grandfather had fought at the Battle of
+Waterloo. This gave him great prestige, and it was almost
+universally believed, in Chellowdene, that the pre&euml;minence of
+the British Empire was mainly due to the battle-zeal of Jimmy's
+ancestry. But whenever Jimmy talked about his grandfather,
+Bob skilfully turned the conversation to his game-cock.
+This made Jimmy testy, and one day he told Bob,
+in contemptuous tones, that "he'd be even wi' him yet, in
+the matter o' game-cocks, as well as everything else."</p>
+
+<p>That was one Monday evening, and the following Wednesday
+Bob O' Tims's cock disappeared. When Bob discovered
+his loss, his face went quite pale with anger. Without a word,
+he flung on his cap and set off for Jimmy Taylor's cottage.</p>
+
+<p>When he reached it, he went still whiter. For Jimmy was
+sitting at the door, and up and down the yard in front of him
+strutted a magnificent game-cock.</p>
+
+<p>Bob O' Tims stretched out his forefinger, pointed at the
+cock, and with a stubborn look forming about his mouth
+and jaw, observed:</p>
+
+<p>"Yon's mine."</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't," responded Jimmy. "It's mine."</p>
+
+<p>"I tell thee, yon's mine. Yo've prigged it."</p>
+
+<p>"It's mine! I bought it at th' fair."</p>
+
+<p>"Thee never bought yon cock at any fair. It's mine, I
+tell thee."</p>
+
+<p>Words grew high between the disputants, as the cock, in
+all its bronze and golden splendor, marched up and down the
+yard, until the argument between the two men terminated in
+a quarrel so violent that half-a-dozen neighbors came in to
+see what was the matter. It ended in Bob O' Tims insisting
+that he would take the matter into court. He was as good
+as his word, and the next time that the bench met, Bob O'
+Tims summoned Jimmy Taylor on a charge of having stolen
+his game-cock.</p>
+
+<p>The magistrates listened to the witnesses on either side.
+Half-a-dozen people were ready to swear that the cock belonged
+to Bob. But Jimmy brought up a couple of witnesses to
+testify that they had seen him buy a similar animal at Turton
+Fair. The cock was then brought into court. It clucked
+and choked indignantly, and the partisans of Bob and Jimmy
+swore against each other as hard as ever they could. The
+bench appeared perplexed; and it was owing to their inability
+to come to any decision that the magistrate's clerk made his
+famous suggestion.</p>
+
+<p>"The case appears to me impossible to prove as it stands,
+your worships," he said to the bench. "I would suggest, if
+I may be allowed, that you direct an officer of the court to
+take the cock to some spot at an equal distance between the
+houses of the plaintiff and of the defendant. If he is there
+placed upon the ground, and left to his own devices, he is
+pretty sure to make his way straight home."</p>
+
+<p>The magistrates accepted the suggestion of the clerk, and
+gave judgment accordingly. A policeman was ordered to
+carry out their instructions. Now, this officer was young and
+raw, and had only recently been enrolled in the constabulary.
+He was a fat, rosy man, with an air of self-importance. He
+set out from the court with the cock under his arm. An
+excited crowd streamed after the policeman, who stalked on
+with no little pomposity. When he reached the common,
+which lay between the houses of the rival claimants, he stood
+still for a minute or two, grasping the cock and looking judiciously
+from one side of the broken land to the other.</p>
+
+<p>The crowd eagerly commenced to give information.</p>
+
+<p>"You're a bit nearer Bob O' Tims's than you are to
+Jimmy's!" cried one.</p>
+
+<p>"Nay! Nay!" interposed another spectator, who was a
+partisan of Bob O' Tims. "There's a corner to turn afore
+you get to Bob's. It's not fair, not to make allowance for
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"Stand back!" cried the policeman majestically&mdash;"Stand
+back, every man of you. The critter will be too much put
+about to go anywhere if you don't keep still tongues in your
+heads."</p>
+
+<p>The officer still stood, with his legs wide apart, turning his
+head slowly from side to side. Once he made a pace in the
+direction of Jimmy Taylor's; then, changing his mind, he took
+a couple of steps toward Bob O' Tims's. Finally, he decided
+that he had fixed upon the exact locality commanded by the
+law, and with a magisterial air, he again waved back the
+crowd and deposited the cock upon the ground in front of him.</p>
+
+<p>Everybody held their breath. The first thing that the
+cock did was to shake himself until he resembled nothing
+so much as a living mop. Then he began to smooth his
+feathers down again. Then he stretched his neck, flapped
+his wings and crowed. Finally, with a blink of his bright
+eyes, which almost appeared like a wink to the hushed and
+expectant crowd, he made two solemn steps with his slender
+legs in the direction of Jimmy Taylor's cottage.</p>
+
+<p>"He's going to Jimmy's!" exclaimed the crowd with one
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Can't you all be quiet for a moment or two," interposed
+the policeman, indignantly. "I tell you, if you don't keep
+still, you'll upset the critter's mind, and make the magistrates'
+decision just good for nothing."</p>
+
+<p>The crowd appeared ashamed and relapsed once more
+into silence.</p>
+
+<p>The policeman stood erect and tall, a few paces in front
+of them, watching the cock with great solemnity. It was
+standing still now, jerking its neck a little. Then it looked
+round, and, retracing its paces, began stepping slowly off in
+the opposite direction.</p>
+
+<p>"It's going to Bob's!" cried the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>But the cock was doing no such thing; it paused again,
+scratching in an imaginary dust-heap, and then, with a loud
+crow, stretched its wings and flew up into a small tree.</p>
+
+<p>This was disconcerting. The policeman turned with anger
+upon the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>"I told you you were not giving the critter a chance!"
+he exclaimed. "You'd best be off home. Come, move on!
+Move on!"</p>
+
+<p>The crowd retreated, but it had no intention of going
+home. Some of those less interested strolled away, but the
+partisans of Bob and Jimmy remained at a little distance,
+eagerly watching to see what would happen next.</p>
+
+<p>The cock, after jerking his head round several times, settled
+down comfortably among his feathers, and went to sleep
+in the tree.</p>
+
+<p>This was altogether beyond the expectancy of the policeman.
+Not knowing what else to do, he sat down on a broken
+bit of fence under the tree and waited.</p>
+
+<p>The day advanced. The cock slept on and the policeman
+began to doze. Now and then he awoke with a start, and
+looked up at the obstinate biped above his head. Presently
+the man got down from the fence and shook himself.</p>
+
+<p>The partisans of Bob and Jimmy still remained at a discreet
+distance, watching the progress of events. The policeman
+stood still for a few moments, staring at the cock; then he
+approached the small, stumpy tree and clapped his hands
+vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>The cock woke up, gurgled, and went to sleep again.</p>
+
+<p>The policeman clapped his hands a second time, and then
+with shrill indignation the creature flew down from the tree,
+and set off in the direction of the distant moors.</p>
+
+<p>The proceedings promptly assumed the aspect of a hunt.
+The cock ran along with outstretched wings and neck, and
+the policeman and the crowd ran after it. At last it reached
+a small cottage, belonging to a widow of the name of Gammer.
+Exerting a final effort, it flew up toward her open window
+and ensconced itself on the top of the good woman's
+tester-bed.</p>
+
+<p>Now Mrs. Gammer was a woman of character. She
+heard the noise outside; and when the breathless policeman
+arrived at the door of her kitchen, she was wiping the soapsuds
+off her plump red arms, ready for any dispute or fray.
+She stood with her arms held akimbo, as the man in blue
+explained his errand. When he had finished his recital she
+looked at him defiantly.</p>
+
+<p>"And I should like to know what you call yourself, policeman
+or no policeman, to be chasing a poor harmless critter
+across 'em blazing commons on a day like this! You want
+to go and poke him down from my tester-bed, do you? Well,
+you can just go back and tell the magistrates as Mrs. Gammer's
+got him, and if they want him they must come for him
+themselves."</p>
+
+<p>This was direct defiance of the law, and the policeman
+commenced a remonstrance. His remarks were, however, cut
+short by Mrs. Gammer.</p>
+
+<p>"I have always said as magistrates was as ignorant as
+babies, and I only wish that they was as harmless," she persisted,
+in open contempt of the government of her country.
+"You can go back, and tell 'em as Mrs. Gammer says so.
+My house is my house, magistrate or no magistrate, and I
+won't have any policeman messing about on the top of my
+tester-bed."</p>
+
+<p>The policeman was not certain whether the authority which
+had been entrusted to him in the matter would justify his
+making a deliberate prisoner of Mrs. Gammer. And, as
+she showed every sign of resorting to violence, should he
+attempt to pass the door, which she barred with her stout
+figure, he decided upon beating a retreat. He went outside
+again and reasserted his shattered dignity by once more driving
+away the crowd; then, not knowing what else to do, he returned
+to the police station and reported the matter to the chief
+constable.</p>
+
+<p>The chief laughed, and so did everybody else who heard
+the story. The policeman was directed to return to Mrs.
+Gammer's cottage later in the day, and serve her with an order
+requiring her to give up the cock immediately. But when
+he handed Mrs. Gammer the official paper, she laughed in
+his face.</p>
+
+<p>"You can look round the house for the cock now if you
+like," she said contemptuously, slapping down the order upon
+the table, "and you can see if you can find him."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he still on the top of your tester-bed?" demanded the
+policeman.</p>
+
+<p>"Go and look," responded Mrs. Gammer, with a snort.
+"You can take the turk's-head brush and brush him down!"</p>
+
+<p>So, armed with the turk's-head brush, the policeman
+ascended Mrs. Gammer's small, steep staircase. When he
+reached her bedroom, he poked into every cranny and corner
+with the handle of his brush. But no cock was to be found.</p>
+
+<p>He descended the stairs, and stood again in the little
+kitchen. A savory smell of cooking arose from a stew-pan
+on the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"Where's the critter gone to?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"How should I know?" replied Mrs. Gammer testily.</p>
+
+<p>The policeman, still standing in the kitchen, wished that
+Mrs. Gammer would give him an invitation to supper. The
+widow glanced up sharply at him and saw what was in his
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd like some supper, I make no doubt, after your
+wild-goose chase," she said. "Sit down at t' table and take
+a bit o' stew."</p>
+
+<p>The policeman seated himself with alacrity. The stew
+which Mrs. Gammer placed before him consisted of a mixture
+of barley, onions and some white meat. He ate a hearty
+supper, and when he stood up he drew his hands across his
+mouth.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you kindly," he said. "I must be off now, and
+see where that cock has gone to."</p>
+
+<p>Then it was that Mrs. Gammer gave a short and derisive
+laugh. She began to pile up the empty plates and to put the
+spoons and forks in the basin by the sink.</p>
+
+<p>"If you go a-chasing of that cock until you are black and
+blue in the face," she said, "you'll never find him. And the
+reason why, is that you have just helped to eat him up."</p>
+
+<p>"I have eat him up!" he gasped.</p>
+
+<p>"Aye," responded Mrs. Gammer, with brevity. "I made
+him into soup!"</p>
+
+<p>The policeman remained open-mouthed, staring at the
+impenitent widow.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd no business ever to do such a thing," he said.
+"The cock belonged to the Law."</p>
+
+<p>"I care nowt for your Law," retorted Mrs. Gammer.
+"Anyway you've helped to eat him!"</p>
+
+<p>A vague sense of cannibalism was haunting the policeman's
+mind; he felt almost as dismayed as if he had made a
+hearty supper off the magistrate's clerk himself.</p>
+
+<p>"You're a very wicked woman," he said to Mrs. Gammer.
+"And&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He broke off, entirely nonplussed by the situation in which
+he found himself. Mrs. Gammer continued to wash up the
+spoons and forks with utter indifference to his consternation.</p>
+
+<p>"The cock's eat up, and there's an end of it," she said.
+"You'd best go and tell the magistrates all about it."</p>
+
+<p>Sheepish and disconcerted, the policeman slunk home.
+The next morning the chief asked him if he had served the
+order on Mrs. Gammer.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;served it," said he, scratching his head.</p>
+
+<p>"And did you get the bird given up?" demanded his
+superior officer.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I can't say as I did," replied the policeman.</p>
+
+<p>"Was it still on the top of the tester-bed?" pursued his
+awkward questioner.</p>
+
+<p>"No. It was not on the tester-bed," replied the policeman.</p>
+
+<p>"Then where was it?" insisted the chief.</p>
+
+<p>For several seconds the policeman was silent, then he
+told a lie.</p>
+
+<p>"I canna say," he answered, "it war gone."</p>
+
+<p>The chief shrugged his shoulders, and sent the man about
+the business of the day. The next time that the magistrates
+met, the question of Bob O' Tims's cock was again brought
+into court. The magistrate's clerk demanded if the case
+were settled.</p>
+
+<p>To the great relief of the policeman, who was waiting in
+attendance, Bob O' Tims spoke up from the spot where he
+stood.</p>
+
+<p>"Jim hadna stolen my cock after all, sir," he said, "for
+it came home the next morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what happened to the cock that was brought into
+court on Tuesday?" demanded the magistrate's clerk. But
+nobody seemed to know.</p>
+
+<p>Only, people used to wonder why Widow Gammer almost
+always gave a peculiar kind of snort when she spoke of Police
+Constable X, and why that worthy officer avoided her cottage
+ever after, and invariably turned down a side street if he saw
+the widow within speaking distance of him.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>VI</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="PRISONERS_IN_THE_TOWER" id="PRISONERS_IN_THE_TOWER"></a>PRISONERS IN THE TOWER</h2>
+
+<h3>An Episode of Travel</h3>
+
+<h3>By LUCY COPINGER</h3>
+
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">In the</span> words of Macaulay this, ladies and gentleman, is
+the saddest spot on earth." The white-haired old
+Tower guard in charge of the little chapel of Saint Peter waved
+his hand impressively toward the open door. "Through that
+door"&mdash;the heads of the American tourists who were doing
+the Tower all turned in unison&mdash;"you may see the block
+upon which many a royal head has rested, and beneath these
+very stones lie buried two dukes between two queens&mdash;Dukes
+of Northumberland and of Somerset, with the Queens
+Anne Boleyn and Katherine Howard&mdash;all beheaded."</p>
+
+<p>The chapel was a crypt-like place, windowless, dark, and
+musty, and at this mournful climax one of the tourists who
+was nervous moved suddenly off that particular stone upon
+which she had been standing; the school teachers out for
+self-improvement began to write it all in their note-books,
+while a stout matron evidently of good old Dutch stock looked
+sadly down at the flat, gray stones. "Poor things!" she
+murmured, "and there ain't one of them got a respectable
+white tombstone with a wreath carved on it." Then, in their
+usual two-by-two line, the party moved down the aisle wearily,
+but triumphant in the fact that they had succeeded in doing
+the Tower, the Abbey, and the Museum all in one day. Peggy
+Wynne, in demurely severe blue suit and jaunty panama,
+lagged at the end of the line while she looked critically at her
+compatriots.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"The animals went out two by two,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The elephant and the kangaroo,"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>she murmured to herself, "and I'm so tired of playing Noah's
+Ark or a Christian Association out for a lark," she continued
+in unconscious poetical despair. Then, warned by the attitude
+of the guard, that wonderful attitude of the haughty Briton
+in hopes of a tip, she opened her ridiculously tiny gold-linked
+purse and gave herself up to the absorbing question as to
+which of the pieces therein was a shilling. Having at last
+decided this, she presented it to the guard with a dazzling
+smile. It had been so long since Peggy had had an opportunity
+to smile at anything masculine that the smile was
+unusually bright.</p>
+
+<p>She had already passed through the little door when she
+suddenly turned back. The other tourists, noses in Baedekers,
+were hurrying on before, the guard was busily counting
+his sixpences, and she slipped back into the dim chapel
+unperceived.</p>
+
+<p>"They'll think I've gone back to those dingy lodgings,"
+she reflected, as she groped her way between the benches
+into an even more shadowy corner&mdash;a little recess, with a tiny
+niche in the wall, that had probably been the sanctuary of
+some pious king. She seated herself comfortably behind the
+pillar in the corner and gazed pensively at the stones.</p>
+
+<p>"Tombs and tombs and tombs!" she murmured mournfully,
+"even in Paris, instead of Maxim's and the cafes, nothing
+but tombs! The next time I want to see where anybody is
+buried I will just go out to the cemetery instead of coming
+across that dreadful ocean. Oh, just to have one adventure
+before I go home!" she continued with a long sigh, "a real
+adventure with a real man in it&mdash;not a horrid, womanish
+Frenchman or a stolid, conceited Britisher, but a nice, safe
+American&mdash;like&mdash;like&mdash;like&mdash;my American."</p>
+
+<p>Then the dimple in her right cheek that was probably
+responsible for the calling her Peggy, in spite of her many
+protests for her rightful dignity of "Margaret," came out
+suddenly as it always did when she thought of her American.
+She had called him that from the time when, in the midst of
+the perplexities of the English luggage system, she had looked
+up and found him watching her. The cut of his gray suit
+and his shoes had told her his nationality at once, and they
+had looked for a moment at each other with that peculiar
+friendliness that compatriots in a strange land always feel.
+She had forgotten him until, leaning from a taxi-cab in the
+Rue de la Paix, she had met the same eyes, this time so unrefrainedly
+joyful in their recognition that she had suddenly
+blushed. When, a week later at Calais, as she stood by the
+rail of the departing Channel steamer she caught a glimpse of
+him on the dock, he had seemed like an old friend, and before
+she had thought she had smiled in answer to his lifted hat.
+She had grown so sure of seeing him that now when they had
+been in London a week and he had not appeared she found
+herself suddenly sick of tombs and tourists.</p>
+
+<p>Peggy's day had been a strenuous one of trams, motor-busses,
+abbeys, and galleries, and though she realized an adventure
+might probably await her outside, it was pleasant to
+sit for awhile in the dimness of the quiet chapel. From her
+recess she could look out through the open doors upon the
+tragic Tower Green, where in the sunlight two sparrows were
+frivolously flirting. Even as she watched, the sparrows grew
+dim, her ridiculously tiny purse slipped from her hand, her
+head with its thick dark hair dropped against the pillar, and
+her lashes touched her cheek. After awhile a cautious footfall
+sounded in the chapel, then somewhere a heavy door closed,
+and all was still.</p>
+
+<p>When Peggy sat up indignantly with the queer sensation
+that she had been violently shaken, darkness surrounded
+her, a darkness so deep that she could not see her hand as
+she ran it along the bench in front of her. With the movement
+came remembrance of her surroundings, and also a
+realization in strained and aching muscles that a stone pillar
+is not a wise choice for a head-rest.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" she gasped painfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be frightened," entreated a voice quite near to her,
+and out of the lesser darkness a tall black figure rose suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not at all frightened," said Peggy at once. In
+spite of the bigness of the figure there was something reassuring
+in the voice with its crisp, humorous note and its intonation
+that Peggy at once recognized as American.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing here?" she continued, inhospitably
+addressing the darkness before her.</p>
+
+<p>"I went to sleep" the voice explained, "on the other side
+of the pillar."</p>
+
+<p>"How silly!" said Peggy, severely, "didn't you see me here?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was a little dim," the voice apologized and, Peggy's
+silence still condemning, "you should have snored," it continued
+extenuatingly.</p>
+
+<p>Peggy arose with a dignity that she hoped penetrated the
+darkness. Then she groped along the bench.</p>
+
+<p>"My purse," she explained anxiously, "and it had a sixpence
+for tea and two shillings for tips," she continued with an
+unconscious epitome of the joys of traveling. As she groped
+along bench and floor she was conscious of assistance from
+her companion, and just as she grasped the discovered purse
+she felt purse and hand caught and retained in a firm grip.</p>
+
+<p>"I apologize," he said at once, still however, holding on
+to her hand, "I thought it was the purse."</p>
+
+<p>Peggy jerked her hand loose indignantly, and speechless
+with wrath she hurried toward the door only to find that she
+had mistaken her direction. In her effort to recover her
+bearings she become hopelessly confused, stumbled noisily
+over a bench, and fell headlong into the arms of her companion.</p>
+
+<p>"You had better sit down again," he remarked coolly as
+he returned her to her seat and sat down calmly beside her.
+As he did so Peggy noted curiously the dim attractive silhouette
+of his head and the remarkably good line from ear to
+shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"I am going at once," she said haughtily, but without moving.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't," the man beside her replied, "and if you
+promise not to cry or fall over any more benches I will tell you
+why&mdash;although I myself do not object to the latter," he continued
+judicially, "but for the sake of your own bones, merely."</p>
+
+<p>Peggy ignored the last.</p>
+
+<p>"Why can't I go?" she said defiantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Because the door is locked," he explained succinctly.</p>
+
+<p>"We can both scream or you can throw a bench through
+the window," said Peggy triumphantly.</p>
+
+<p>The unseen laughed a nice laugh that Peggy liked.</p>
+
+<p>"In that latter case, beside the fact that there is no window,
+we would surely be had up before the head-warden of this
+old jail. Besides, do you know what time it is?"</p>
+
+<p>"About tea time," said Peggy who had lunched frugally
+at one of the tea-shops on a cup of tea and a jam roll.</p>
+
+<p>"Just before you woke up," said her companion, "I used
+my last match&mdash;it always is the last in a case like this&mdash;to
+look at my watch. It was half-past twelve. Remember, you
+promised&mdash;&mdash;" at a warning gurgle from Peggy.</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly a laugh rang out sweet and clear in the
+darkness of the musty chapel, a laugh that echoed into the
+recesses of the old tombs&mdash;perhaps in its musical cadences
+stirring pleasantly the haughty slumber of their noble
+occupants.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you laughing at?" said the voice suspiciously.</p>
+
+<p>"An adventure at last!" Peggy cried, clapping her hands
+applaudingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad you take it so cheerfully," returned her companion.
+"There is only one thing to do," he continued
+practically, "I thought it out for myself before you woke up
+and complicated matters by your appearance. Of course
+with sufficient yelling we can arouse the barrack sentry, and
+for our pains we'd probably have the whole barrack out to
+arrest us. There is no way in which you can offend the noble
+and independent Briton more deeply than by treating lightly
+his worship of royalty, dead or alive, and we would probably
+be held for committing <i>lese majeste</i> by getting ourselves
+locked up with the numerous relicts of Henry the Eighth. But
+if we wait until morning we can run good chances of slipping
+out unperceived with the first crowd of tourists."</p>
+
+<p>"I feel just like the little princes in the Tower, or Queen
+Mary or Charlotte Corday," murmured Peggy in ecstatic
+historical confusion, "or somebody noble and romantic and
+beheaded. I think I shall play at being Queen Mary. I
+once learned a piece about her. It was very sad, but I always
+stuck at the fifth line and had to sit down. Since we have to
+stay here till morning we might as well amuse ourselves and
+you may be Rizzio."</p>
+
+<p>"Who was he?" asked her companion sceptically, "sounds
+like one of those Italian fellows."</p>
+
+<p>"He was Queen Mary's chaperon," Peggy explained
+vaguely, "and he sang her love songs."</p>
+
+<p>"Good," said the voice agreeably.</p>
+
+<p>"Can't you think of something else for me?" said the unseen,
+gloomily appalled by the prospect of having doughnut recipes
+pronounced over his remains.</p>
+
+<p>"How would you like to be Darnley?" said Peggy. "He
+was her husband." "I'll be Darnley," came from the
+darkness so decidedly that Peggy jumped.</p>
+
+<p>"You have to get blown-up right off," she hastened to add.
+"Darnley did."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh he did, did he?" the voice spoke with deeper gloom.</p>
+
+<p>"Queen Mary did it," added Peggy.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, even in the Dark Ages matrimony seems to have
+given your sex the same privileges," philosophized her companion
+cynically.</p>
+
+<p>"How mean!" said Peggy coldly, "I shall play at being
+Elizabeth all alone."</p>
+
+<p>"It wouldn't suit you," said her discarded leading man,
+"not with your voice."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" said Peggy.</p>
+
+<p>"Because it's not hard and cold and metallic enough.
+Because it has too much womanly sweetness in it and not
+enough harsh masculinity."</p>
+
+<p>"What a good dramatic critic you would make!" said
+Peggy a little spitefully, "and since you are reading voices
+I can tell quite well by yours that you are fat and red faced."</p>
+
+<p>The man laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"And by the same token you are all sweetness and blue
+eyes and dearness and dimples," he punished her. Then
+the banter in his tones died suddenly out.</p>
+
+<p>"There's something I want to tell you," he said abruptly,
+with a movement that seemed in the darkness like a sudden
+squaring of his shoulders. "But first I want you to tell me
+your name."</p>
+
+<p>"What a sudden descent from romance and poetry to mere
+stupid facts," hedged Peggy. "Think, in this atmosphere of
+royalties if it should be Bridget, or, still more horrible,
+Mamie."</p>
+
+<p>"Please," the voice persisted in its gravity, "we have been
+fellow-prisoners, you know, and you should be kind."</p>
+
+<p>Peggy told him with the full three-syllabled dignity of the
+"Margaret."</p>
+
+<p>"Mine," he continued, "is John Barrett."</p>
+
+<p>"Now," cried Peggy, "if this were a proper adventure we
+have reached the place when I should be able to say, 'Why!
+not the Jack Barrett that Brother Billy knew at Harvard?'
+Then you would cry, 'And this is my old chum William's
+little sister Peggy that used to send him fudge!' and then
+everything would be all right. But I haven't any brother
+at all," she finished regretfully.</p>
+
+<p>"And Harvard wasn't my college," said her companion.
+"However," he went on, "it would take more than the conventional
+backing of many brother Billies to put me right
+with you after I've told you what I have to tell you."</p>
+
+<p>"Then don't do it," said Peggy softly.</p>
+
+<p>"If I didn't know you'd find it out in a very few minutes
+I wouldn't," he confessed shamelessly. "But before I
+tell you I want you to know what finding you here meant to
+me. You've got to realize the temptation before you can
+understand the fall. You always got away from me, from that
+first time in Liverpool&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" said Peggy with a gasp.</p>
+
+<p>"And at Paris and at Calais when you smiled adorably
+at me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't" said Peggy, blushing in the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>"When you didn't smile adorably at me, then," pursued
+the voice relentlessly. "It was always the same. I found
+you and you were gone&mdash;snatched away by an unkind fate
+in the form of your man from Cook's. When you sailed away
+from me at Calais I was booked to leave that same day from
+Antwerp, but I came on here after you instead. London is
+small&mdash;the American tourist London, that is&mdash;the Abbey,
+the Museum, the galleries, and the Tower, but I seemed to
+miss you everywhere. It was fate again that sent me here to
+find you asleep in the corner."</p>
+
+<p>"Now I know you are going to tell something very foolish,"
+said Peggy reflectively, "when people begin to talk about
+fate like that you always find they are just trying to shift the
+responsibility."</p>
+
+<p>"I want you to know it wasn't premeditated, however,"
+pursued the voice. "It wasn't till the guard shut the door
+that I thought of it. You will believe that, won't you?" he
+pleaded.</p>
+
+<p>The dimple appeared suddenly in Peggy's cheek. There
+came an echo from without of many footsteps.</p>
+
+<p>"And so," she took up the tale quickly, "having nicely
+planned it all out you shook me rudely to wake me up, told
+me the door was locked, and that it was midnight when it
+was only four in the afternoon. And it wasn't at all necessary
+to shake me so hard," she continued, "because I woke up
+when you came in."</p>
+
+<p>"Peggy you knew!" the voice cried with a sudden realization,
+"you knew and you stayed!" He caught her hand, and in
+the darkness she could feel his nearness. Then suddenly the
+door opened letting into the chapel a flood of bright sunlight.
+"Ladies and gentlemen," the sonorous voice of the old guard
+came to them, "this, in the words of Macaulay, is the saddest
+spot on earth," continued the mournful recital, even as, in
+happy contradiction, Peggy and her American, secure in their
+little recess, looked blissfully into each other's eyes.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>VII</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="SANKEYS_DOUBLE-HEADER" id="SANKEYS_DOUBLE-HEADER"></a>SANKEY'S DOUBLE-HEADER</h2>
+
+<h3>A Winter's Tale</h3>
+
+<h3>By FRANK H. SPEARMAN</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> oldest man in the train service didn't pretend to
+say how long Sankey had worked for the company.
+Pat Francis was a very old conductor; but old man Sankey
+was a veteran when Pat Francis began braking. Sankey ran
+a passenger train when Jimmie Brady was running&mdash;and
+Jimmie afterward enlisted and was killed in the Custer fight.</p>
+
+<p>There was an odd tradition about Sankey's name. He was
+a tall, swarthy fellow, and carried the blood of a Sioux chief
+in his veins. It was in the time of the Black Hills excitement,
+when railroad men, struck by the gold fever, were abandoning
+their trains even at way-stations and striking across the
+divide for Clark's Crossing. Men to run the trains were
+hard to get, and Tom Porter, trainmaster, was putting in every
+man he could pick up without reference to age or color.
+Porter (he died at Julesburg afterward) was a great "jollier,"
+and he wasn't afraid of anybody on earth. One day a war
+party of Sioux clattered into town and tore around like a
+storm. They threatened to scalp everything, even to the
+local tickets. They dashed in on Tom Porter, sitting in the
+despatcher's office upstairs, while the despatcher was hiding
+below, under a loose plank in the baggage-room floor. Tom,
+being bald as a sand-hill, considered himself exempt from
+scalping parties anyway. He was working a game of solitaire
+when they bore down on him, and got them interested in it.
+That led to a parley, which ended by Porter's hiring the whole
+band to brake on freight trains. Old man Sankey was said
+to have been one of that original war party.</p>
+
+<p>Now this is merely a caboose story, told on winter nights
+when trainmen get stalled in the snow that drifts down from
+the Sioux country. But what follows is better attested.</p>
+
+<p>Sankey, to start with, had a peculiar name&mdash;an unpronounceable,
+unspellable, unmanageable name. I never heard
+it, so I can't give it to you; but it was as hard to catch as an
+Indian pony, and that name made more trouble on the payrolls
+than all the other names put together. Nobody at headquarters
+could handle it; it was never turned in twice alike,
+and they were always writing Tom Porter about the thing.
+Tom explained several times that it was Sitting Bull's ambassador
+who was drawing that money, and that he usually signed
+the pay-roll with a tomahawk. But nobody at Omaha ever
+knew how to take a joke. The first time Tom went down, he
+was called in very solemnly to explain again about the name,
+and being in a hurry and very tired of the whole business,
+Tom spluttered: "Hang it, don't bother me any more about
+that name! If you can't read it make it Sankey, and be done
+with it."</p>
+
+<p>They took Tom at his word. They actually did make it
+Sankey; and that's how our oldest conductor came to bear
+the name of the famous singer. And more I may tell you:
+good name as it was&mdash;and is&mdash;the Sioux never disgraced it.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose every old traveler on the system knew Sankey.
+He was not only always ready to answer questions; but, what
+is more, ready to answer the same question twice. It is that
+which makes conductors gray-headed and spoils their chances
+for heaven&mdash;answering the same questions over and over
+again. Children were apt to be startled a bit at first sight
+of Sankey, he was so dark. But Sankey had a very quiet
+smile that always made them friends after the first trip
+through the sleepers, and they sometimes ran about asking
+for him after he had left the train. Of late years&mdash;and this
+hurts a bit&mdash;these very same children, grown ever so much
+bigger, and riding again to or from California or Japan or
+Australia, will ask, when they reach the West End, about the
+Indian conductor. But the conductors who now run the overland
+trains pause at the question, checking over the date
+limits on the margins of the coupon tickets, and handing
+the envelopes back, look at the children, and say quietly:
+"He isn't running any more."</p>
+
+<p>If you have ever gone over our line to the mountains or to
+the coast, you may remember at McCloud, where they change
+engines and set the diner in or out, the pretty little green park
+to the east of the depot, with a row of catalpa trees along the
+platform line. It looks like a glass of spring water. If it
+happened to be Sankey's run and a regular West End day,
+sunny and delightful, you would be sure to see standing under
+the catalpas a shy, dark-skinned girl of fourteen or fifteen
+years, silently watching the preparations for the departure of
+the Overland. And after the new engine had been backed
+champing down, and harnessed to its long string of vestibuled
+sleepers; after the air-hose had been connected and examined;
+after the engineer had swung out of his cab, filled his cups, and
+swung in again; after the fireman and his helper had disposed
+of their slice-bar and shovel and given the tender a final
+sprinkle, and after the conductor had walked leisurely
+forward, compared time with the engineer, and cried,
+"All Abo-o-o-ard!" then, as your coach moved slowly ahead,
+you might notice, under the receding catalpas, the little girl
+waving a parasol or a handkerchief at the outgoing train.
+That is, at Conductor Sankey; for she was his daughter,
+Neeta Sankey. Her mother was Spanish, and died when
+Neeta was a wee bit. Neeta and the Limited were Sankey's
+whole world.</p>
+
+<p>When Georgie Sinclair began pulling the Limited, running
+west opposite Foley, he struck up a great friendship with
+Sankey. Sankey, though he was hard to start, was full of
+early-day stories. Georgie, it seemed, had the faculty of
+getting him to talk; perhaps because when he was pulling
+Sankey's train he made extraordinary efforts to keep on time;
+time was a hobby with Sankey. Foley said he was so careful
+of it that he let his watch stop when he was off duty just to
+save time. Sankey loved to breast the winds and the floods and
+the snows, and if he could get home pretty near on schedule,
+with everybody else late, he was happy; and in respect of that,
+as Sankey used to say, Georgie Sinclair could come nearer
+gratifying Sankey's ambition than any engine-runner we had.
+Even the firemen used to observe that the young engineer,
+always neat, looked still neater on the days when he took out
+Sankey's train.</p>
+
+<p>By and by there was an introduction under the catalpas.
+After that it was noticed that Georgie began wearing gloves
+on the engine&mdash;not kid gloves, but yellow dogskin; and
+black silk shirts&mdash;he bought them in Denver. Then&mdash;such
+an odd way engineers have of paying compliments&mdash;when
+Georgie pulled into town on Number Two, if it was Sankey's
+train, the big sky-scraper would give a short, hoarse scream,
+a most peculiar note, just as it drew past Sankey's house,
+which stood on the brow of the hill west of the yards. Thus
+Neeta would know that Number Two and her father, and
+naturally Mr. Sinclair, were in again, and all safe and sound.</p>
+
+<p>When the railway trainmen held their division fair at
+McCloud there was a lantern to be voted to the most popular
+conductor&mdash;a gold-plated lantern with a green curtain in
+the globe. Cal Stewart and Ben Doton, who were very swell
+conductors and great rivals, were the favorites, and had the
+town divided over their chances for winning it. But at the
+last moment Georgie Sinclair stepped up to the booth and cast
+a storm of votes for old man Sankey. Doton's friends and
+Stewart's laughed at first; but Sankey's votes kept pouring
+in amazingly. The two favorites got frightened; they pooled
+their issues by throwing Stewart's vote to Doton. But it
+wouldn't do. Georgie Sinclair, with a crowd of engineers&mdash;Cameron,
+Kennedy, Foley, Bat Mullen, and Burns&mdash;came
+back at them with such a swing that in the final five
+minutes they fairly swamped Doton. Sankey took the lantern
+by a thousand votes. But I understood it cost Georgie and
+his friends a pot of money.</p>
+
+<p>Sankey said all the time that he didn't want the lantern,
+but just the same he always carried that particular lantern,
+with his full name, Sylvester Sankey, ground into the glass
+just below the green mantle. Pretty soon, Neeta being then
+eighteen, it was rumored that Sinclair was engaged to Miss
+Sankey, and was going to marry her. And marry her he did;
+though that was not until after the wreck in the Blackwood
+gorge after the Big Snow.</p>
+
+<p>It goes by just that name on the West End yet; for never
+were such a winter and such a snow known on the plains and
+in the mountains. One train on the northern division was
+stalled six weeks that winter, and one whole coach was chopped
+up for kindling wood. The great and desperate effort of
+the company was to hold open the main line, the artery which
+connected the two coasts. It was a hard winter on trainmen.
+Week after week the snow kept falling and blowing. The
+trick was not to clear the line; it was to keep it clear. Every
+day we sent out trains with the fear that we should not see
+them again for a week. Freight we didn't pretend to move;
+local passenger business had to be abandoned. Coal, to keep
+our engines and our towns supplied, we had to carry; and
+after that all the brains and muscle and motive power were
+centered on keeping One and Two, our through passenger
+trains, running.</p>
+
+<p>Our trainmen worked like Americans; there were no
+cowards on our rolls. But after too long a strain men become
+exhausted, benumbed, indifferent; reckless, even. The nerves
+give out, and will-power seems to halt on indecision; but
+decision is the life of the fast train. None of our conductors
+stood the hopeless fight like Sankey. He was patient, taciturn,
+untiring; and in a conflict with the elements, ferocious. All
+the fighting blood of his ancestors seemed to course again in
+that struggle with the winter king. I can see him yet, on bitter
+days, standing alongside the track in a heavy pea-jacket and
+Napoleon boots, a sealskin cap drawn snugly over his straight
+black hair, watching, ordering, signaling, while Number One,
+with its frost-bitten sleepers behind a rotary, tried to buck
+through ten and twenty-foot cuts which lay bank-full of snow
+west of McCloud.</p>
+
+<p>Not until April did it begin to look as if we should win out.
+A dozen times the line was all but choked on us. And then,
+when snow-plows were disabled and train crews desperate,
+there came a storm that discounted the worst blizzard of the
+winter. As the reports rolled in on the morning of the 5th,
+growing worse as they grew thicker, Neighbor, dragged out,
+played out, mentally and physically, threw up his hands.
+It snowed all day the 6th, and on Saturday morning the
+section men reported thirty feet in the Blackwood ca&ntilde;on.
+It was six o'clock when we got the word, and daylight before
+we got the rotary against it. They bucked away till noon
+without much headway, and came in with their gear smashed
+and a driving-rod fractured. It looked as if we were at last
+beaten. Number One pulled into McCloud that day eighteen
+hours late; it was Sankey's and Sinclair's run west.</p>
+
+<p>There was a long council in the round-house. The rotary
+was knocked out; coal was running low in the chutes. If
+the line wasn't kept open for the coal from the mountains, it
+was plain we should be tied until we could ship it from Iowa
+or Missouri. West of Medicine Pole there was another big
+rotary working east, with plenty of coal behind her; but she
+was reported stuck fast in the Cheyenne Hills. Foley made
+suggestions, and Dad Sinclair made suggestions. Everybody
+had a suggestion left. The trouble was, Neighbor said, they
+didn't amount to anything, or were impossible. "It's a
+dead block, boys," announced Neighbor sullenly after everybody
+had done. "We are beaten unless we can get Number
+One through to-day. Look there: by the holy poker, it's
+snowing again."</p>
+
+<p>The air was dark in a minute with whirling clouds. Men
+turned to the windows and quit talking. Every fellow felt
+the same&mdash;hopeless; at least, all but one. Sankey, sitting
+back of the stove, was making tracings with a piece of chalk.
+"You might as well unload your passengers, Sankey," said
+Neighbor. "You'll never get 'em through this winter."</p>
+
+<p>And it was then that Sankey proposed his double-header.</p>
+
+<p>He devised a snow-plow which combined in one monster
+ram about all the good material we had left, and submitted
+the scheme to Neighbor. Neighbor studied it, and hacked
+at it all he could, and brought it over to the office. It was
+like staking everything on the last cast of the dice, but we
+were in the state of mind which precedes a desperate venture.
+It was talked over an hour, and orders were finally given by
+the superintendent to rig up the double-header and get against
+the snow with it.</p>
+
+<p>All that day and most of the night Neighbor worked twenty
+men on Sankey's device. By Sunday morning it was in such
+shape that we began to take heart. "If she don't get through,
+she'll sure get back again, and that's what most of 'em don't
+do," growled Neighbor, as he and Sankey showed the new ram
+to the engineers.</p>
+
+<p>They had taken the 566, George Sinclair's engine, for one
+head, and Burns's, the 497, for the other. Behind these
+were Kennedy, with the 314, and Cameron, with the 296.
+The engines were set in pairs, headed each way, and buckled
+up like pack mules. Over the pilots and stacks of the head
+engines rose the tremendous plows, which were to tackle the
+worst drifts ever recorded, before or since, on the West End.
+The ram was designed to work both ways. Under the coal,
+each tender was loaded with pig-iron.</p>
+
+<p>The beleaguered passengers on Number One, side-tracked
+in the yards, eagerly watched the preparations Sankey was
+making to clear the line. Every amateur on the train had his
+camera out taking pictures of the ram. The town, gathered
+in a single great mob, looked silently on, and listened to the
+frosty notes of the sky-scrapers as they went through their
+preliminary man&oelig;uvers. Just as the final word was given
+by Sankey, conductor in charge, the sun burst through the
+fleecy clouds, and a wild cheer followed the ram out of the
+western yard; it was looked on as a sign of good luck to see
+the sun again.</p>
+
+<p>Little Neeta, up on the hill, must have seen them as they
+pulled out. Surely she heard the choppy ice-bitten screech
+of the 566; for that was never forgotten, whether the service
+was special or regular. Besides, the head cab of the ram
+carried this time not only Georgie Sinclair, but her father as
+well. Sankey could handle a slice-bar as well as a punch, and
+rode on the head engine, where, if anywhere, the big chances
+would come. What Sankey was not capable of in the train-service
+we never knew, because he rose superior to every
+emergency that ever confronted him.</p>
+
+<p>Bucking snow is principally brute force; there is very little
+coaxing. West of the bluffs there was a volley of sharp tooting,
+like code signals between a fleet of cruisers, and in just a
+minute the four ponderous engines, two of them in the back
+motion, fires white and throats bursting, steamed wildly into
+the ca&ntilde;on. Six hundred feet from the first cut, Sinclair's
+whistle signaled again. Burns and Cameron and Kennedy
+answered; and then, literally turning the monster ram loose
+against the dazzling mountain, the crews settled themselves
+for the shock.</p>
+
+<p>At such a moment there is nothing to be done. If anything
+goes wrong, eternity is too close to consider. There came a
+muffled drumming on the steam-chests; a stagger and a
+terrific impact; and then the recoil, like the stroke of a trip-hammer.
+The snow shot into the air fifty feet, and the wind
+carried a cloud of fleecy confusion over the ram and out of
+the cut. The cabs were buried in white, and the great steel
+frames of the engines sprung like knitting-needles under the
+frightful force of the blow. Pausing for hardly a breath,
+they began the signaling again; then backed up and up and
+up the line; and again the massive machines were hurled
+screaming into the cut. "We're getting there, Georgie,"
+cried Sankey when the rolling and lurching had stopped.</p>
+
+<p>No one else could tell a thing about it, for it was snow and
+snow and snow; above and behind and ahead and beneath.
+Sinclair coughed the flakes out of his eyes and nose and mouth
+like a baffled collie. He looked doubtful of the claim until
+the mist had blown clear and the quivering monsters were
+again recalled for a dash. Then it was plain that Sankey's
+instinct was right; they were gaining.</p>
+
+<p>Again they went in, lifting a very avalanche over the stacks,
+packing the banks of the cut with walls hard as ice. Again,
+as the drivers stuck, they raced in a frenzy, and into the shriek
+of the wind went the unearthly scrape of the overloaded
+safeties. Slowly and sullenly the machines were backed again.
+"She's doing the work, Georgie," cried Sankey. "For
+that kind of a cut she's as good as a rotary. Look everything
+over now while I go back and see how the boys are standing
+it. Then we'll give her one more, and give it the hardest
+kind."</p>
+
+<p>And they did give her one more; and another. Men at
+Santiago put up no stouter fight than these men made that
+Sunday morning in the ca&ntilde;on of the Blackwood. Once they
+went in, and twice. And the second time the bumping
+drummed more deeply; the drivers held, pushed, panted, and
+gained against the white wall; heaved and stumbled ahead;
+and with a yell from Sinclair and Sankey and the fireman, the
+double-header shot her nose into the clear over the Blackwood
+gorge. As engine after engine flew past the divided
+walls each cab took up the cry; it was the wildest crowd that
+ever danced to victory. Through they went and half-way
+across the bridge before they could check their monster
+catapult. Then, at a half full, they shot it back again at the
+cut, for it worked as well one way as the other.</p>
+
+<p>"The thing is done," declared Sankey, when they got into
+position up the line for a final shoot to clean out the eastern
+cut and get head for a dash across the bridge and into the west
+end of the ca&ntilde;on, where there lay another mountain of snow
+to split. "Look the machines over pretty close, boys," said
+he to the engineers. "If nothing's sprung, we'll take a full
+head across the gorge&mdash;the bridge will carry anything&mdash;and
+buck the west cut. Then after we get Number One
+through this afternoon, Neighbor can put his baby cabs in here
+and keep 'em chasing all night. But it's done snowing,"
+he added, looking at the leaden sky.</p>
+
+<p>He had the plans all figured out for the master mechanic,
+the shrewd, kindly old man. I think, myself, there's no man
+on earth like a good Indian; and, for that matter, none like
+a bad one. Sankey knew by a military instinct just what
+had to be done and how to do it. If he had lived, he was to
+have been assistant superintendent. That was the word
+that leaked from headquarters afterward. And with a volley
+of jokes between the cabs and a laughing and yelling between
+toots, down went Sankey's double-header again into the
+Blackwood gorge.</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment, by an awful misunderstanding of
+orders, down came the big rotary from the west end with a
+dozen cars of coal behind. Mile after mile it had wormed
+east toward Sankey's ram, and it now burrowed through the
+western cut of the Blackwood, crashed through the drift Sankey
+was aiming for, and whirled out into the open, dead against
+him, at forty miles an hour. Each train, in order to make
+the grade and the blockade against it, was straining the
+cylinders.</p>
+
+<p>Through the swirling snow that half hid the bridge and
+interposed between the rushing plows Sinclair saw them
+coming. He yelled. Sankey saw them a fraction of a second
+later, and while Sinclair struggled with the throttle and the
+air, Sankey gave the alarm through the whistle to the poor
+fellows in the blind pockets behind. But the track was at the
+worst. Where there was no snow there were "whiskers";
+oil itself couldn't have been worse to stop on. It was the old
+and deadly peril of fighting blockades from both ends on a
+single track. The great rams of steel and fire had done their
+work, and with their common enemy overcome, they dashed
+at each other like madmen across the Blackwood gorge.</p>
+
+<p>The fireman at the first cry shot out the side. Sankey
+yelled at Sinclair to jump. But Georgie shook his head: he
+never would jump. Without hesitating, Sankey picked him
+from the levers in his arms, planted a sure foot, and hurled him
+like a coal shovel through the gangway far out into the gorge.
+The other cabs were already empty. But the instant's delay
+in front cost Sankey his life. Before he himself could jump
+the rotary crashed into the 566. They reared like mountain
+lions, pitched sideways and fell headlong into the creek, fifty
+feet. Sankey went under them. He could have saved himself;
+he chose to save George. There wasn't time to do
+both; he had to choose, and to choose instantly. Did he,
+maybe, think in that flash of Neeta and of whom she needed
+most&mdash;of a young and a stalwart protector rather than an
+old and failing one? I do not know; I know only what he
+did. Every one who jumped got clear. Sinclair lit in ten
+feet of snow, and they pulled him out with a rope: he wasn't
+scratched. Even the bridge was not badly strained. Number
+One pulled over it next day.</p>
+
+<p>Sankey was right; there was no more snow; not even
+enough to cover the dead engines that lay on the rocks. But
+the line was open: the fight was won.</p>
+
+<p>There never was a funeral in McCloud like Sankey's.
+George Sinclair and Neeta followed first, and of the mourners
+there were as many as there were spectators. Every engine on
+the division carried black for thirty days.</p>
+
+<p>Sankey's contrivance for fighting snow has never yet been
+beaten on the high line. It is perilous to go against a drift
+behind it: something has to give. But it gets there, as Sankey
+got there&mdash;always; and in time of blockade and desperation
+on the West End they still send out Sankey's double-header;
+though Sankey, as the conductors tell the children, traveling
+east or traveling west&mdash;Sankey isn't running any more.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>VIII</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="AUNT_MARY_TELEGRAPHS" id="AUNT_MARY_TELEGRAPHS"></a>AUNT MARY TELEGRAPHS</h2>
+
+<h3>A Comedy of Everyday Life</h3>
+
+<h3>By LLOYD E. LONERGAN</h3>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"<span class="smcap">Auntie</span> left on the six-o'clock train last night. Meet
+her at the depot.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Clara</span>."</p></div>
+
+<p>This telegram, dated New York, greeted Frank Carey
+when he reached his pleasant little home on Indiana Avenue,
+Chicago.</p>
+
+<p>"Aunt Mary will be here to-night," he said to his wife, "my
+rich aunt from New York, you know. I am to meet her at
+the depot."</p>
+
+<p>"When does she arrive?" fluttered pretty little Mrs. Carey,
+a bride of a few months. "Cannot I go with you to
+the depot?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Carey said she could, then he thought for a moment,
+then he put his doubts into words after a second reading of
+the telegram.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder what road she is coming in on?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"'Twas stupid of her," replied his wife, "but call up the
+railroads and find out which one has a six-o'clock train from
+New York. Silly!"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Carey kissed his wife and remarked that she was the
+brightest little girl in the world, after which he gaily telephoned,
+listened intently to someone on the other end of the
+line, made numerous notes, and turned to his wife in despair.</p>
+
+<p>"Bless Clara!" he said devoutly.</p>
+
+<p>His wife looked surprised, so he hastily explained.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a six o'clock train from New York on the Pennsylvania,
+also on the Lake Shore, likewise on the Michigan
+Central, and the Lehigh Valley, and the Grand Trunk, and the
+West Shore, and the B. &amp;. O.!"</p>
+
+<p>"Which one is auntie coming on?" inquired Mrs. Carey
+with interest.</p>
+
+<p>"All of them," replied her husband wrathfully. "She is
+sitting on the cow-catcher of each and every train, and if I'm
+not there to meet her she'll disinherit me. Haven't you
+any sense?"</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon there were tears, apologies, and finally a council
+of war. It was Mrs. Carey who solved the problem.</p>
+
+<p>"All we have to do," she cried, "is to meet all the trains.
+Won't it be cute?"</p>
+
+<p>Carey didn't think so, but was afraid to express himself.
+He simply tried to look impressed and listened.</p>
+
+<p>"There are only seven trains," she continued. "Now
+you," counting on her fingers, "are one, and I am two and Mr.
+and Mrs. Haines next door, who belong to my whist club, are
+four; and Ella Haines is five; and I just saw Mr. What's-his-name
+go in to call on Ella&mdash;and he'll be six; and that
+horrid man on the next block who is in your lodge will have
+to be seven."</p>
+
+<p>The "train meeters" were gathered together inside of an
+hour. Mrs. Carey overruled all objections and laughed away
+all difficulties. She told them it would be a lark, and they
+believed it&mdash;at the time! As none of them had met Mrs.
+Smith (Aunt Mary), Carey was called upon for a description.</p>
+
+<p>"Aunt Mary," he said, "is of medium height, dark complexion
+and usually dresses in black. She is fifty-eight
+years old, but tells people she is under fifty. You cannot
+miss her." And with this they were compelled to be satisfied.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Ella Haines was assigned to the Pennsylvania depot and
+arrived late. All the New York passengers had disembarked,
+but an old woman was standing at the entrance and looking
+anxiously at the passers-by.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Smith?" said Ella, inquiringly.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank heaven, you have come," was the joyous reply.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," and she stepped to one side and revealed a little girl
+who was gazing out at the tracks. "I've had such a time
+with that brat and I'll never travel with another again. I've
+just got time to catch my train for St. Paul. Good-bye!"
+Whereupon, disregarding Ella's cries and her protestations,
+the woman rushed madly to the other end of the depot and
+disappeared through a gate which closed behind her with a
+slam. It was the last call for the St. Paul train.</p>
+
+<p>Naturally, Ella did not know what to do. She hung around
+the depot for half an hour, hoping someone would claim the
+child. Then she put the little one in a cab and gave the
+Careys' address in Indiana Avenue.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Walter Haines went to the Lake Shore depot. One of
+the first passengers to emerge from the New York train was a
+female, who seemed to answer the general description furnished
+by Carey. She was breathless as if from running
+faster than an old woman should run. As she reached Haines,
+she stopped and glared at him.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Smith?" he inquired, lifting his hat.</p>
+
+<p>The woman grabbed him by the arm. "I knew you would
+be here, but hurry, that man is after me!"</p>
+
+<p>"What man?" asked Haines in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, we cannot talk now," was the reply. "Get a
+carriage and drive fast, fast; we must escape him."</p>
+
+<p>"George couldn't come, he sent me. My name is Haines,"
+said the puzzled escort.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care if your name is Beelzebub" was the impatient
+retort. "You get that carriage or I'll write to Roosevelt."
+And Mr. Haines, very much astonished, complied.</p>
+
+<p>He thought as he drove away that he heard someone shouting,
+but was not sure; in fact, he paid no attention, for he was
+too busy thinking what a queer old aunt his friend Carey had.</p>
+
+<p>The "horrid man who belonged to the lodge" was named
+Perkins. He reached the B. &amp; O. depot half an hour ahead
+of time, so he went across the street and had a drink. When
+he returned he discovered that No. 7 was late, and so had
+another. Also, several more. By the time the train did
+arrive he was in such a mellow state that he couldn't tell a
+parlor car from a lake steamer&mdash;and he didn't care! He
+had likewise forgotten what George's aunt looked like, but
+that, too, was a trivial matter. So he stood at the gate, beaming
+blandly at every person that appeared.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you Georsh's saunt?" he inquired of a tall man with
+white side-whiskers and garbed in ministerial black. His
+answer was a look of horror, but it had no effect on Perkins,
+who repeated his question at intervals without result. His
+lack of success finally drove him to tears.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Georsh!" he sobbed. "Dear old Georsh! Must
+have an naunt! Break hish heart if he don't have an naunt!
+Can't fine his naunt! Get him one myself!"</p>
+
+<p>A gang of immigrants were passing at the time. Perkins
+grabbed one of them by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Be nish fellow," he said persuasively, "be Georsh's
+aunt."</p>
+
+<p>The immigrant was obdurate, but Perkins was persistent.
+He drew a roll of bills from his pocket and peeled off a five.
+This he pressed upon his new-found friend.</p>
+
+<p>"Be a good aunt," he said, "be a nish aunt, and I'll give
+you two more like thish!"</p>
+
+<p>The Italian, overcome by the sight of so much wealth,
+fell captive to the eloquence of Perkins. The latter was
+delighted. He escorted his victim to a saloon across the
+street and hurled six drinks into him in rapid succession.
+The immigrant beamed and forgot all his troubles. He lit
+a fifteen-cent cigar and puffed away as if he were used to it.</p>
+
+<p>"Be your-a aunt," he said, "be-a anybody's aunt. You
+good-a feller."</p>
+
+<p>This sentiment led to another round of drinks, and then
+the pair tumbled into a cab, singing discordantly in two languages.
+Perkins fortunately remembered the address of Haines,
+and was able to mumble it so that the hackman could understand.
+Therefore there was no bar to his enjoyment.</p>
+
+<p>Of course they stopped en route, for Perkins was brimming
+over with gratitude and the cabman was included in their
+rejoicing. Long before they reached Indiana Avenue, everybody
+was drunk except the horse.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime there was all sorts of trouble in the modest
+residence of George Carey. The head of the household had
+fumed and fretted about the Michigan Central depot, and
+finally started home, auntless. There he met his wife, Mrs.
+Haines and Ella's young man with similar stories. Five minutes
+later a carriage drove up and Ella and her charge alighted.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't she a dear little girl?" gurgled Miss Haines, who,
+being petite and worried, didn't know anything else to do
+under the circumstances except to gurgle.</p>
+
+<p>Carey gazed at the young woman with distinct disapproval
+for the first time in his life.</p>
+
+<p>"I know the popular impression is that old ladies shrink,"
+he said, "but Aunt Mary could never have shrunk to that
+size. Where did you get her and why?"</p>
+
+<p>Falteringly, Miss Haines explained. Then she cried. The
+child, who had regarded them gravely up to this point, took
+it for a signal. She screamed, then she roared. Nobody
+could comfort her or find out who she was.</p>
+
+<p>The arrival of another cab distracted their attention. The
+bell rang loudly. As Carey opened the door, an old woman
+bounded in. Her hat was on one side of her head and her eyes
+gleamed madly.</p>
+
+<p>"Safe at last!" she cried. Then she ran upstairs, entered
+Mrs. Haines's room, and locked the door. Through the panels
+came the sound of hysterical laughter.</p>
+
+<p>Walter Haines entered the house at this moment. His
+attitude was distinctly apologetic.</p>
+
+<p>"Remarkable old lady, isn't she?" he ventured.</p>
+
+<p>"Who?" asked Mr. Carey.</p>
+
+<p>"Why your aunt, of course; didn't you see her come in?"</p>
+
+<p>Carey choked down his wrath out of respect to the ladies,
+but it was hard work.</p>
+
+<p>"I never saw that woman before," he remarked; "you
+brought her here uninvited, now you take her away."</p>
+
+<p>Naturally this provoked argument. Mrs. Haines sided
+with her husband, Mrs. Carey flew to the aid of her worser
+half, Miss Haines wept, and the little girl screamed. Upstairs,
+the bogus Aunt Mary was still laughing.</p>
+
+<p>None of the interested parties could tell afterward how long
+the talk continued. A louder noise outside drew them all to
+the front porch. In front of the house was a hansom cab
+drawn by a disgusted-looking horse. He looked and acted
+like one who had been compelled against his will to mingle
+with disreputable associates.</p>
+
+<p>The driver descended from his seat and fell full length upon
+the pavement. He didn't try to get up, but chanted in a
+husky tone, "Hail! hail! the gang's all here!!!"</p>
+
+<p>Then the door of the cab opened and Mr. Perkins appeared.
+Nobody could deny that he was very much the worse for wear.
+But Mr. Perkins bore himself like a conqueror. He advanced
+hastily and embraced Carey with enthusiasm. Carey
+recoiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear Georsh," said Perkins. "Got you an naunt!"</p>
+
+<p>Apprehensively, Carey ran to the carriage. Huddled upon
+the floor was an object that moved faintly. From the atmosphere
+Sherlock Holmes would have deduced that a whisky
+refinery had exploded in that cab a few hours before. The
+onlooker gingerly touched the object. It rolled over, then it
+rolled out of the cab and lay on the sidewalk beside the driver.</p>
+
+<p>Perkins kept on smiling. "Your naunt," he remarked,
+blandly. "Couldn't get you what you wanted. Got you
+thish one!"</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, Carey remembered that he had a telephone.
+He spurned his "aunt" with his foot and passed into the
+house. He called up Police Headquarters. His friend,
+Sergeant Bob O'Rourke, was on duty, which made it easier
+for him.</p>
+
+<p>"Bob," he said, after greetings had been exchanged, "have
+you an alarm out for a little girl kidnapped from the Pennsylvania
+station?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"And does anybody want a crazy woman, last seen on a
+Lake Shore train?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; her keeper was here half an hour ago," was the
+reply. "He was taking her to Kankakee and she made a get-away.
+What do you know about her?"</p>
+
+<p>"They are both here," was the reply. "Send the wagon,
+and just for good measure I'll throw in an Italian immigrant
+who came in over the B. &amp; O. and a cab-driver. They are
+both drunk, very drunk, and please take the cab away too."</p>
+
+<p>The next half hour gave Indiana Avenue residents plenty
+to talk about for a month. But finally the combat was over,
+and Carey and his friends sat down exhausted.</p>
+
+<p>"But what I would like to know," remarked the head of
+the house, "where, oh where is Aunt Mary?"</p>
+
+<p>It was a messenger-boy who brought the answer&mdash;a telegram
+dated Niagara Falls, current date and reading:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Stopped over here. Isn't the view from Goat Island
+wonderful? Leave for Chicago on the first train. Meet me."</p></div>
+
+<p>There was a sudden painful silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Does anybody know how many trains there are from
+Niagara Falls?" inquired Mrs. Carey, speaking to the company
+generally. She didn't dare to address her husband.</p>
+
+<p>"Just about as many as there are from New York," replied
+Haines, with a woebegone look. "But&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't finish it," returned Carey, "I am not going to ask
+you to try again, and I am not going to do so myself. Aunt
+Mary can leave her money to anybody she pleases. If I
+had another night like this the executors would be compelled
+to mail me my cheque to an asylum."</p>
+
+<p>And the next evening Aunt Mary, unattended, reached her
+nephew's house without any trouble at all. She didn't
+disinherit him; in fact, she felt so sorry because of his troubles
+that she bought Mrs. Carey a complete spring outfit regardless
+of cost.</p>
+
+<p>It's a good thing to have an Aunt Mary, even if she is
+indefinite in her telegrams.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>IX</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="THE_VENGEANCE_OF_THE_WOLF" id="THE_VENGEANCE_OF_THE_WOLF"></a>THE VENGEANCE OF THE WOLF</h2>
+
+<h3>A Drama in Wales</h3>
+
+<h3>By J. AQUILA KEMPSTER</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">In the</span> great stone hall of Llangarth, Daurn-ap-Tavis,
+the old Welsh Wolf lay dying. Outside was the night
+and a sullen gale whose winds came moaning down the hills
+and clung about the house with little bodeful whispers that
+grew to long-drawn eerie wails, while pettish rain-squalls
+spent their spite in futile gusts on door and casement.</p>
+
+<p>And through the night from time to time a horseman came,
+spurring hard and spitting out strange Welsh oaths at the
+winds that harried him. Five had passed the door since sun-down,
+four worthy sons and a nephew of the Wolf. They
+stood now booted and spurred about the old man's couch,
+a rough-looking crew with the mud caking them from
+head to foot, while the leaping flames from the log
+fire flung their shadows black and distorted far up among
+the rafters.</p>
+
+<p>They hung around him sullenly, but as he looked them up
+and down the sick man's eyes took on a new keenness and a
+low, throaty laugh that was half a growl escaped him.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Cedric, man, what devil's game have you been
+playing of late? and, Tad, you black rascal&mdash;ah, 'twas a
+pity you were born to Gruffydd instead of me. Well, well,
+boys, the old Wolf's cornered at last, cornered at last, and
+Garm, Levin, Rhys&mdash;the Cadwallader's going to live and
+laugh, aye, he's going to live and laugh while a Tavis roasts
+in hell."</p>
+
+<p>Garm started with a low growl, while Cedric kicked savagely
+at a hound that lay beside the logs.</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, Ced, kick the old dog, but it won't stop the Cadwallader's
+laugh."</p>
+
+<p>Cedric clenched his fists at the taunt and his face grew
+purple in the fire glow, but old Daurn went on remorselessly:
+"Twenty years he's laughed at the Wolf and his whelps, an'
+think you he'll stop now? He was always too lucky for me.
+I thought when my lads grew strong&mdash;&mdash; But there, he laid me
+low, the only man that ever did, curse him! There's the
+mark, boys; see the shamed blood rise to it?"</p>
+
+<p>He loosened his shirt with a fretful jerk and they bent
+over and glowered at the red scar which ran across his chest.
+They had all seen it times before, knew the dark quarrel and
+the darker fight, had tingled with shame again and again, but
+to-night it seemed to hold an added sting, for the Wolf was
+going out with his debt unpaid.</p>
+
+<p>Cedric, the elder, gaped and shuddered, then fell to cursing
+again, but Daurn drew back the quilt and went on talking:
+"I swore by the body of God to get even, and day and night
+I've watched my chance. I tried at Tredegar, and that
+night ye all mind at Ebbu Vale. Yes, I tell you a dozen times,
+but he's a fox, curse him! a sly old fox, and now the Wolf's
+teeth are broken. What's that, Ced? Look to him, Tad&mdash;aye,
+look to all thy cousins. Fine grown lads, big, brave, and
+fierce, but the Cadwallader still lives and laughs; yes, laughs
+at old Daurn and his boys. My God! to think of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Curse me! choke me!" Cedric stormed out in spluttering
+fury, gripping his sword with one hand while he dragged at
+his coat with the other. "I'll cut&mdash;cut his bl-black gizzard,
+blast him. I'm a c-c-coward, eh! Right in my t-teeth!
+Well, wait till th'-th' dawn an' see."</p>
+
+<p>He had crammed his hat over his eyes and with coat buttoned
+all awry was half way to the door before Tad caught
+and held him, whispering in his ear: "Steady, Ced, steady.
+He's got some plan or I'm a fool. Come back an' wait a bit,
+an' if I'm mistaken I'll surely ride along with ye."</p>
+
+<p>Cedric yielded, doubtful and sullen, but Daurn greeted
+him bravely: "God's truth, lad, you've the spirit of the
+Wolf at least, but you've got no brains to plan. Come close
+an' listen, an' if ye truly want a fight thy father'll never
+balk thee."</p>
+
+<p>Then with faltering breath but gleaming eyes he unfolded
+the plan he had conceived to make his dying a thing of greater
+infamy than all his bloody days.</p>
+
+<p>The beginnings of the feud between the House of the Wolf
+and that of Llyn Gethin, the Cadwallader, were so remote
+that probably both had forgotten, if they ever knew them, for
+the old Welsh chieftains passed their quarrels on from generation
+to generation and their hot blood rarely cooled in the
+passing. Llyn was about the only man in the country who had
+been able to hold his own against "the Tavis," but hold it he
+had with perhaps a trifle to spare. Indeed, of late years he
+had let slip many an opportunity for reprisals, and thrice had
+made overtures of peace which had been violently rejected.
+Llyn had fought fair at least, even if he had struck hard, but
+the life of the Wolf had been as treacherous as it was bloody.
+And day by day and year by year, as Daurn's strength began
+to fail and brooding took the place of action, the bitterness
+of his hatred grew, and out of this at last the plan. It was
+simple.</p>
+
+<p>Daurn was old, dying, and weary of the strife. He would
+pass at peace with the world and particularly with his ancient
+foe. A messenger should be sent inviting Llyn and his sons
+to Llangarth. They would suspect nothing, for all Wales
+knew the Wolf lay low&mdash;would probably come unarmed and
+needs must, as time was short, travel by night. Well, there
+was a convenient and lonely spot some three miles from
+Llangarth&mdash;did the lads understand? Aye, they understood,
+but their breath came heavily and they glanced furtively
+each at the other, while the youngest, Rhys, shivered and drew
+closer to Tad.</p>
+
+<p>Daurn's burning eyes questioned them one by one, and
+one by one they bowed their heads but spake never a word.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye'll swear to it, lads," he whispered hoarsely, and drew
+a long dagger from beneath his pillow. For answer there
+came the rattle of loosened steel, and as he again bared his
+breast they drew closer in a half circle, laying their blades
+flat above his heart, his own dagger adding to the ring of
+steel.</p>
+
+<p>And then they swore by things unknown to modern men
+to wipe out the shame that had lain so long upon their house,
+and that before their father died.</p>
+
+<p>As their voices ceased the wind outside seemed to take
+up the burden of their bloody oath as if possessed, for it
+shrieked and wailed down the great chimney like some living
+thing in pain. And then, in a little lull following on the sobbing
+cry, there came a curious straining push that shook the
+closed oak door.</p>
+
+<p>They stood transfixed, for a moment daunted, with their
+swords half in and half out their scabbards, till with a warning
+gesture to his cousins, Black Tad stole softly across the floor
+and, lifting the heavy bar cautiously, opened the door.</p>
+
+<p>He paused an instant on the lintel, motionless and rigid to
+the point of his sword, his eyes fixed on the white face of a
+girl who was cowered back against the further wall. For a
+fraction of time he hesitated, but the awful anguish of the
+face and the mute, desperate appeal of the whole pose settled
+him. With a rough clatter he sprang into the dim passage,
+rattling his sword and stamping his feet, at the same time
+giving vent with his lips to the yelp of a hound in pain, and
+following it with rough curses and vituperation. Then, without
+another glance at the girl, he re-entered the hall and
+slammed to the door, grumbling at Rhys for not keeping his
+dogs tied up.</p>
+
+<p>By one o'clock the great hall was still. The men were
+lying scattered about the house, for the most part sleeping
+as heavily as many jorums of rum made possible.</p>
+
+<p>But the firelight flickering in the hall caught ever an answering
+gleam from the old Wolf's eyes as he lay there gray, shaggy,
+and watchful. From time to time his bony fingers plucked
+restlessly at his beard, and now and again his lips stretched
+back over yellow teeth in an evil smile as he gloated over the
+details of his coming vengeance.</p>
+
+<p>And out in a chill upper hall Gwenith, the fair daughter
+of a black house, sat in a deep embrasure, her arms clinging
+to the heavy oak bars desperately. The wind moaned and
+sighed about her while her white terrified lips echoed the
+agony of her heart. And the burden of her whispered cry
+was ever, "Davy!&mdash;Davy!" and then: "For the Christ's
+sake! Davy!&mdash;Davy!&mdash;Davy!"</p>
+
+<p>So the night drew on with the men and dogs sleeping torpidly;
+with the old Wolf chuckling grimly as the shadows
+closed about him, and with the child in the cold above sobbing
+out pitiful prayers for her lover, for only yesterday she had
+plighted her troth to Davy Gethin, the Cadwallader's youngest
+son.</p>
+
+<p>These two had met in the early days when she wandered
+free over the rolling hills, a wild young kilted sprite, fearful
+of nothing save her father and his grim sons. And Davy
+had wooed her ardently, though in secret from the first. It
+had been charming enough in the past despite the fear that
+ever made her say him nay. Then yesterday he had won her
+from her tears and fears, won her by his brave and tender
+front, and she had placed her little hands on his breast and
+sworn to follow him despite all else when once her father had
+passed away. And now, twelve short hours after her fingers
+had touched him, her fear had caught her by the throat, for
+they would kill him surely, her prince, the only joy she had
+ever known.</p>
+
+<p>So went the night, with desperate distracted plans, and the
+dumb agony of cold despair. And in the very early dawn,
+when men and things cling close to sleep, she heard a gentle
+stirring&mdash;a muffled footfall on the stairs, and Black Tad
+stood at her side, a great shadow, questioning her.</p>
+
+<p>"Mistress, what heard you?"</p>
+
+<p>And she answered quick with loathing: "All! all the vile,
+shameful thing!"</p>
+
+<p>"They are our foes" he muttered moodily.</p>
+
+<p>"Foes! Foes! Nay, none of you are worthy any foe&mdash;save
+the hangman! Ah, God will curse you! Cruel! Cruel!"</p>
+
+<p>She leaned out of her seat toward him, her panting breath
+and fierce words lashing him so that he stepped back a pace,
+dazed&mdash;she was ever such a gentle child.</p>
+
+<p>"What would you, Gwen?"</p>
+
+<p>"What would I! My God!&mdash;a fair fight at least. Oh,
+Tad, and I thought you were a brave man."</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I&mdash;damme, I, what can I do?&mdash;and what does it
+matter?"</p>
+
+<p>"Matter?&mdash;a foul blot!&mdash;matter to you and Ced and
+father&mdash;nothing! Murderers! I hate you all! What has
+the Cadwallader done? All Wales knows 'twas ever father
+set on him, not he on father&mdash;Always!&mdash;always, I say! Aye,
+I remember that bloody night at Ebbu Vale. Shame! Shame!
+And the harrying and burning at Rhyll, when the mother and
+her babes perished. No, you weren't there, Tad, but you
+know and I know who was. Ah, Tad, she's crying to God&mdash;that
+mother, and holding the little dead things in her hands,
+close up to his face. And now you'd murder Llyn, for all he's
+ever been for peace."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush-s-sh! not so loud, Gwen."</p>
+
+<p>"Not so loud! not so loud!" she jibed bitterly. "If you
+fear my poor voice now, what will it be when all Wales is
+ringing with this last foul deed?"</p>
+
+<p>Tad breathed hard, then caught her wrists suddenly,
+crushing them in his fierceness: "Listen, Gwenith. After
+all I'm no Tavis&mdash;I'm Gruffydd, and I love you."</p>
+
+<p>She shrank away with wide, fearful eyes, her breath coming
+in little painful gasps.</p>
+
+<p>"What&mdash;what do you mean, Tad?"</p>
+
+<p>"I love you, Gwen."</p>
+
+<p>"And&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'm no Tavis&mdash;I'm Gruffydd."</p>
+
+<p>Slowly the meaning which he himself hardly understood
+dawned on her.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll save them, Tad?"</p>
+
+<p>"Na, na. A fair fight is what you said. 'Tis all I can do."</p>
+
+<p>"And you will?"</p>
+
+<p>"I love you," he persisted stubbornly.</p>
+
+<p>She closed her eyes tightly and leaned back against the
+wooden shutter, her hands still held close in his grasp. And
+she strove to see clearly through the mist of horror and pain.
+It was a chance, at least a fighting chance, to save Davy, her
+prince; the only chance, the only way, and outside that what
+else mattered?</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes opened and her lips trembled; then she got her
+strength back and faced him in the dim dawn.</p>
+
+<p>"My life for theirs, Tad,&mdash;is that it?"</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes and her question shamed him, but he clung to
+his text doggedly, for he had loved her long and hopelessly in
+his wild, stubborn way, and this was his first and only desperate
+chance.</p>
+
+<p>"I love ye, Gwenith, I love ye!"</p>
+
+<p>There came a stir in the far hall, a long-drawn yawn; and
+at the sound the girl whispered fiercely: "Well, it's a bargain;
+give them fair warning and I'll&mdash;I'll do&mdash;give you your
+will. Yes, I swear it by the dear Saint David. Quick! let
+me go&mdash;no, not now!&mdash;Tad, I command you, I&mdash;I&mdash;Quick!
+that's Garm's voice; let me go."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>"Llyn Gethin! a word in your ear before we ride on."</p>
+
+<p>It was Tad who spoke to the old Cadwallader out in the
+moonlight. Llyn had answered Daurn's urgent message
+for peace, and a few miles north of Llangarth had met Tad.
+At the words the old man looked at him curiously, but reined
+his horse in, while his sons watched the pair suspiciously, for
+they were young, their blood and their hate still ran hotly,
+and save for their father would have had none of this death-bed
+reconciliation.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, lad, what is it?" asked Llyn, when they were out
+of earshot.</p>
+
+<p>"A word of warning, sir&mdash;from one who hates you."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! You were ever a good hater, boy. What is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis a trick o 'mine, sir&mdash;this visit&mdash;and you'd better
+ride back."</p>
+
+<p>"I think not, Tad."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, have your way, but if you ride with me you ride to
+hell."</p>
+
+<p>"We ride with you, Tad."</p>
+
+<p>"Your blood be on you and your sons, then, Llyn Gethin.
+You're safe to the stone bridge; after that fend for yourself.
+I&mdash;I'm a cursed traitor, but, by David, I strike with my
+house. There, I've warned you, and God forgive me."</p>
+
+<p>"Amen, lad! Will you shake hands before we ride?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, choke me! I'd sooner ding my dagger in your
+neck."</p>
+
+<p>So they rejoined the waiting group and rode forward, Tad
+moodily in advance, Llyn and his sons in a whispering bunch
+some yards behind. It had been Tad's own suggestion that
+he ride forward and meet the Gethins so they might be lured
+the more easily to the turn beyond the bridge. Now they
+followed on till they saw the white masonry gleaming in the
+moonlight, and then the dark form of Tad's horse crossing it,
+when there was a halt and a grim tightening of belts and
+loosening of swords. And as the man on the bridge threw up
+his arm, Llyn answered the sign hoarsely: "God keep thee,
+son of Gruffydd!" he cried. Then as his sons closed in he
+turned on them sternly: "Remember, lads! who touches him
+touches me. Ah! steady now! Forward!"</p>
+
+<p>Even as they clattered on the bridge Tad's challenge and
+signal to his kinsmen rang out furiously:</p>
+
+<p>"The Wolf! The Wolf and Saint David!"</p>
+
+<p>Then came a rush of horse and steel and wild-eyed men,
+which but for their preparation would have swept the Gethins
+down. As it was they met it fiercely as it came. They had
+not come unarmed&mdash;perhaps wise old Llyn distrusted such
+late penitence even as did his sons. Be that as it may, the cry
+of "Cadwallader!" rose against "The Wolf!" and bore it
+back, for even in the first wild rush, Cedric fell away before
+a long, swift thrust, and a moment later Rhys, the youngest of
+the house went down and died beneath the stamping iron
+hoofs.</p>
+
+<p>When Llyn saw this he called to stop the fight, but Tad,
+in a frenzy of horror and remorse, flung on again with Garth
+and Levin striking wild beside him. 'Twas a wicked rush,
+but now the fight stood five to three, and in the crash Levin
+slipped and got a dagger in his throat, while Tad spurred
+through an open way. Then as he reined and turned, the
+end was come, for Garm's shrill death-cry tore the air, and
+he was left alone.</p>
+
+<p>Thrice he charged like a wounded boar, shouting hoarsely
+for the house he had betrayed. "The Wolf! The Wolf!
+Saint David and the Wolf!"</p>
+
+<p>And ever he found that open way and ever their steel
+avoided him.</p>
+
+<p>At last he reined in his sweating mare and fell to cursing,
+his face distraught with agony and wet with blood and sweat
+and tears. So he stood, desperate&mdash;at bay, and taunted
+them with every vileness his furious tongue could frame.
+Then faltered at last with a great heartbroken sob, for they
+sat silent and still and would not give him fight.</p>
+
+<p>On the road at his horse's feet Cedric lay and Rhys, and
+over yonder in the grass the other two. He swayed weakly
+as he looked, then slid from his saddle and stooping, kissed
+his cousins one by one, with those grim, silent figures looking
+on. He broke his sword across his knee&mdash;his father, Gruffydd's
+sword&mdash;and flung the pieces with an oath at Llyn.
+Then, ere they could guess his meaning, his dagger flashed,
+and with a last weak cry for "the Wolf," he fell with the men
+of his House.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Back at Llangarth the great hall was aglow and Daurn
+chuckled and waited and plucked at his beard, till, just past
+midnight, there came a sudden commotion and the heavy
+tramp of horses in the outer court. Then Gwenith ran in
+white and wild, and kneeling, buried her sobs in the drapery
+of the couch. And ere her father could question her a group
+of sombre figures filled the doorway.</p>
+
+<p>'Twas a dream&mdash;surely 'twas a fearful dream! Or were
+they ghosts? Yes, that was it; see the blood on them! He
+was either dreaming or these were the very dead.</p>
+
+<p>They drew up to the couch, Llyn and his tall, stern sons.
+Daurn knew them well and strove to curse them, but the
+Cadwallader's grave voice hushed him to a sudden fear.</p>
+
+<p>"Peace be with thee, Daurn-ap-Tavis, we come&mdash;to
+bid thee farewell."</p>
+
+<p>Daurn gasped and stuttered, his fingers clawing fearfully
+while a cold sweat broke out over his forehead. But ere
+he found his voice two of Llyn's sons, David and Sion, drew
+away to the door, and later, Llewellen and Pen. They came
+back heavily and laid their burdens gently by the fire logs
+and returned, then came again and went. Five times in all.
+And an awful fear was in Daurn's eyes as he glared at those
+still, muffled shapes lying close beside him in the firelight.</p>
+
+<p>Then Llyn spoke, slow and sorrowfully, as he stooped and
+one by one drew the face-cloths from the dead.</p>
+
+<p>"Peace be with thee, Daurn-ap-Tavis; thy son Cedric&mdash;bids
+thee farewell.</p>
+
+<p>"Rhys&mdash;bids thee farewell.</p>
+
+<p>"Also Tad, thy brother's son&mdash;bids thee farewell."</p>
+
+<p>But the end was come, for Daurn, with a little childish cry,
+had gone to seek his sons. Llyn stooped and gently closed the
+old Wolf's eyes, then with bent head and weary step passed
+from the room.</p>
+
+<p>But young Davy stole back softly and knelt near the stricken
+girl at the foot of the couch.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>X</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="THE_WOOING_OF_BETTINA" id="THE_WOOING_OF_BETTINA"></a>THE WOOING OF BETTINA</h2>
+
+<h3>A Story of Finance</h3>
+
+<h3>By W.Y. SHEPPARD</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Paul Strumley</span> stood on the veranda of Mr.
+Richard Stokes's sumptuous home in the fashionable
+suburb of Lawrenceville and faced the daughter of the house
+indignantly. The daughter of the house was also plainly
+perturbed. Their mutual agitation was sharply accentuated
+by the fresh calmness of the spring morning, which seemed
+to hover like a north-bound bird over the wide, velvety lawn.</p>
+
+<p>"Bettina," announced Mr. Strumley suddenly, "your
+father is&mdash;is&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"An old goose."</p>
+
+<p>"No, a brute!"</p>
+
+<p>This explosion appeared momentarily to relieve his state
+of mind. But in his breast there was still left a sufficiency
+of outraged dignity to warm his cheeks hotly, and not by any
+means without an abundance of cause. Scarcely an hour
+before he had nervously, yet exultantly, alighted from his big
+touring car in front of the Commercial Bank, to seek the
+president of that institution in the sanctity of his private
+office. There, briefly but eloquently, he announced the
+engagement of Miss Bettina Stokes to Mr. Paul Strumley,
+and na&iuml;vely requested for the happy young people a full share
+of the parental sanction and blessing. And his callow confidence
+can hardly be condemned on recalling that he was
+one of the wealthiest and most popular young swains in the
+city. Mr. Stokes, however, did not seem to take this into
+consideration. On the contrary, he rose to the occasion with
+an outburst of disapprobation too inflammatory to be set
+on paper, and quickly followed it with a picturesque and
+uncompromising ultimatum. In the confused distress of
+the unexpected Mr. Strumley found himself unable to marshal
+a single specimen of logical refutation. He could only retreat
+in haste, to recover, if possible, at leisure.</p>
+
+<p>But this leisure, the time it had taken him to hurl the
+machine across town to Bettina, had proven sadly insufficient.
+When he rushed up the steps to the veranda, where sat
+the object of his affections rocking in beautiful serenity, he
+was still choking from indignation, and had found it hard to
+tell her in coherent sentences that her father had energetically
+refused the honor of an alliance with the highly respectable
+Strumley family.</p>
+
+<p>The grounds, however, on which had been based this
+unreasonable objection were of all things under the sun the
+most preposterous. Mr. Stokes had emphatically declared
+that his daughter's happiness was too dear to him to be foolishly
+entrusted to one who could not even manage his own
+affairs, let alone the affairs of a wife, and, presumably later,
+of a family. Mr. Strumley was rich at present, so much
+was readily conceded; but he was not capable himself of taking
+care of what a thrifty parent had laid by for him. He in his
+weak-mindedness was compelled to hire the brains of a mere
+substitute, a manager, if you prefer. Should anything happen,
+and such things happen every day, where would Mr. Strumley
+be? And where, pray, would be his wife and family? In
+the poorhouse!</p>
+
+<p>"My daughter is too good for a man who cannot manage
+his own concerns," the irate father had summed up. "When
+you have shown yourself capable, my lad, of competing in
+the world with grown-up intellects, then there will be time
+enough for you to contemplate matrimony&mdash;and not until
+then. Good morning to you, Mr. Strumley."</p>
+
+<p>"And he snapped his jaws together like a vise," recalled
+Paul, coming out from his gloomy retrospection.</p>
+
+<p>"If he shut them so," and Bettina worked her pretty chin
+out to its farthest extension, "well, that means he is like the
+man from Missouri; you've got to show him before he changes
+his mind one iota."</p>
+
+<p>"I ought to have been humping over a desk from the start,"
+regretted Mr. Strumley, feeling his bulging biceps dolefully.
+"It's all right stroking a crew, and heaps of fun, too, but it
+doesn't win you a wife. Now there's your dad, he couldn't
+pull a soap box across a bath tub; but he can pull through
+a 'deal' I couldn't budge with a hand-spike."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Bettina sighed sympathetically, and smiled appreciatively.
+She felt deeply for her lover, and was justly proud
+of such a capable parent. "Every one does say papa is an
+excellent business man," she remarked; "and he certainly
+can swing some wonderful deals. Only yesterday I accidentally
+overheard him telling Mr. Proctor that he held an option&mdash;I
+think that was the word&mdash;from Haynes, Forster &amp; Company
+on thousands and thousands of acres of timber land in Arkansas.
+He said it would expire to-day at two o'clock, but that
+he was going to buy the land for cash&mdash;'spot cash' he said
+was what they demanded."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Strumley smiled ruefully. "And I guess it will be
+some of my 'spot cash,'" he ruminated. "I am not saying
+anything against your father, Bettina, but if it wasn't for
+such idle good-for-nothings as myself, who let their money
+accumulate in his bank, I doubt if he could swing many of
+these 'big deals.' If we were like he wanted us to be, we'd
+be swinging them ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>After Mr. Strumley had finished his bit of philosophy, he
+fell to communing with himself. Apparently his own wisdom
+had stirred a new thought within his breast. It had. He
+was beginning to wonder what would happen if Bettina's
+father suddenly found himself bereft of sufficient "spot cash"
+to take advantage of this option. Anyone having a second
+call on same might be fortunate enough to swing the "big
+deal"&mdash;and profit by it, according to his intentions!</p>
+
+<p>"Paul," Bettina broke in upon his meditations, a little note
+of hopeful pleading in her voice, "it might not be too late
+for you to&mdash;to reform?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Strumley aroused himself with difficulty, and looked
+into her bewitching face before replying. Then: "Maybe
+you are right," he mused; "at any rate I have an idea."
+And kissing her thoughtfully, he strode down the steps toward
+where encouragingly panted his car.</p>
+
+<p>The car proudly bore Mr. Strumley and his idea to the
+brand-new offices of a certain young friend of his who had
+himself only recently metamorphosed from the shell to the
+swivel chair. Mr. Greenlee looked up in mute surprise. But
+Mr. Strumley ignored it and came to the point with a rush.
+Did Mr. Greenlee have twenty thousand dollars in cash to
+spare? He did? Good! Would he lend it to Mr. Strumley
+on gilt-edge collateral? Never mind exclamations; they had
+no market value. Eight per cent. did. Then Mr. Greenlee
+was willing to make the loan? That was talking business;
+and Mr. Strumley with the securities would call in two hours
+for the cash. That would give Mr. Greenlee ample time in
+which to get it from his bank&mdash;the Commercial.</p>
+
+<p>When outside Mr. Strumley allowed himself to smile.
+Suddenly this evidence of inward hilarity broadened into a
+heartily exploded greeting, as a familiar figure turned the
+corner and advanced directly toward him. It was another
+wealthy customer of the aforesaid bank.</p>
+
+<p>"I was just on my way to your office, Mr. Proctor," Paul
+announced pleasantly, at the same time cautiously drawing to
+one side the customer of the Commercial. "I intend investing
+heavily in real estate," he vouchsafed with admirable sang-froid;
+"and need, right away, in spot cash, about thirty
+thousand dollars. Have you got that much to spare at 8 per
+cent., on first class security?"</p>
+
+<p>Eight per cent! Mr. Proctor's expression expanded. He
+made his living by lending money for much less. If dear
+Mr. Strumley would call at his office within two hours he
+should have it every cent&mdash;just as soon as he could get a
+check cashed at the Commercial.</p>
+
+<p>Next the faithful machine whirled Paul to the rooms of
+his staid attorney and general manager, Mr. John Edwards.</p>
+
+<p>That elderly gentleman welcomed him with his nearest
+approach to a smile. But the young man was in no mood for
+an elaborate exchange of exhilarations. Without preface he
+inquired the amount of his deposit subject to check in the
+Commercial Bank. Fifty thousand dollars! A most delightful
+sum. He needed it every cent within an hour. Also he
+wanted from his safe-deposit box enough A1 collateral to
+secure loans of twenty and thirty thousand, respectively. But
+first would Mr. Edwards kindly call up and get second option
+on all Arkansas timber lands represented by Haynes, Forster
+&amp; Company? Mr. Strumley believed that the first option
+was held by a local party. Furthermore he knew it expired
+to-day; and had reasons to believe that a local party would not
+be able to take advantage of it, and he, Mr. Strumley, thought
+that he could handle the property to a good purpose.</p>
+
+<p>For the first time Mr. Edwards learned that his young
+client had a will of his own. After a few fruitless exhortations
+he rose to obey, but remarking: "Right much money in
+these hard times to withdraw in a lump from the bank."
+Then, with a sidelong glance at the grave, boyish face, he
+added significantly: "Know you would not do anything to
+jeopardize Mr. Stokes's financial standing."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, a bagatelle like that wouldn't embarrass as shrewd
+and resourceful a business man as he," assured Paul breezily.</p>
+
+<p>"Money is pretty tight," mused the lawyer. But he called
+up Haynes, Forster &amp; Company without further remonstrances
+and afterward went out to perform his commissions.
+Soon Mr. Strumley lighted a cigar and followed. There
+would be something doing in the way of entertainment
+presently in the neighborhood of the musty old Commercial
+Bank.</p>
+
+<p>In front of that institution he had the good fortune to meet
+the town miser, who seldom strayed far from the portals
+behind which reposed his hoard. Mr. Strumley halted to
+liberally wish the local celebrity an abundance of good health
+and many days of prosperity. Incidentally he noted through
+the massive doors that his three cash-seeking friends were in
+the line before the paying teller's window, the lawyer being
+last and Mr. Greenlee first. When the latter came out, still
+busily trying to cram the packages of bills properly in the
+satchel he carried, Paul remarked confidentially to his
+companion:</p>
+
+<p>"Must be something doing to-day. The big guns are
+drawing all of theirs out."</p>
+
+<p>The old fellow gave a start as the suggestion shot home.
+Before Paul could nurse it further, he had sprinted off up the
+street like mad, chattering to himself about the desirability
+of returning immediately with his certificates of deposit.</p>
+
+<p>It is an old adage that no one knows the genesis of a "run
+on the bank." Maybe Mr. Strumley was the exception which
+proves the validity of the rule. At any rate he considered
+with large satisfaction the magical gathering of a panic-inoculated
+crowd, which, sans courage, sans reason, sans everything
+but a thirst for the touch of their adored cash, clamored
+loudly, despairingly, for the instant return of their dearly
+beloved.</p>
+
+<p>At last through the meshes of the mad throng appeared the
+shiny pate of Mr. John Edwards. He uttered an exclamation
+of relief at the sight of his calm client.</p>
+
+<p>"Hope you got it before the storm broke?" Mr. Strumley
+greeted amiably.</p>
+
+<p>"S-s-sh!" cautioned the attorney dramatically. "I was
+about to go in search of you." Then he added in even a
+lower key: "Mr. Stokes asked me to persuade you not to
+withdraw the money until he had had a chance to get the flurry
+well in hand."</p>
+
+<p>"But the money is mine, and I want it now," expostulated
+the young man.</p>
+
+<p>"Come with me, please, and listen to reason," beseeched
+the lawyer, drawing him resolutely in the direction of a side
+entrance. "It would be a dire misfortune, sir, a calamity to
+the community, if the bank were forced to close its doors. So
+far, however, it is only the small depositors who are clamoring;
+but the others will quickly enough follow if you do not
+let your fifty thousand remain to help wipe out this first rush.
+The bank, though, is as sound as a dollar."</p>
+
+<p>In another instant they were through the door, and before
+Mr. Strumley could reply, for the second time that morning
+he stood in the presence of Bettina's father.</p>
+
+<p>"As Mr. Edwards will tell you," explained Paul, unable
+altogether to suppress his nervousness, "I hold second option
+for to-day on large timber tracts in Arkansas, represented by
+Messrs. Haynes, Forster &amp; Company. The first option,
+I was advised, will expire at two o'clock; and my party was
+of the belief it would not be closed. It is a big deal, Mr.
+Stokes,"&mdash;Mr. Stokes winced perceptibly&mdash;"and I was
+extremely anxious to swing it, because&mdash;er&mdash;well, because
+it's my first big venture and much depends on its success."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," mused Mr. Stokes sadly, "it is quite probable the
+first option may be allowed to lapse, and I understand good
+money is to be made in Arkansas timber." His face had
+grown a trifle ashy. "Of course, this being the case, I feel
+in honor bound, Mr. Strumley, to instantly recall my
+request."</p>
+
+<p>Paul gave a gasp of admiration. He was glad Bettina's
+father was "game." So was Bettina. In the up-boiling of
+his feelings he emphatically vetoed the determination of the
+banker. Indeed, so well and eloquently did he argue for the
+retention and use of his funds by the Commercial, that even
+the self-effacing man of "deals" could not resist the onslaught.
+He rose with unconcealed emotion and grasped the hand of
+the young man whose generosity would save the credit of the
+old financial institution.</p>
+
+<p>Later, flushed with victory, Mr. Strumley returned to the
+cushions of his touring car; and the jubilantly chugging
+machine whizzed him off in the direction where, surrounded by
+cash, awaited the 8 per cent. expectations of Messrs. Proctor
+and Greenlee. Later still he descended with said cash upon
+the offices of Haynes, Forster &amp; Company. And even later,
+after an exhilarating spin in the country, he arrived safe and
+blithesome at his well-appointed rooms in the Hotel Fulton,
+ready to remove with good soap and pure aqua the stains of
+mart and road before calling on Miss Bettina Stokes.</p>
+
+<p>The first thing that attracted his eyes on entering his little
+sitting room was a neatly wrapped parcel on the table. On
+the top of it reclined a dainty, snowy envelope. Mr. Strumley
+approached suspiciously. Then he recognized the handwriting
+and uttered an exclamation of joy. It was from
+Bettina.</p>
+
+<p>In the short time he held the missive poised reverently in
+his hand Paul permitted a glow of satisfaction to permeate
+his being. He had done well and was justly entitled to a
+moment of self laudation. Mr. Stokes&mdash;Bettina's father&mdash;would
+no longer be against him, for who could not say he
+was not capable of competing in the world-arena with full-grown,
+gladiatorial intellects? He had even successfully
+crossed blades with Mr. Stokes's own best brand of Damascene
+gray matter. And he had won the fray, for the everlasting
+good and happiness of all parties concerned. In anticipation
+he already felt himself thrilling proudly beneath the crown of
+Bettina's love and her father's benediction.</p>
+
+<p>The crackle of the delicate linen beneath his grasp brought
+him sweetly back to the real. What delicious token could
+Bettina be sending him? Of course her father had told her
+all. How happy she, too, must be! Mr. Strumley broke the
+seal of the envelope and read:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap">"Mr. Paul Strumley</span>,<br />
+City.<br />
+<br />
+"<span class="smcap">Dear Sir:</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"I herewith return your letters, photographs, etc. Papa
+has told me all. It was at first impossible to believe you
+capable of taking such a base advantage of my confidence
+about the Arkansas option; but I am at last thoroughly convinced
+that you incited the run on the bank to embarrass poor
+papa and compel him to let the deal fall into your traitorous
+hands. And the by-play of yours in returning the money you
+did not really need, though it has completely deceived him,
+has in my eyes only added odium to your treachery. I trust
+that I have made it quite clear that in the future we can meet
+only as strangers.</p></div>
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap">"Bettina Stokes."</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Strumley let the letter slip unnoticed through his
+palsied fingers. He sat down with heavy stupefaction. So
+this was the sud-spray of his beautiful bubble? It was incomprehensible!
+Bettina! Bettina! Oh, how could she? Where
+was her faith? No small voice answered from within the
+depths of his breast; and Mr. Strumley got clumsily to his
+feet. He was painfully conscious that he must do something&mdash;think
+something. But what was he to do? What was he
+to think? Could he ever make her understand? Make her
+believe? At least he could go and try.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Strumley finished his toilet nervously; and repaired
+to the home of Bettina, to cast his hope on the waters of her
+faith and charity. The butler courteously informed him that
+she was "not in." But Mr. Stokes was in the library. Would
+Mr. Strumley like to see him? Mr. Strumley thought not.</p>
+
+<p>It was a bad night for Paul. From side to side he tossed
+in search of inspiration. Day came; and he rolled wearily
+over to catch the first beams of the gladsome spring sunshine.
+From its torrid home ninety-three million miles afar it hurried
+to his bedside. It shimmered in his face and laughed with
+warm invigoration into the torpid cells of his brain. It awakened
+them, filled them with new life, hope&mdash;inspiration!</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Strumley leaped from his bed to the bath-tub, and
+fluttered frolicsomely in the crystal tide. When he sprang out
+there was the flush of vigorous young manhood on his skin
+and the glow of an expectant lover's ardency in his breast.
+Everything was arranged satisfactorily in the space beneath
+Mr. Strumley's water-tousled hair, wherein sat the goddess of
+human happiness&mdash;reason.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Strumley, after a hurried stop-over at the office of his
+astounded charge d'affaires, reached the Commercial Bank
+before the messenger boys. While waiting in the balm of
+the spring morning for the doors to open he circumnavigated
+the block nine times&mdash;he counted them. Coming in on the
+last tack he sighted the portly form of the banker careening
+with dignified speed around the corner. Another instant he
+had crossed the mat and disappeared into his financial harbor.
+Mr. Strumley steered rapidly in his wake.</p>
+
+<p>Again he stood in the presence of Bettina's father. This
+time, however, he was calm. In fact, the atmosphere about
+the two men was heavily charged with the essence of good
+fellowship. Mr. Stokes held out his hand cordially. The
+younger man pressed its broad palm with almost filial veneration.
+He noted, too, with a slight touch of remorse, that the
+banker's countenance was harassed. Evidently his heart
+still ached for the lost Arkansas timber. Mr. Strumley
+smiled philanthropically.</p>
+
+<p>He had something to say to Mr. Stokes, and began to say
+it with the easy enunciation of one who rests confident in the
+sunshine of righteousness. He spoke evenly, fluently. Of
+course Mr. Stokes at first might be a trifle perplexed. But
+please bear with him, hear him through, then he himself should
+be the sole judge.</p>
+
+<p>He, Mr. Strumley, did not care a rap&mdash;no, not a single
+rap, for every tree that grew in the entire state of Arkansas.
+What he wanted to do was to show Mr. Stokes&mdash;Bettina's
+father&mdash;that he was worth the while. That is, he wanted to
+demonstrate&mdash;it was a good word&mdash;to demonstrate that he
+had brains in his cranium as good as many another variety
+that boasted a trade mark of wider popularity. Had he done
+it? And if what he had done did not concur with the elements
+of high finance, he would like Mr. Stokes&mdash;Bettina's
+father&mdash;to tell him what it did concur with. Now, there was
+the whole story from its incipiency. And as conclusive proof
+that he did not mean to profit by the deal financially, would
+Mr. Stokes kindly examine those papers?</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Stokes looked at the documents tossed on the desk
+before him; and saw that they were several warranty deeds,
+conveying to Richard Stokes, his heirs and assigns forever,
+all titles and claims of all kinds whatsoever in certain therein-after
+described tracts or parcels of land in the state of Arkansas,
+for value received.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Strumley leaned back and contentedly watched a flush
+overspread the banker's face. His automobile waited at the
+door to whisk him to Bettina, and he was ready to carry on
+the campaign there the moment her father had finished his
+effusions of gratitude. Meanwhile the flush deepened; and,
+all impatience to fly to his lady-love, Paul egged on the speech.</p>
+
+<p>"You will note, Mr. Stokes," he volunteered, "that the
+price is exactly the same you had proposed paying. At your
+convenience, of course, you can remit this amount to my
+attorney, Mr. Edwards."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Stokes rose slowly. The flush had become apoplectic.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Strumley," he began, his large voice trembling, "this
+trick of yours is unworthy of an honorable man. Here, sir,
+take these papers and leave my office immediately."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Strumley rose also. Like the banker's voice, he, too,
+was trembling.</p>
+
+<p>"But, sir&mdash;&mdash;" he commenced to expostulate.</p>
+
+<p>"Go!" thundered the father of Bettina.</p>
+
+<p>Dazed, confused by the suddenness of the blast, Paul
+groped his way through the bank to the refuge of his car.
+Mechanically he put one hand on the lever and glanced ahead
+for obstacles. Crossing the street, not twenty yards ahead,
+tripped the most dangerous one conceivable&mdash;the beautiful
+Bettina herself!</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Strumley's hand fell limply to his knee. Fascinated
+he watched her reach the curb and with a little skip spring to
+the pavement. Then she came straight toward him; but he
+could see she was blissfully oblivious of his nearness. Suddenly
+an odd wave of emotion surged through his brain. His
+heart leaped with primitive savagery of love, and every fibre
+in him rebelled fiercely against the decrees and limitations of
+modern courtship. He had failed in the game as governed
+and modified by the rules of polite society and high finance.
+The primogenital man-spirit in him cried out for its inning.
+Mr. Strumley, as umpire, hearkened to its clamor.</p>
+
+<p>"Bettina!" he called, as that young lady came calmly
+abreast of the car, "wait a moment. I must speak with you."</p>
+
+<p>She started with a half-frightened exclamation; but met
+his look, at first defiantly, scornfully, then hesitatingly, faltering
+as she tried to take another step onward.</p>
+
+<p>"Bettina!" Mr. Strumley's voice vibrated determinedly,
+"I said I wished to speak with you. I can explain&mdash;everything."</p>
+
+<p>She halted reluctantly, and partly turned. In a moment
+he was at her side, his hand upon her arm. His glance had
+in it all the compelling strength of unadulterated, pristine
+manhood. She seemed to feel its potency, and without
+remonstrance suffered him to lead her toward the machine.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment, for a single moment, Mr. Strumley was
+exhilaratingly conscious of being borne aloft on a great wave
+of victorious gladness. Then the waters of triumph let him
+down with a shock.</p>
+
+<p>"Bettina!"</p>
+
+<p>At the word they both pivoted like pieces of automata. Mr.
+Stokes, large and severe, was standing between the portals of
+his financial fortification.</p>
+
+<p>"Bettina!" His voice was almost irresistible in the force
+of its parental summons.</p>
+
+<p>At the sound of it the primeval lover, newly renascent in
+Mr. Strumley's breast, cowed before the power of genitorial
+insistency. Then it came back into its own exultantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Bettina, my darling, get in," he commanded.</p>
+
+<p>She faltered, turned rebelliously, turned again and obeyed.</p>
+
+<p>"Bettina!" The voice of the childless banker faded off in
+the distance, its last echo drowned in the full-throated:
+"Bettina, we are going to be married at once," that broke
+joyously from Mr. Strumley's lips. "I have followed the
+example of the Romans, and taken me a wife from the Sabines."</p>
+
+<p>Bettina peeped up at him from beneath the dark screens
+of her lashes. "Then I, like the wise Sabian ladies, shall save
+the day for peace and for Rome," she smiled archly.</p>
+
+<p>And the machine laughed "Chug-chug!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>XI</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="THE_JAM_GOD" id="THE_JAM_GOD"></a>THE JAM GOD</h2>
+
+<h3>A Tale of Nigeria</h3>
+
+<h3>By H.M. EGBERT</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lieutenant Peters</span>, of the Royal Nigerian Service,
+was lying upon the ground face downward, under a
+prickly tree. The sun was nearly vertical, and the little
+round shadow in which he reclined was interlaced with streaks
+of hot light. As the sun moved, Peters rolled into the shade
+automatically. His eyes were shut, and he was in that hot
+borderland which is the nearest approach to sleep at noontide
+in Nigeria.</p>
+
+<p>The flies were pestering him, and he was thirsty&mdash;not with
+that thirst of the mouth which may be quenched with a long
+draught, but with the thirst of the throat that sands and
+sears. He felt thirsty all over. He had been thirsty, like
+this, ever since he struck the bend of the Niger. What made
+it worse, every night he dreamed of fruits that were snatched
+away, like the food of Tantalus, as he approached to grasp
+them. Two nights before he had been wandering knee-deep
+in English strawberry beds; the night before he had
+been shaking down limes and oranges from groves of trees
+set with green leaves and studded with golden fruit. Once
+he had dreamed of a new fruit, a cross between a pear and
+a watermelon; but when he cut into it he found nothing but
+hard, small seeds, with a pineapple flavor, which he detested.</p>
+
+<p>Peters was dreaming now, for he twined his fingers in the
+long grass and tossed uneasily.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll pick them all," he muttered sleepily. "All mixed
+together, with ten or twelve pounds of damp, brown sugar,
+and boiled into jam."</p>
+
+<p>He woke and felt his teeth for the hundredth time, to note
+whether any untoward looseness betokened the advent of
+the dreaded scurvy. Reassured, he stretched his limbs and
+rolled over into the shade of the tree.</p>
+
+<p>"When I get back to a white man's country," he murmured&mdash;"when
+I get home to England what is it I am going to do?
+Why, I shall go into a restaurant and order some rich brown
+soup. Then I shall have <i>pate de foie gras</i> sandwiches. Then
+scrambled eggs, chocolate, and muffins buttered with whipped
+cream. Then half a dozen cans of jam. I shall either begin
+with strawberry and conclude with apricot, or else I shall
+begin with apricot and wind up with raspberry. It doesn't
+matter much; any kind of jam will do except pineapple."</p>
+
+<p>He opened his eyes, brushed away the flies that swarmed
+noisily round him, took out his hard-tack, and opened a small
+can of dried beef. He munched for a while, sipping occasionally
+from the tepid water in his canteen. When he had
+finished he put the can-opener back in the pocket of his tunic
+and rose, his face overspread with a look of resolution.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe," he cried, "I believe that I could eat even a
+can of pineapple!"</p>
+
+<p>He rose, the light of his illusion still in his eyes, and began
+staggering weakly under the blazing sun in the direction
+of his camp. He was weaker than he had thought, and when
+he reached the shelter of his tent he sank down exhausted
+upon the bed. Through the open flap he could see, five
+hundred yards away, the round, beehive-shaped huts of the
+native village and, in their centre, the square palace of King
+Mtetanyanga, built of sticks and Niger mud, surrounded by
+its stockade, the royal flag, a Turkish bath-towel stained yellow
+and blue, floating proudly above.</p>
+
+<p>Lieutenant Peters had been sent by the Nigerian Government
+along the upper Niger to conclude treaties with the
+different kings and sweep them within the British sphere of
+interest. The French were out upon a similar errand, for
+in this region the two nations possessed only a vague and very
+indeterminate boundary line. Peters had been successful
+until he came to the village of King Mtetanyanga, who had
+balked at affixing his cross to the piece of mysterious parchment
+on the ground that it was unlawful to do so during the
+festival of the great Ju-Ju, whose worshipers could be heard
+wailing and beating tom-toms nightly in some unknown part
+of the jungle. What this Ju-Ju fetish was nobody could tell;
+it had come into the village recently, from the coast, men
+whispered; it possessed awful and mysterious potency;
+was guarded zealously by some score of priests, who veiled
+its awful vision; and it was the greatest Ju-Ju for hundreds
+of miles along the Niger, tribes from distant regions frequently
+arriving to sacrifice pigs to it.</p>
+
+<p>However, Lieutenant Raguet, the French commissioner,
+had been equally unsuccessful in inducing the dusky monarch
+to affix his signature to the French treaty, and the ambassadors
+of the rival nations were both encamped near the village,
+waiting for the Ju-Ju festivities to reach their plethoric conclusion
+before the king sobered up and attended to business.</p>
+
+<p>Raguet, strolling into his rival's camp that evening, found
+Peters in his tent, flushed, and breathing heavily.</p>
+
+<p>"Tcht! tcht! you are seeck," said the Frenchman sympathetically.
+"That ees too bad. Have you quinine?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quinine be hanged," cried Peters huskily. "I've taken
+the stuff until I've floated in it. There's only one thing
+can cure me, Raguet. I've been living on crackers and
+canned beef for over a month, and I'm pining for jam. Have
+you got any jam?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dsham, dsham?" repeated Raguet with a puzzled
+expression.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, les preserves&mdash;le fruit et le sugar, bouilli&mdash;you
+know what I mean."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, ze preserve!" said the Frenchman, with an expression
+of enlightenment. "Ze preserve, I have him not."</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you what, Raguet," said Peters irritably, "I've got
+to get some jam somewhere or I shall kick the bucket. I'm
+craving for it, man. If I had one can of the stuff it would
+put me upon my feet instantly, I can feel it. Now it's ten to
+one I'll be too sick to see the king after the ceremonies are
+over, and he'll sign your treaty instead of mine. And I've
+given him three opera hats, a phonograph, and a gallon of
+rum, curse the luck! What did you give him, Raguet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Me? I give him a umbrella with ze gold embroider," the
+Frenchman answered.</p>
+
+<p>"My government won't let me give the little kings umbrellas,"
+said Peters in vexation. "It makes the big chiefs
+jealous. I say, Raguet," he rambled on, sitting up dizzily,
+"what is this Ju-Ju idol of theirs?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know not," said the French lieutenant. "Only ze
+king and ze priests have seen him. If zey tell, zey die&mdash;ze
+idol keel zem."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose they'll be keeping up these infernal tom-toms
+for another week," grumbled the sick man, lying back and
+half closing his eyes from weariness. "Well, I'll have to
+try to get well in time."</p>
+
+<p>The Frenchman resisted the impulse to leap back in surprise,
+but his eyes narrowed till they were slits in his face.
+So! This Englishman did not know that this had been the
+last day of the sacrifices, that at midnight a hecatomb of pigs
+was to be killed and eaten in the bush in honor of the Ju-Ju.
+Nor that the king, when he had broached and drunk the cask
+of rum, would be in a mood to discuss the treaty. Peters
+evidently was unaware how much his majesty had been
+affronted by his failure to present him with an umbrella. La!
+la! Fortune was evidently upon his side. All this flashed
+through the Frenchman's mind in an instant. A solitary
+chuckle escaped him, but he turned it into an exclamation of
+grief, sighed deeply, seated himself upon the bed, and kissed
+Peters affectionately on either cheek.</p>
+
+<p>"My Peters, my poor friend," he began, "you must not
+theenk of leaving your tent for ze next two, t'ree days. Ze
+fever, he is very bad onless you receive him in bed. I shall
+take care of you."</p>
+
+<p>"You're a good fellow, Raguet," said Peters, wiping his
+face surreptitiously with the backs of his hands. When his
+visitor had left he turned over and sank into a half-delirious
+doze that lasted until the sun sank with appalling suddenness,
+and night rushed over the land. Tossing upon his bed, all
+through the velvet darkness he was dimly conscious, through
+his delirious dreams, of tom-toms beaten in the bush. His
+throat was parched, and in his dreams he drank greedily
+from his canteen; but each time that he awoke he saw it hanging
+empty from the tent flap. Presently a large, bright, yellow
+object rose up in front of him. Greedily he set his teeth into
+it; and even as he did so it disappeared, and he awoke, gasping
+and choking under the broiling blackness.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll have to take that canteen down to the stream and
+fill it," he muttered, rising unsteadily and proceeding toward
+the bank. To his surprise he found that rain had fallen.
+He was treading in ooze, which rose higher and higher until
+it clogged his footsteps. He struggled, but now it held him
+fast, and he was sinking slowly, but persistently, now to the
+waist, now to the shoulders. Frantically he thrust his hands
+downward to free himself, and withdrew them sticky with&mdash;jam!
+He scooped up great handsful greedily; and even as
+he raised it to his mouth it vanished, and he awoke once more
+in his tent.</p>
+
+<p>He flung himself out of bed with an oath, took down his
+canteen, and started toward the river. The noise of the
+tom-toms was louder than ever, proceeding, apparently, from
+some point in the bush a little to the left of the king's palace.
+Scrambling and struggling through the thorn thickets, he
+reached the sandy bed of the stream, filled his water-bottle
+at a pool, and drank greedily.</p>
+
+<p>It was that still hour of night when the many-voiced clamor
+of the bush grows hushed, because the lions are coming down
+to drink at the waters. The rising moon threw a pale light
+over the land. The tom-toms were still resounding in the
+bush, but to Peters's distorted mind they took on the sound of
+ripe mangoes falling to the ground and bursting open as they
+struck the soil. He counted, "one, two, three," and waited.
+He counted again. There must be thousands of them.
+Peters began to edge his way through the reeds in the direction
+of the sound. After a while he came to a wall of rocks
+perpendicular and almost insurmountable. He paused and
+considered, licking his lips greedily as the thud, thud continued,
+now, apparently, directly in front of him. All at once
+his eyes, curiously sensitive to external impressions, discovered
+a little, secret trail between two boulders. He
+followed it; a great stone revolved at his touch, and he found
+himself inside the sacred groves. He went on, gulping
+greedily in anticipation of the feast which awaited him.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he stopped short. He had seen something that
+brought back to him with a rush the realization of his whereabouts.
+Seated in the shelter of a cactus tree, not fifty yards
+away, was King Mtetanyanga, wearing his three opera hats,
+one upon another, in the form of a triple crown, and drinking
+his own rum with Raguet, under the shade of Raguet's
+umbrella. Prone at their feet crouched Tom, the interpreter.</p>
+
+<p>"His Majesty say, 'How you fix him Ju-Ju?'" translated
+Tom.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell His Majesty, my Ju-Ju stronger than the Englishman's
+Ju-Ju," answered the Frenchman. "My Ju-Ju eat
+up his Ju-Ju. He very sick. If I choose, he die."</p>
+
+<p>"Ugh!" grunted the king, when this explanation was
+vouchsafed, apparently impressed.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell His Majesty my Ju-Ju stronger than his own Ju-Ju.
+If he no sign treaty, eat up his Ju-Ju," Raguet went on.</p>
+
+<p>A flow of language came from the king's lips.</p>
+
+<p>"His Majesty say, he bring his Ju-Ju, see whose greater,"
+said the interpreter.</p>
+
+<p>Vaguely aware that treachery was impending, but crazed
+now by the falling mangoes, Peters left them palavering and
+followed the trail. All at once he emerged into a tiny clearing
+and stood blinking at a fire, round which a group of men&mdash;priests,
+as he knew, from their buffalo horns and crane
+feathers&mdash;were reclining, hammering upon tom-toms and
+shouting in various stages of intoxication. The firelight
+blinded their eyes. Peters stood still uncertainly. Then
+his eyes fell upon a sawed-off tree-trunk, in the hollow of
+which lay something wrapped in a white cloth, surrounded
+with snake-skins. He had come by this secret road into the
+actual presence of the great Ju-Ju.</p>
+
+<p>Curiously he inserted his hand, lifted the object out, and
+examined it. Inside was something of a strange, yet familiar
+shape, oval, and flattened at the ends. He lifted it out of its
+wrappings, and there, in his hand, he saw a can, bearing the
+legend:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>GREENAWAY'S BEST JAM.</p></div>
+
+<p>He looked at it in solemn and holy meditation; then, sitting
+down, he drew the can-opener from his tunic and wiped
+it clean upon his sleeve.</p>
+
+<p>After awhile a babel of sound broke in upon his ears. Men
+had come running up, brandishing spears, stopped, flung
+themselves upon the ground prostrate in front of him. The
+priests were there, frantically abasing themselves; Mtetanyanga,
+his opera hats rolling, unheeded, on the ground.
+Their cries ceased; they veiled their eyes. Then from the
+dust came the feeble tones of the interpreter.</p>
+
+<p>"His Majesty say, you eat him Ju-Ju&mdash;yours greatest
+Ju-Ju, he want to sign treaty."</p>
+
+<p>But Peters, waving the empty can over his head, shouted:</p>
+
+<p>"I've eaten jam, I've eaten jam! It's pineapple&mdash;and
+I don't care!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>XII</h3>
+
+<h2><a name="WHEN_FATHER_WORKED" id="WHEN_FATHER_WORKED"></a>WHEN FATHER WORKED</h2>
+
+<h3>A Suburban Story</h3>
+
+<h3>By CHARLTON LAWRENCE EDHOLM</h3>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"H'everybody works but Fadher,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">H'and 'e sets 'round h'all diy&mdash;&mdash;"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Thus</span> in chorus shrilled the infant Cadges like the morning
+stars singing together, but still more like the transplanted
+little cockneys they were.</p>
+
+<p>The placid brow of Mr. Thomas Cadge was darkened
+with disapproval, he shifted his stubby brier pipe to the other
+corner of his mouth, edged a little from his seat on the sunny
+front stoop and, craning his neck around the corner of his
+house, revealed an unwashed area extending from collarbone
+to left ear.</p>
+
+<p>"Shet up, you kids!" he barked. "Wot for? Becos I
+say so, that's why. I don't like that song, 'taint fit for
+Sunday."</p>
+
+<p>With a soothing consciousness that he had upheld the
+sacred character of the Sabbath, Mr. Cadge settled back to
+the comfort of his sun-bath and smoke. But he had scarcely
+emitted three puffs before the piping voice of Arabella Cadge
+was again wafted to his ears. She sang solo this time, and the
+selection was of a semi-devotional nature, more in keeping with
+the day:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Oh fadher, dear fadher, come 'ome wid me now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">De clock on de steeple strikes&mdash;&mdash;"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"Shet up, drat you!" again commanded her parent. "If
+I has to get up and go arter you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The balance of this direful threat may never be known, for
+at that moment Mr. Job Snavely, garbed in the black broadcloth
+which he wore one day out of seven, paused in front of
+Mr. Cadge's door and bade him good morning.</p>
+
+<p>"Mornin'," responded the ruffled father.</p>
+
+<p>"Your little girl is quite a song bird," continued Mr.
+Snavely, with his usual facility in making well-meant small-talk
+more irritating than a hurled brick.</p>
+
+<p>"She sings too much," commented Mr. Cadge, shortly,
+"I likes people wot knows when to 'old their tongues."</p>
+
+<p>"Very true, very true!" amiably replied Mr. Snavely, "but
+for all that, there is nothing sweeter than the artless babble of
+babes; I declare it almost brought the tears to my eyes when
+I heard them prattling, 'Everybody works but father,' it is
+so very, very appro&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Snavely checked himself abruptly, for the light in
+the small, green eyes of Thomas Cadge was baleful, and his
+square jaw protruded menacingly. The kindly critic of music
+had a vague feeling that the subject might be changed to
+advantage.</p>
+
+<p>"Been to church this morning, I suppose?" he inquired
+briskly with the assurance of a man just returning from that
+duty.</p>
+
+<p>"No I 'asn't," retorted Cadge, "and wot's more the old
+woman 'asn't, and the kids 'asn't neither. 'Cos why?
+'Cos in this 'ere free country of yours, a laboring man can't
+make a living for 'is family, workin' 'ard as I does, Sundays,
+nights, and h'all the time. The missus and the kids stays
+from church 'cos their duds ain't fit, and I stays 'ome 'cos
+I've got to work like a slave to pay you for seven dollars'
+worth of spoiled vegetables and mouldy groceries. That's
+the reason I works on Sundays, if you've got to know."</p>
+
+<p>"Work on Sundays!" gasped the grocer. "Work! work?"
+and he stared at the reclining figure of Mr. Cadge in unfeigned
+astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, work. This 'ere construction company wot's doing
+the job of grading this vacant block, employs me to sort of
+look after things, their shovels, scoops, and the like. A kind
+of private police officer, I am," he concluded, drawing
+himself up a little and puffing into the air.</p>
+
+<p>"And when are you on duty?" asked Mr. Snavely.</p>
+
+<p>"Nights," replied Cadge, "nights and Sundays, when the
+tools ain't in use."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope they pay you well for it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but they don't. 'Ow much do you think I get for
+stayin' awake nights and doin' without my church on Sunday?
+Three measly dollars a week and the rent of this 'ere 'ouse,
+if you can call it a 'ouse."</p>
+
+<p>It would have been difficult to determine just what name
+to give the residence of Mr. Thomas Cadge. It would hardly
+be called a cottage, though not because it was more spacious
+than the name implied; nor was it a piano-box, in spite of the
+fact that a piano would have fitted snugly within its walls,
+for no manufacturer would have trusted a valuable instrument
+in so flimsy a shell. It was not a real-estate office, as the
+sign which decorated its entire front proclaimed it to be, for
+through a jagged hole in the window facing the street projected
+a rusty iron stovepipe, which was wired to the fa&ccedil;ade of
+the building, and emitted the sooty smoke that had almost
+totally obscured and canceled the legend, "Suburban Star
+Realty Syndicate."</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, a litter of tin cans, impartially distributed at
+the front and back doors, indicated the domestic use to which
+this temporary office had been put. A smell of steaming suds
+that pervaded the place likewise indicated the manner in which
+Mrs. Cadge eked out her lord's stipend. This impression was
+confirmed by the chorus of irrepressible little Cadges proclaiming:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Mother tikes in washin',<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">H'and so does sister h'Ann,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">H'everybody works at our 'ouse,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But my old&mdash;&mdash;"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&mdash;a burst of melody which was abruptly checked with a tomato
+can hurled like a hand-grenade by their unmusical father.</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, Cadge," said Mr. Snavely, with the air of
+proprietorship one adopts to hopeless debtors, "three dollars
+a week is not going to keep your family, to say nothing of
+paying up that seven dollars. I can't carry you forever, you
+know. Why don't you get a daylight job?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, that is easy enough said," protested that injured
+individual. "'Aven't I tramped the streets day after day,
+lookin' for work?"</p>
+
+<p>"Them as 'as a good paying business don't know wot it
+means to look for a job," pursued Cadge bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes they do," asserted the grocer cheerfully. "I was
+given work at sweeping floors in the very store I now own.
+The fact is, I am sorry for you, Cadge, and I have been looking
+around to get you a job."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cadge seemed depressed.</p>
+
+<p>"And I am glad to say," chirruped Mr. Snavely, "that
+I have found a small piece of work for you, which will be
+worth a dollar and a half a day."</p>
+
+<p>Cadge's brow was still gloomy.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, it is real work," added his kind-hearted creditor,
+briskly, "no sitting in the sun and watching other people's
+shovels; but a customer of mine, a widow lady, that lives
+along Catnip Creek, wants a man to pile up a wall of loose
+stones to keep her land from washing away in high water."</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Cadge shook his head with the air of C&aelig;sar virtuously
+refusing the crown.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, Snavely, it wouldn't do," he said. "I can see
+that it would interfere with my present h'occupation, and I
+can't afford to risk losing this 'ere job. Supposin' my family
+was to be turned out of doors!"</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense! It will only take you about four days to build
+the wall, and at one-fifty per day, that will be six dollars, twice
+your week's wages right there, and almost enough to pay
+what you owe me."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid it can't be done, Snavely; the company might
+not like it; you see, I would be competing with them, that's
+their line."</p>
+
+<p>"They wouldn't handle so small a job. You know that,
+Cadge."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but a man can't draw pay for two positions at once;
+'t ain't honest."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, this is not a regular situation," protested the upright
+Snavely, who saw his bill still unpaid; "you could work on
+it at odd times if you like. She'll pay you by the piece,
+I am pretty sure, and you will get your six dollars cash when
+the wall is done."</p>
+
+<p>The furtive eyes of the hunter of work avoided those of
+his benefactor. He was pondering a new excuse when he
+happened to notice Master Cadge, aged nine, Thomas Cadge,
+Jr., aged eight, and Arabella Cadge, whose years were six,
+busily constructing a fort of cobblestones, and an idea struck
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," he said, loftily waving his pipe, "I'll drop
+in Monday and talk this over with you, Snavely. Then if
+the job suits me I may take it. I don't like to talk business
+on Sunday, you know."</p>
+
+<p>Thus rebuked, Mr. Snavely resumed his homeward way.</p>
+
+<p>The following Monday Cadge overslept; Tuesday found
+him with a headache as a result, which by Wednesday had
+settled in a tooth; Thursday he felt so much better that he
+feared to do anything which might check his convalescence;
+Friday was an unlucky day, but so desirous was he of work
+that he manfully conquered his superstitious qualms and
+strolled over to the little shop where Mr. Job Snavely dealt in
+groceries and vegetables.</p>
+
+<p>The details regarding the work were furnished with cheerful
+alacrity, the tradesman going so far as to accompany his
+proteg&eacute; to the home of their patron, Mrs. Pipkin, a withered
+little lady who lived with her cats on the bank of the creek.</p>
+
+<p>The work to be performed demanded more brawn than
+brain and no vast amount of either. All that was required
+was to pile up the boulders and cobblestones which littered
+the bed of the stream, as a rough, unmortared wall, along the
+sloping bank of Mrs. Pipkin's property.</p>
+
+<p>It was evident that Mrs. Pipkin herself had not the slightest
+notion of how much a wall should cost, as she was ignorant of
+the two factors which determined it, namely, the wages of
+day-laborers and the time required to build the wall; therefore
+she requested Mr. Snavely, as a man of affairs, to make
+the bargain for her.</p>
+
+<p>It was well that she did so, for Mr. Cadge's ideas on the
+subject were as boundless as hers were limited. Day wages,
+he affirmed, ranged from two dollars up for common labor,
+and as building a wall was highly skilled labor he thought
+three and a half or four dollars per diem would be about right,
+going on the basis of at least six days of eight hours each.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Snavely, on the contrary, after looking over the ground
+declared that four days' steady work would build a wall running
+the entire length of the widow's lot. Furthermore, that a
+dollar and a quarter a day was fair wages for such employment,
+while laborers would scramble for the job at a dollar
+and a half. As a concession to Mr. Cadge, he was willing
+to allow him to take his own time and agreed to pay six
+dollars when the wall should be completed.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cadge waxed indignant and very voluble, while Mr.
+Snavely was a mild man of few words; but the simple laborer
+was no match for a man who made his living by small chaffering.
+He was forced to give in, and Saturday morning, bright
+and early, he appeared on the banks of Catnip Creek accompanied
+by Master Cadge, Thomas Cadge, Jr., and Arabella
+Cadge.</p>
+
+<p>"Daddy's going to give you kids a treat to-day," he
+announced. "My eye! wot larks we will 'ave. Nothing to
+do all day long but play building a stone fort right on the
+brook, and Daddy will show you 'ow to build it."</p>
+
+<p>The little Cadges were perfectly charmed at this condescension
+on the part of their sire, who seldom acknowledged
+their presence except with a cuff in passing. They were
+eager to begin, and as they had no need to strip their legs,
+which were always bare, the work proceeded apace.</p>
+
+<p>Cadge, Sr., ensconced himself in the sunniest nook of the
+bank, and directed his offspring what stones to select and
+where to place them, and above all, to make haste, since the
+enemy would soon appear to attack the fort.</p>
+
+<p>Before their Saturday holiday was over, the children had
+discovered that their father was a strenuous playfellow. In
+vain they suggested fishing, hunting Injuns, or gathering
+wild flowers; they had set out to build a fort on Catnip Creek,
+and build it they must.</p>
+
+<p>They entertained hopes of sneaking off alone when they
+should go home for lunch, but Mr. Cadge had provided for
+this contingency. His wife appeared at noon with slices of
+bread and butter for the Cadgelings, to which was added a
+cold beefsteak and a bucket of beer for the support of their
+house. Having already lunched at home, she was permitted
+to lay a tier of heavier stones along the wall while waiting for
+her family to finish the repast.</p>
+
+<p>It was an arduous day for the tribe of Cadge, excepting,
+of course, its head. Not until the first star came out and
+the owls began to hoot along the Catnip did he declare himself
+satisfied with the day's work and proceed homeward to
+supper. Widow Pipkin's wall was half finished.</p>
+
+<p>Not until Saturday was the patient father able to enlist
+once more the services of his offspring, for, "What if they are
+your own kids!" retorted Mrs. Cadge from her wash-board.
+"I've rubbed my 'ands raw to give 'em the eddication you
+and me lacks, and to school they go. You build that wall
+yourself, or wait until the week's end for your pay."</p>
+
+<p>The former alternative was not to be thought of, and the
+Widow Pipkin wondered mildly whether the half finished
+wall was ever to be completed.</p>
+
+<p>But Saturday at dawn Cadge once more appeared, driving
+before him three tear-stained and reluctant Cadgelets. They
+had inherited part of their father's disposition in regard to
+real work, likewise his unwillingness to be imposed upon.
+Constructing fortifications along the Catnip was well enough
+for one Saturday, but their backs still ached from their exertions,
+and they had only disdain for the restricted paternal
+imagination which suggested that this time they build stone
+castles.</p>
+
+<p>Their sire waxed eloquent over the art of castle building and
+the sport of imprisoning ogres in them, but was finally compelled
+to assume the attitude of an ogre himself, and threatened
+to skin them alive if they did not do as they were bid.</p>
+
+<p>It was a long, hard day for the whole Cadge family. The
+little Cadges worked like galley-slaves in fear of the lash;
+their mother, out of pity for them, laid two tiers of cobbles
+when she came at noon, and even Cadge himself was tempted
+on one or two occasions to descend from his nook and lend
+a hand, but restrained himself.</p>
+
+<p>Again the owls hooted along the stream and bullfrogs
+croaked from the reedy places. Cadge knocked the dottle
+out of his pipe and arose, stretching his short, muscular limbs,
+which had become cramped from sitting still so long.</p>
+
+<p>"Run along 'ome, kiddies," he said, "and tell the old woman
+not to wait supper for me. There's a man down town as
+wants to see me about a job. I'll 'ave a bite with 'im."</p>
+
+<p>The little Cadges disappeared in the twilight and their
+father presented himself at the Widow Pipkin's door to receive
+his hard-earned wages.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear me! I can't pay you to-night," answered Mrs.
+Pipkin. "I never keep any money in the house."</p>
+
+<p>Cadge grumbled something about, a check would do. He
+was pretty sure that the barkeeper at Spider Grogan's place
+would cash it.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but mine is a savings account, and I will have to go
+down to the bank myself and get the money; but, never mind,
+you shall have it first thing Monday morning."</p>
+
+<p>The thirsty man could find no solution to this problem and,
+although he urged the Widow Pipkin to think of a way, as
+his "missus needed the medicine something orful," that
+kind-hearted old lady could suggest nothing more to the
+point than going at once with a mustard poultice to the
+sufferer.</p>
+
+<p>Old women are so set in their notions that the anxious
+husband was a full half hour dissuading her, and, when he
+reached home with both hands in his empty pockets, Mrs.
+Cadge was washing the dishes.</p>
+
+<p>"Did the man give you a job?" inquired his wife brightly.</p>
+
+<p>"Wot man? Wot job? Where's my supper?" snapped
+Cadge. Then, as the ingenious ruse occurred to him, a flood
+of language rose to his lips and would not be dammed, though
+everything else was.</p>
+
+<p>"Gone and hogged all the supper, did you!" he growled.
+"H'it's a nice state of affairs, when a man comes 'ome from a
+'ard day's work to a h'empty table."</p>
+
+<p>"But it was such a little steak, Tom," urged his wife,
+"and the children were so hungry that I let them finish it."</p>
+
+<p>There was no money in the house, and Snavely, the only
+credit grocer, had closed his shop, so Mr. Cadge's supper that
+night was bread and cheese without kisses.</p>
+
+<p>Sunday was a long-remembered day of misery for Cadge's
+wife and children, who played the scapegoat for Mr. Snavely
+and whipping-boy for Mrs. Pipkin.</p>
+
+<p>Monday morning the head of the house arose early and,
+before Mrs. Pipkin had finished her beauty sleep, that hard-working
+man was at the door demanding his pay. An hour
+was all the time she required for dressing. Mr. Cadge wished
+he had broken his fast before leaving home.</p>
+
+<p>"Really, I don't know whether I ought to pay you," replied
+Widow Pipkin when she finally answered his last, desperate
+ring. "Mr. Snavely made the bargain, and I should like to
+have him see the work before settling with you."</p>
+
+<p>She jingled some silver in her plump chain purse as she
+spoke.</p>
+
+<p>Aha, the widow had deceived him! It was eight o'clock,
+the bank would not open for an hour, she had had the money
+in the house all the time. The deceitfulness of women!</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cadge's blood rose to his head. His little green eyes
+smouldered. Fortunately for the widow, Mr. Snavely drove
+up at that moment on his delivery wagon, and cheerfully
+agreed to appraise the work.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, come now, Cadge, my man, you don't call that a
+finished job, I hope? Why, it is three foot short at each end
+and lacks a tier at the top. You had better pitch in for an
+hour or two and make a fair job of it, and then you'll get your
+money."</p>
+
+<p>"Wot do you call a fair job, I should like to know?" replied
+the heated Cadge; "look at them 'ere boulders, as I fished out
+of the h'icy water at peek o' day! Look at all them little
+stones, h'every one of them as cost me backache and sweat.
+H'if that job ain't worth six dollars it ain't worth six cents."</p>
+
+<p>"Mebbe so, mebbe so, my good man," responded the
+grocer, genially, "but whatever it's worth, I don't pay for a
+job until it's finished."</p>
+
+<p>At this point Cadge's torrent of eloquence swept away all
+punctuating pauses and he became slightly incoherent, but
+the drift of his harangue was that because he had worked like
+a slave and finished the wall in two days they wanted to rob
+him of his money. "I'll 'ave the six dollars for my work, or
+I'll 'ave the lor on you," he concluded.</p>
+
+<p>The amiable but tactless Snavely saw a happy solution of
+the problem. "Never mind, Mrs. Pipkin," he said, "there
+shall be no lawsuit. You pay me the six dollars, and I will
+write Cadge a receipt for the seven dollars he owes me. I lose
+a dollar that way, to be sure, but then it is just the same as
+finding six."</p>
+
+<p>"Ho! that's your game is it?" snarled Cadge, gasping with
+indignation. "That's 'ow you two plot against a poor 'ard-workin'
+man with a family, to beat him out of 'is pay. H'it's
+a put-up job, that's wot h'it is! But you don't get the best
+of Tom Cadge that way. I'll 'ave a h'orficer 'ere if I don't
+get my money, you bloomin' old plotters, you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you had better call an officer," agreed Mr. Snavely.
+"I saw one around the corner as I passed; the same one your
+brats were pelting from behind a fence last week."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cadge tacked adroitly. "No, I ain't going to spend
+my money with the loryers, as'd want twelve dollars to get
+you back six. I'll tear down the wall, that's wot I'll do.
+If I don't get my pay the loidy don't get her wall, and you can
+tike your measly job and give it to some poor man wot
+needs it."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Snavely had one foot on the wheel and swung lightly
+into his cart. "Have it your own way, Cadge," he responded
+cheerfully. "You can finish the wall and get your six dollars
+cash, or you can leave it as it stands and take my receipt for
+seven, or you can tear it down and have your labor for your
+pains; but mind, if the police catch you destroying property,
+you will get a month in the chain gang."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care if I get sixty days!" screamed the outraged
+laborer. "The city can look after my missus and the kids if
+their nateral provider is took from them. That wall is
+comin' down! I'm h'only a workin'-man, and I don't mind
+bein' spit on once in a while, but I won't stand for it bein'
+rubbed in."</p>
+
+<p>It was a sultry June day, the first of the summer vacation,
+and toward noon Mrs. Cadge set out to take her husband a
+bite of lunch. The little Cadges accompanied her, eager to
+exhibit the noble castle which they had completed on Catnip
+Creek. When they came to that charming stream, their
+eyes flew open in amazement and their jaws dropped.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, mamma, look at daddy!" they cried in unison.
+"Daddy's workin'!"</p>
+
+<p>Incredible though it seemed, it was true indeed. Father
+worked. Mrs. Cadge wondered whether she, too, was to have a
+vacation, after her years of drudgery.</p>
+
+<p>Cadge worked furiously, his rage uncooled by the waters
+of the Catnip which flowed through his shoes. He had discarded
+coat, vest, and hat, and was hurling rocks with the
+strength of a maddened giant, clear across the stream. What
+splendid muscles he had!</p>
+
+<p>A tier or two of Mrs. Pipkin's wall was already down.
+The telephone within her cottage was ringing madly.</p>
+
+<p>Even as the Cadgelings watched their parent sweating at
+his toil, a blue-coated figure ran swiftly down the bank, caught
+the hard-working man by the collar, and firmly led him away
+to where steady work awaited him.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Cadge watched him go with mingled feelings. She
+had seen him depart thus before, and remembered how much
+easier it was that month to feed four mouths instead of five.
+Besides, the exercise on the rock pile would do him good, poor
+man. A night-watchman's position was so confining.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Snavely had driven up to the curb, and the Widow
+Pipkin ran out all of a flutter. They sympathetically related
+to Mrs. Cadge the events of the morning which had led to
+her husband's arrest.</p>
+
+<p>"And there was only an hour's work to be done on the
+job," said Mr. Snavely judicially.</p>
+
+<p>"I would gladly pay six dollars cash to have it just as it was
+this morning," added the tremulous Widow Pipkin, "and
+I'd make it ten if it were done as Mr. Snavely says."</p>
+
+<p>"And I'd still be willing to write a receipt for the
+full seven dollars for six dollars cash," interposed that
+astute philanthropist.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Cadge's shrewd, birdlike eyes were half closed in
+mental computation; ten dollars for the wall and one dollar
+discount on the grocery bill, that would make eleven dollars
+clear.</p>
+
+<p>"Come along, kiddies," she said, "you and me will pitch
+in and finish that wall to the queen's taste in an hour or two!"
+And she did.</p>
+
+<p>Eleven dollars clear, and the watchman's pay still going
+on, Cadge on the rock pile, hence the biggest mouth of the
+family fed by the city. Indeed, indeed, the little Cadges
+were not the only ones who enjoyed a vacation when father
+worked!</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 95%;" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Golden Stories, by Various
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Golden Stories, by Various
+
+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: Golden Stories
+ A Selection of the Best Fiction by the Foremost Writers
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: September 22, 2006 [EBook #19356]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GOLDEN STORIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Lybarger, Brian Janes, Melissa Er-Raqabi
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
+
+Following each author's name was a notice: "All rights reserved." This
+book is currently in the public domain, and the notices have been
+removed, but are mentioned here in the interest of completeness.
+
+Many inconsistencies in spelling, punctuation, and hyphenation have been
+normalized. Others remain as in the original. Any deviation from the
+author's intent is solely the responsibility of the transcriber.
+
+This book seems to have been bound in two sections, each with stories
+numbered I-XII.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Golden Stories
+
+
+A SELECTION OF THE BEST FICTION
+BY THE FOREMOST WRITERS
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+NEW YORK
+THE SHORT STORIES COMPANY
+1909
+
+
+
+
+ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN
+LANGUAGES, INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1908-1909, BY THE SHORT STORIES COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+THE NIGHT EXPRESS
+
+The Story of a Bank Robbery
+
+By FRED M. WHITE
+
+
+A PELTING rain volleyed against the great glass dome of the terminus, a
+roaring wind boomed in the roof. Passengers, hurrying along the
+platform, glistened in big coats and tweed caps pulled close over their
+ears. By the platform the night express was drawn up--a glittering mass
+of green and gold, shimmering with electric lights, warm, inviting, and
+cozy.
+
+Most of the corridor carriages and sleeping berths were full, for it was
+early in October still, and the Scotch exodus was not just yet. A few
+late comers were looking anxiously out for the guard. He came presently,
+an alert figure in blue and silver. Really, he was very sorry. But the
+train was unusually crowded, and he was doing the best he could. He was
+perfectly aware of the fact that his questioners represented a Cabinet
+Minister on his way to Balmoral and a prominent Lothian baronet, but
+there are limits even to the power of an express guard, on the Grand
+Coast Railway.
+
+"Well, what's the matter with this?" the Minister demanded. "Here is an
+ordinary first-class coach that will do very well for us. Now, Catesby,
+unlock one of these doors and turn the lights on."
+
+"Very sorry, my lord," the guard explained, "but it can't be done. Two
+of the carriages in the coach are quite full, as you see, and the other
+two are reserved. As a matter of fact, my lord, we are taking a body
+down to Lydmouth. Gentleman who is going to be buried there. And the
+other carriage is for the Imperial Bank of Scotland. Cashier going up
+north with specie, you understand."
+
+It was all plain enough, and disgustingly logical. To intrude upon the
+presence of a body was perfectly impossible; to try and force the hand
+of the bank cashier equally out of the question. As head of a great
+financial house, the Minister knew that. A platform inspector bustled
+along presently, with his hand to his gold-laced cap.
+
+"Saloon carriage being coupled up behind, my lord," he said.
+
+The problem was solved. The guard glanced at his watch. It seemed to him
+that both the bank messenger and the undertaker were cutting it fine.
+The coffin came presently on a hand-truck--a black velvet pall lay over
+it, and on the sombre cloth a wreath or two of white lilies. The door of
+the carriage was closed presently, and the blinds drawn discreetly
+close. Following behind this came a barrow in charge of a couple of
+platform police. On the barrow were two square deal boxes, heavy out of
+all proportion to their size. These were deposited presently to the
+satisfaction of a little nervous-looking man in gold-rimmed glasses. Mr.
+George Skidmore, of the Imperial Bank, had his share of ordinary
+courage, but he had an imagination, too, and he particularly disliked
+these periodical trips to branch banks, in convoy, so to speak. He took
+no risks.
+
+"Awful night, sir," the guard observed. "Rather lucky to get a carriage
+to yourself, sir. Don't suppose you would have done so only we're taking
+a corpse as far as Lydmouth, which is our first stop."
+
+"Really?" Skidmore said carelessly. "Ill wind that blows nobody good,
+Catesby. I may be overcautious, but I much prefer a carriage to myself.
+And my people prefer it, too. That's why we always give the railway
+authorities a few days' notice. One can't be too careful, Catesby."
+
+The guard supposed not. He was slightly, yet discreetly, amused to see
+Mr. Skidmore glance under the seats of the first-class carriage.
+Certainly there was nobody either there or on the racks. The carriage
+at the far side was locked, and so, now, was the door next the platform.
+The great glass dome was brilliantly lighted so that anything suspicious
+would have been detected instantly. The guard's whistle rang out shrill
+and clear, and Catesby had a glimpse of Mr. Skidmore making himself
+comfortable as he swung himself into his van. The great green and gold
+serpent with the brilliant electric eyes fought its way sinuously into
+the throat of the wet and riotous night on its first stage of over two
+hundred miles. Lydmouth would be the first stop.
+
+So far Mr. Skidmore had nothing to worry him, nothing, that is, except
+the outside chance of a bad accident. He did not anticipate, however,
+that some miscreant might deliberately wreck the train on the off chance
+of looting those plain deal boxes. The class of thief that banks have to
+fear is not guilty of such clumsiness. Unquestionably nothing could
+happen on this side of Lydmouth. The train was roaring along now through
+the fierce gale at sixty odd miles an hour, Skidmore had the carriage to
+himself, and was not the snug, brilliantly lighted compartment made of
+steel? On one side was the carriage with the coffin; on the other side
+another compartment filled with a party of sportsmen going North.
+Skidmore had noticed the four of them playing bridge just before he
+slipped into his own carriage. Really, he had nothing to fear. He lay
+back comfortably wondering how Poe or Gaboriau would have handled such a
+situation with a successful robbery behind it. There are limits, of
+course, both to a novelist's imagination and a clever thief's process of
+invention. So, therefore....
+
+Three hours and twenty minutes later the express pulled up at Lydmouth.
+The station clock indicated the hour to be 11.23. Catesby swung himself
+out of his van on to the shining wet platform. Only one passenger was
+waiting there, but nobody alighted. Catesby was sure of this, because he
+was on the flags before a door could be opened. He came forward to give
+a hand with the coffin in the compartment next to Skidmore's. Then he
+noticed, to his surprise, that the glass in the carriage window was
+smashed; he could see that the little cashier was huddled up strangely
+in one corner. And Catesby could see also that the two boxes of bullion
+were gone!
+
+Catesby's heart was thumping against his ribs as he fumbled with his
+key. He laid his hand upon Skidmore's shoulder, but the latter did not
+move. The fair hair hung in a mass on the side of his forehead, and here
+it was fair no longer. There was a hole with something horribly red and
+slimy oozing from it. The carpet on the floor was piled up in a heap;
+there were red smears on the cushions. It was quite evident that a
+struggle had taken place here. The shattered glass in the window
+testified to that. And the boxes were gone, and Skidmore had been
+murdered by some assailant who had shot him through the brain. And this
+mysterious antagonist had got off with the bullion, too.
+
+A thing incredible, amazing, impossible; but there it was. By some
+extraordinary method or another the audacious criminal had boarded an
+express train traveling at sixty miles an hour in the teeth of a gale.
+He had contrived to enter the cashier's carriage and remove specie to
+the amount of eight thousand pounds! It was impossible that only one man
+could have carried it. But all the same it was gone.
+
+Catesby pulled himself together. He was perfectly certain that nobody at
+present on the train had been guilty of this thing. He was perfectly
+certain that nobody had left the train. Nobody could have done so after
+entering the station without the guard's knowledge, and to have
+attempted such a thing on the far side of the river bridge would have
+been certain death to anybody. There was a long viaduct here--posts and
+pillars and chains, with tragedy lurking anywhere for the madman who
+attempted such a thing. And until the viaduct was reached the express
+had not slackened speed. Besides, the thief who had the courage and
+intelligence and daring to carry out a robbery like this was not the man
+to leave an express train traveling at a speed of upwards of sixty miles
+an hour.
+
+The train had to proceed, there was no help for it. There was a hurried
+conference between Catesby and the stationmaster; after that the
+electric lamps in the dead man's carriage were unshipped, and the blinds
+pulled down. The matter would be fully investigated when Edinburgh was
+reached, meanwhile the stationmaster at Lydmouth would telephone the
+Scotch capital and let them know there what they had to expect. Catesby
+crept into his van again, very queer and dizzy, and with a sensation in
+his legs suggestive of creeping paralysis.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Naturally, the mystery of the night express caused a great sensation.
+Nothing like it had been known since the great crime on the South Coast,
+which is connected with the name of Lefroy. But that was not so much a
+mystery as a man hunt. There the criminal had been identified. But here
+there was no trace and no clue whatever. It was in vain that the
+Scotland Yard authorities tried to shake the evidence of the guard,
+Catesby. He refused to make any admissions that would permit the police
+even to build up a theory. He was absolutely certain that Mr. Skidmore
+had been alone in the carriage at the moment that the express left
+London; he was absolutely certain that he had locked the door of the
+compartment, and the engine driver could testify that the train had
+never traveled at a less speed than sixty miles an hour until the bridge
+over the river leading into Lydmouth station was reached; even then
+nobody could have dropped off the train without the risk of certain
+death. Inspector Merrick was bound to admit this himself when he went
+over the spot. And the problem of the missing bullion boxes was quite as
+puzzling in its way as the mysterious way in which Mr. Skidmore had met
+his death.
+
+There was no clue to this either. Certainly there had been a struggle,
+or there would not have been blood marks all over the place, and the
+window would have remained intact. Skidmore had probably been forced
+back into his seat, or he had collapsed there after the fatal shot was
+fired. The unfortunate man had been shot through the brain with an
+ordinary revolver of common pattern, so that for the purpose of proof
+the bullet was useless. There were no finger marks on the carriage door,
+a proof that the murderer had either worn gloves or that he had
+carefully removed all traces with a cloth of some kind. It was obvious,
+too, that a criminal of this class would take no risks, especially as
+there was no chance of his being hurried, seeing that he had had three
+clear hours for his work. The more the police went into the matter, the
+more puzzled they were. It was not a difficult matter to establish the
+bona fides of the passengers who traveled in the next coach with
+Skidmore, and as to the rest it did not matter. Nobody could possibly
+have left any of the corridor coaches without attracting notice; indeed,
+the very suggestion was absurd. And there the matter rested for three
+days.
+
+It must not be supposed that the authorities had been altogether idle.
+Inspector Merrick spent most of his time traveling up and down the line
+by slow local trains on the off-chance of hearing some significant
+incident that might lead to a clue. There was one thing obvious--the
+bullion boxes must have been thrown off the train at some spot arranged
+between the active thief and his confederates. For this was too big a
+thing to be entirely the work of one man. Some of the gang must have
+been waiting along the line in readiness to receive the boxes and carry
+them to a place of safety. By this time, no doubt, the boxes themselves
+had been destroyed; but eight thousand pounds in gold takes some moving,
+and probably a conveyance, a motor for choice, had been employed for
+this purpose. But nobody appeared to have seen or heard anything
+suspicious on the night of the murder; no prowling gamekeeper or watcher
+had noticed anything out of the common. Along the Essex and Norfolk
+marshes, where the Grand Coast Railway wound along like a steel snake,
+they had taken their desolate and dreary way. True, the dead body of a
+man had been found in the fowling nets up in the mouth of the Little
+Ouse, and nobody seemed to know who he was; but there could be no
+connection between this unhappy individual and the express criminal.
+Merrick shook his head as he listened to this from a laborer in a
+roadside public house where he was making a frugal lunch on bread and
+cheese.
+
+"What do you call fowling nets?" Merrick asked.
+
+"Why, what they catches the birds in," the rustic explained. "Thousands
+and thousands of duck and teel and widgeon they catches at this time of
+year. There's miles of nets along the road--great big nets like fowl
+runs. Ye didn't happen to see any on 'em as ye came along in the train?"
+
+"Now I come to think of it, yes," Merrick said thoughtfully. "I was
+rather struck by all that netting. So they catch sea birds that way?"
+
+"Catches 'em by the thousand, they does. Birds fly against the netting
+in the dark and get entangled. Ducks they get by 'ticing 'em into a sort
+of cage with decoys. There's some of 'em stan's the best part of half a
+mile long. Covered in over the top like great cages. Ain't bad sport,
+either."
+
+Merrick nodded. He recollected it all clearly now. He recalled the wide,
+desolate mud flats running right up to the railway embankment for some
+miles. At high tide the mud flats were under water, and out of these the
+great mass of network rose both horizontally and perpendicular. And in
+this tangle the dead body of a man had been found after the storm.
+
+There was nothing really significant in the fact that the body had been
+discovered soon after the murder of Mr. George Skidmore. Still, there
+might be a connection between the two incidents. Merrick was going to
+make inquiries; he was after what looked like a million to one chance.
+But then Merrick was a detective with an imagination, which was one of
+the reasons why he had been appointed to the job. It was essentially a
+case for the theoretical man. It baffled all the established rules of
+the game.
+
+Late the same afternoon Merrick arrived at Little Warlingham by means of
+a baker's cart. It was here that the body of the drowned man lay
+awaiting the slim chances of identity. If nothing transpired during the
+next eight and forty hours, the corpse would be buried by the parish
+authorities. The village policeman acted as Merrick's guide. It was an
+event in his life that he was not likely to forget.
+
+"A stranger to these parts, I should say, sir," the local officer said.
+"He's in a shed at the back of the 'Blue Anchor,' where the inquest was
+held. If you come this way, I'll show him to you."
+
+"Anything found on the body?"
+
+"Absolutely nothing, sir. No mark on the clothing or linen, either.
+Probably washed off some ship in the storm. Pockets were quite empty,
+too. And no signs of foul play. _There_ you are, sir!"
+
+Casually enough Merrick bent over the still, white form lying there. The
+dead face was turned up to the light, Rembrandtesque, coming through the
+door. The detective straightened himself suddenly, and wiped his
+forehead.
+
+"Stranger to you, sir, of course?" the local man said grimly.
+
+"Well, no," Merrick retorted. "I happen to know the fellow quite well.
+I'm glad I came here."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Until it was quite too dark to see any longer Merrick was out on the mud
+flats asking questions. He appeared to be greatly interested in the
+wildfowlers and the many methods of catching their prey. He learned,
+incidentally, that on the night of the express murder most of the nets
+and lures had been washed away. He took minute particulars as to the
+state of the tide on the night in question; he wanted to know if the
+nets were capable of holding up against any great force. For instance,
+if a school of porpoises came along? Or if a fish eagle or an osprey
+found itself entangled in the meshes?
+
+The fowlers smiled. They invited Merrick to try it for himself. On that
+stormy east coast it was foolish to take any risks. And Merrick was
+satisfied. As a matter of fact, he was more than satisfied.
+
+He was really beginning to see his way at last. By the time he got back
+to his headquarters again he had practically reconstructed the crime. As
+he stood on the railway permanent way, gazing down into the network of
+the fowlers below, he smiled to himself. He could have tossed a biscuit
+on to the top of the long lengths of tarred and knotted rigging. Later
+on he telephoned to the London terminus of the Grand Coast Railway for
+the people there to place the services of Catesby at his disposal for a
+day or two. Could Catesby meet him at Lydmouth to-morrow?
+
+The guard could and did. He frankly admitted that he was grateful for
+the little holiday. He looked as if he wanted it. The corners of his
+mouth twitched, his hands were shaky.
+
+"It's nerves, Mr. Merrick," he explained. "We all suffer from them at
+times. Only we don't like the company to know it, ye understand? To tell
+the truth, I've never got over that affair at the Junction here eight
+years ago. I expect you remember that."
+
+Merrick nodded. Catesby was alluding to a great railway tragedy which
+had taken place outside Lydmouth station some few years back. It had
+been a most disastrous affair for a local express, and Catesby had been
+acting as guard to the train. He spoke of it under his breath.
+
+"I dream of it occasionally even now," he said. "The engine left the
+line and dragged the train over the embankment into the river. If you
+ask me how I managed to escape, I can't tell you. I never come into
+Lydmouth with the night express now without my head out of the window of
+the van right away from the viaduct till she pulls up at the station.
+And what's more, I never shall. It isn't fear, mind you, because I've as
+much pluck as any man. It's just nerves."
+
+"We get 'em in our profession, too," Merrick smiled. "Did you happen to
+be looking out of the window on the night of the murder?"
+
+"Yes, and every other night, too. Haven't I just told you so? Directly
+we strike the viaduct I come to my feet by instinct."
+
+"Always look out the same side, I suppose?"
+
+"Yes, on the left. That's the platform side, you understand."
+
+"Then if anybody had left the train there----"
+
+"Anybody left the train! Why we were traveling at fifty miles an hour
+when we reached the viaduct. Oh, yes, if anybody _had_ left the train I
+should have been bound to see them, of course."
+
+"But you can't see out of both windows at once."
+
+"Nobody could leave the train by the other side. The stone parapet of
+the viaduct almost touches the footboard, and there's a drop of ninety
+feet below that. Of course I see what you are driving at, Mr. Merrick.
+Now look here. I locked Mr. Skidmore in the carriage myself, and I can
+_prove_ that nobody got in before we left London. That would have been
+too dangerous a game so long as the train was passing any number of
+brilliantly lighted stations, and by the time we got into the open we
+were going at sixty miles an hour. That speed never slackened till we
+were just outside Lydmouth, and I was watching at the moment that our
+pace dropped. I had my head out of the window of my van till we pulled
+up by the platform. I am prepared to swear to all this if you like. Lord
+knows how the thing was done, and I don't suppose anybody else ever
+will."
+
+"You are mistaken there," said Merrick drily. "Now, what puzzles you,
+of course, is the manner in which the murderer left the train."
+
+"Well, isn't that the whole mystery?"
+
+"Not to me. That's the part I really do know. Not that I can take any
+great credit to myself, because luck helped me. It was, perhaps, the
+most amazing piece of luck I have ever had. It was my duty, of course,
+to take no chances, and I didn't. But we'll come to that presently. Let
+it suffice for the moment that I know how the murderer left the train.
+What puzzles me is to know how he got on it. We can dismiss every other
+passenger in the train, and we need not look for an accomplice. There
+_were_ accomplices, of course, but they were not on the express. Why
+didn't Mr. Skidmore travel in one of the corridor coaches?"
+
+"He was too nervous. He always had a first-class carriage to himself. We
+knew he was coming, and that was why we attached an ordinary first-class
+coach to the train. We shouldn't do it for anybody, but Lord Rendelmore,
+the chairman of Mr. Skidmore's bank, is also one of our directors. The
+coach came in handy the other night because we had an order from a
+London undertaker to bring a corpse as far as here--to Lydmouth."
+
+"Really! You would have to have a separate carriage for that."
+
+"Naturally, Mr. Merrick. It was sort of killing two birds with one
+stone."
+
+"I see. When did you hear about the undertaking job?"
+
+"The same morning we heard from the bank that Mr. Skidmore was going to
+Lydmouth. We reserved a coach at once, and had it attached to the
+Express. The other carriages were filled with ordinary passengers."
+
+"Why didn't I hear of this before?" Merrick asked.
+
+"_I_ don't know. It doesn't seem to me to be of much importance. You
+might just as well ask me questions as to the passengers' baggage."
+
+"Everything is of importance," Merrick said sententiously. "In our
+profession, there are no such things as trifles. I suppose there will
+be no difficulty in getting at the facts of this corpse business. I'll
+make inquiries here presently."
+
+So far Merrick professed himself to be satisfied. But there were still
+difficulties in the way. The station people had a clear recollection of
+the receipt of a coffin on the night of the tragedy, and, late as it
+was, the gruesome thing had been fetched away by the people whom it was
+consigned to. A plain hearse, drawn by one horse, had been driven into
+the station yard, the consignment note had been receipted in the usual
+way, and there was an end of the matter. Lydmouth was a big place, with
+nearly a quarter of a million of inhabitants, and would necessarily
+contain a good many people in the undertaking line. Clearly it was no
+business of the railway company to take this thing any further.
+
+Merrick admitted that freely enough. It was nearly dark when he came
+back to the station, profoundly dissatisfied with a wasted afternoon.
+
+"No good," he told Catesby. "At the same time there are consolations.
+And, after all, I am merely confirming my suspicions. I suppose your
+people here are on the telephone. If so, I should like to send a message
+to your head office. I want the name of the firm in London who consigned
+the coffin here. I suppose the stationmaster could manage this for me."
+
+An hour or so later the information came. Merrick, at the telephone,
+wanted a little further assistance. Would the Grand Coast Railway call
+up the undertaker's firm whilst he held the line and ask the full
+particulars as to the body sent from London to Lydmouth. For half an
+hour Merrick stood patiently there till the reply came.
+
+"Are you there? Is that Inspector Merrick? Oh, yes. Well, we have called
+up Lincoln & Co., the undertakers. We got on to the manager himself. He
+declares that the whole thing is a mistake. They have not sent a corpse
+over our trunk system for two months. I read the manager the letter
+asking for special facilities, a letter on the firm's own paper. The
+manager does not hesitate to say the whole thing is a forgery. I think
+he is right, Inspector. If we can do anything else for you----"
+
+Merrick hung up the receiver and smiled as if pleased with himself. He
+turned to his companion, Catesby.
+
+"It's all right," he said. "Is there any way we can get back to London
+to-night? The whole thing is perfectly plain, now."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Though Merrick returned to London thoroughly satisfied, he knew that the
+sequel was not just yet. There was much conjuring work to be done before
+it would be possible to place all the cards on the table. The Christmas
+holidays had arrived before Merrick obtained a couple of warrants, and,
+armed with these, he went down to Brighton on Boxing Day, and put up at
+the Hotel Regina, registering himself as Colonel Beaumont, sometime of
+the United States Field Forces. Merrick could pose as an authority on
+Cuba, for on one occasion he had been there for six months on the
+lookout for a defaulting bank manager. He had made certain changes in
+his appearance, and just now he bore little resemblance to Inspector
+Merrick of New Scotland Yard.
+
+The big hotel on the front was full. There was a smart dance that same
+night, preceded by a children's party and Christmas tree. The house
+swarmed with young folks, and a good many nationalities were
+represented. On occasions like these somebody generally takes the lead,
+and by common consent the part of the chief of the events had been
+allotted to the Marquis de Branza.
+
+To begin with, he was immensely rich. He had vast estates in Italy. He
+had been staying at the Regina for the past month, and it was whispered
+that his bill had reached three figures. He entertained lavishly; he was
+the soul of hospitality; he was going to buy a palace in Kings' Gardens,
+and more or less settle down in Brighton.
+
+In addition to all this the Marquis was a handsome man, very
+fascinating, and a prime favorite with all the boys and girls at the
+Regina. He had his little peculiarities, of course--for instance, he
+paid for everything in gold. All his hotel bills were met with current
+coin.
+
+Merrick had gleaned all this before he had been a day at the Regina.
+They were quite a happy family, and the Colonel speedily found himself
+at home. The Marquis welcomed him as if he owned the hotel, and as if
+everybody was his guest. The dance was a great success, as also were the
+presents in connection with the cotillon promoted by the Marquis.
+
+At two o'clock the following morning the Marquis was entertaining a
+select party in the smoking-room. The ladies had all vanished by this
+time. The Marquis was speaking of his adventures. He really had quite a
+talent in that direction. Naturally, a man of his wealth was certain to
+be the mark for swindlers. Merrick listened with an approving smile. He
+knew that most of these stories were true, for they had all been
+recorded from time to time at Scotland Yard.
+
+"You would have made an excellent detective, Marquis," he said. "You
+have made it quite clear where the police blundered over that Glasgow
+tragedy. I suppose you read all about the Grand Coast Railway murder."
+
+The Marquis started ever so slightly. There was a questioning look in
+his eyes.
+
+"Did you?" he said. "Naturally one would, Colonel. But a matter the most
+inexplicable. I gave him up. From the very first I gave him up. If the
+guard Catesby was not the guilty person, then I admit I have no theory."
+
+One by one, the smoking-room company faded away. Presently only Merrick
+and the Marquis remained, save one guest who had fallen asleep in his
+chair. A sleepy waiter looked in and vanished again. The hotel was
+absolutely quiet now. Merrick, however, was wide awake enough; so,
+apparently, was the Marquis. All the same, he yawned ostentatiously.
+
+"Let us to bed," he said. "To-morrow, perhaps----"
+
+"No," Merrick said somewhat curtly. "I prefer to-night. Sit down."
+
+The last two words came crisply and with a ring of command in them. The
+Marquis bowed as he dropped into a chair and lighted a fresh cigarette.
+A little red spot glowed on either of his brown cheeks, his eyes
+glittered.
+
+"You want to speak to me, Colonel?" he said.
+
+"Very much indeed. Now, you are an exceedingly clever man, Marquis, and
+you may be able to help me. It happens that I am deeply interested in
+the Grand Coast Express murder; in fact, I have devoted the last two
+months to its solution."
+
+"With no success whatever, my dear Colonel?" the Marquis murmured.
+
+"On the contrary, my dear Marquis, with absolute satisfaction. I am
+quite sure that you will be interested in my story."
+
+The Marquis raised his cigarette graciously.
+
+"You are very good to give me your confidence," he said. "Pray proceed."
+
+"Thank you. I will not bore you with any preliminary details, for they
+are too recent to have faded from your memory. Sufficient that we have a
+murder committed in an express train; we have the disappearance of eight
+thousand pounds in gold, without any trace of the criminal. That he was
+on the train at the start is obvious. That he was not in any of the
+carriages conveying ordinary passengers is equally obvious. It is also
+certain that he left the train after the commission of the crime.
+Doubtless you read the evidence of the guard to prove that nobody left
+the train after the viaduct leading to Lydmouth station was reached.
+Therefore, the murderer contrived to make his escape when the express
+was traveling at sixty miles per hour."
+
+"Is not all this superfluous?" the Marquis asked.
+
+"Well, not quite. I am going to tell you how the murderer joined the
+train and how he left it after the murder and the robbery."
+
+"You are going to tell me that! Is it possible?"
+
+"I think so," Merrick said modestly. "Now, Mr. Skidmore had a
+compartment to himself. He was locked in the very last thing, and nobody
+joined the train afterward. Naturally a--well--an amateur detective like
+myself wanted to know who was in the adjoining compartments. Three of
+these could be dismissed at once. But in the fourth there was a
+corpse----"
+
+"A corpse! But there was no mention of that at the inquest."
+
+"No, but the fact remains. A corpse in a coffin. In a dark compartment
+with the blinds down. And, strangely enough, the firm of undertakers who
+consigned, or were supposed to consign, the body to Lydmouth denied the
+whole business. Therefore, it is only fair to suppose that the whole
+thing was a put-up job to get a compartment in the coach that Mr.
+Skidmore traveled by. I am going to assume that in that coffin the
+murderer lay concealed. But let me give you a light--your cigarette is
+out."
+
+"I smoke no more," the Marquis said. "My throat, he is dry. And
+then----"
+
+"Well, then, the first part is easy. The man gets out of the coffin and
+proceeds to fill it with some heavy substance which has been smuggled
+into the carriage under the pall. He screws the lid down and presently
+makes his way along the footboard to the next compartment. An athlete in
+good condition could do that; in fact, a sailor has done it in a drunken
+freak more than once. Mind you, I don't say that murder was intended in
+the first instance; but will presume that there was a struggle. The
+thief probably lost his temper, and perhaps Mr. Skidmore irritated him.
+Now, the rest was easy. It was easy to pack up the gold in leather bags,
+each containing a thousand sovereigns, and to drop them along the line
+at some spot previously agreed upon. I have no doubt that the murderer
+and his accomplices traveled many times up and down the line before the
+details were finally settled. Any way, there was no risk here. The
+broken packing cases were pitched out also, probably in some thick wood.
+Or they might have been weighted and cast into a stream. Are you
+interested?"
+
+The Marquis gurgled. He had some difficulty in speaking.
+
+"A little dangerous," he said. "Our ingenious friend could not possibly
+screw himself down in the coffin after returning to his compartment. And
+have you perceived the danger of discovery at Lydmouth?"
+
+"Precisely," Merrick said drily. "It is refreshing to meet with so
+luminous a mind as yours. There were many dangers, many risks to take.
+The train might have been stopped, lots of things might have happened.
+It would be far better for the man to leave the express. And he did so!"
+
+"The express at top speed! Impossible!"
+
+"To the ordinary individual, yes. But then, you see, this was not an
+ordinary individual. He was--let us suppose--an acrobat, a man of great
+nerve and courage, accustomed to trapeze work and the use of the diving
+net."
+
+"But Colonel, pardon me, where does the net come in?"
+
+"The net came in at a place near Little Warlingham, on the Norfolk
+coast. There are miles of net up there, trap and flight nets close by
+the side of the line. These nets are wide and strong; they run many
+furlongs without supports, so that an acrobat could easily turn a
+somersault on to one of these at a given spot without the slightest
+risk. He could study out the precise spot carefully beforehand--there
+are lightships on the sands to act as guides. I have been down to the
+spot and studied it all out for myself. The thing is quite easy for the
+class of man I mean. I am not taking any great credit to myself, because
+I happened to see the body of the man who essayed that experiment. I
+recognized him for----"
+
+"You recognized him! You knew who he was?"
+
+"Certainly. He was Luigi Bianca, who used to perform in London years
+ago, with his brother Joseph, on the high trapeze. Then one of them got
+into trouble and subsequently embarked, as the papers say, on a career
+of crime. And when I saw the body of Luigi I knew at once that he had
+had a hand in the murder of Mr. Skidmore. When the right spot was
+reached the fellow took a header in the dark boldly enough, but he did
+not know that the storm had come with a very high October tide, and
+washed the nets away. He fell on the sands and dislocated his neck. But
+I had something to go on with. When I found out about the bogus corpse I
+began to see my way. I have been making careful inquiries ever since for
+the other criminal----"
+
+"The other criminal! You mean to insinuate----"
+
+"I insinuate nothing," Merrick said coldly; "naturally enough I wanted
+to find Joseph Bianca. He was the man who picked up the gold; he was the
+man who hired a car in London from Moss & Co., in Regent Street, for a
+week. This was to recover the gold and incidentally also to take up the
+thief who stole it. I wanted to find Joseph Bianca, and _I've done it!_"
+
+The Marquis leaped to his feet. As he did so the man in the distant
+chair woke up and moved across the room.
+
+"Don't make a fuss!" Merrick said quietly. "You will be able to explain
+presently--perhaps what you are doing here posing as a Marquis, and
+where you got all that ready money from. Meanwhile, let me inform you
+that I am Inspector Merrick, of Scotland Yard, and that this is Sergeant
+Matthews. Joseph Bianca, you are my prisoner, and I have a warrant for
+your arrest as an accessory before and after the fact for the murder of
+Mr. George Skidmore. Ask them to call us a cab, Matthews!"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+OVER THE GARDEN WALL
+
+The Story of a Vacation
+
+By LOUISE HAMILTON MABIE
+
+
+THE impression, which floated vaguely as a perfume in the wake of the
+departing Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Prentiss, adapted itself pleasingly to any
+point of view. Generally, it was thought that Katrina Prentiss was to
+remain at home under the eye of Grandfather McBride. Particularly, was
+this Grandfather McBride's reading of the unspoken word. But Miss
+Prentiss, herself, thought so otherwise that the situation completely
+reversed itself. To Miss Prentiss, Grandfather McBride was left
+absolutely under her eye.
+
+Meanwhile the Jasper Prentisses, characteristically explaining nothing,
+commanding nothing, leaving events to work themselves out somehow, as
+events have been known to do, were off for their month's fishing without
+undue worry.
+
+"Grandfather will smoke his pipe all over the house," remarked Mrs.
+Prentiss easily, as they drove away.
+
+"Oh, Katrina will manage somehow," returned Mr. Prentiss, as easily.
+"They'll come to terms. By the way, Kitty, we mustn't forget that
+marmalade." And, absorbed in their list of supplies, the Jasper
+Prentisses disappeared from view.
+
+Grandfather McBride, eighty-one, dependent, save in moments of
+excitement, upon his knotted stick, hard-featured, with a rusty beard
+and a shabby black hat, departed slowly for his own quarters. Miss
+Prentiss, twenty-one, hazel-eyed and graceful, with a wonderful creamy
+skin, under a crown of auburn braids, sank dreamily upon the broad
+porch step and gazed across the green lawn into the future.
+
+"A whole month," thought Miss Prentiss, "of doing as I
+please--consulting nobody, ordering things, going to places, and coming
+home to--freedom." Miss Prentiss spread out her hands with a sigh of
+content. "Not that I'm interfered with--ever," she added, reproaching
+herself, "but now--well, I'm it."
+
+She rose swiftly and turned up the steps. In the wide doorway stood
+Grandfather McBride, stick in hand, hat jammed down, and in his mouth,
+at a defiant angle, a battered black pipe. A red flag, backed up by a
+declaration of the rights of man, could not have spoken more plainly.
+Miss Prentiss drew back; Mr. McBride stepped forward. Their eyes met.
+Then the old gentleman flung down his challenge. He removed the pipe and
+held it poised in his hand.
+
+"What you goin' to do to-day, Triny?" he asked, briskly. "When you goin'
+over to see the Deerings' parrot? There ain't another such bird in
+America. You go over there this morning and see that parrot. Don't loll
+about the house. Don't be lazy!" Whereupon, with less profanity, but as
+much of autocracy as was ever displayed by an Irish boss whipping into
+shape the lowliest of his Italian gang, Mr. McBride replaced his pipe
+elaborately, and walked off with the honors. Katrina, utterly
+astonished, stared after him, then shrugged, then smiled.
+
+"Poor Grandfather," she reached at length, "in minor matters I'll let
+him have his way."
+
+The next day, Grandfather McBride smoked his pipe on the porch. On the
+third morning he smoked it in the drawing-room--out of sheer defiance,
+for he never entered the room save under compulsion. Katrina, reminding
+herself that peace was to be desired above victory, shrugged once more,
+smiled, and went for a ride. When she swept in, an hour or so later,
+Grandfather McBride was in the back garden with John, and the smoke of a
+huge bonfire obscured the sunlight. This was revolution, simple and
+straightforward, and Katrina went at once to the back garden.
+
+"John," she said, "what is the meaning of this? Don't you know that Mr.
+Prentiss never allows bonfires? The rubbish is to be carted away, _not_
+set on fire."
+
+John, apologetic, perturbed, nodded toward the old gentleman. "Yes,
+miss, I know. I told Mr. McBride, miss----"
+
+Grandfather McBride turned coldly upon Katrina. "I ordered this
+bonfire," he said.
+
+"But, Grandfather, you know the old orders. Father never allows them."
+
+"I allow them," said Mr. McBride. "Your father's away fishing, and I'm
+in charge. This is my bonfire. I order bonfires when I please. I like
+'em. I like the smell of 'em, I like the smoke----" Here an unexpected
+cough gave Katrina a word.
+
+"But, Grandfather," she began again, only to be cut short.
+
+"When the folks are home, I sit still and mind my own business. Now
+they're away, I'm goin' to do things. I'm on a vacation myself," said
+Mr. McBride, "and I'll have a bonfire on the front lawn if I say so. You
+go back to the house, Katriny, and read Gibson."
+
+"Ibsen," flashed Katrina.
+
+"I don't care what his Dutch name is--read him. Or else"--a grim light
+of humor in his hard gray eye--"go over and see that parrot."
+
+Katrina almost stamped her foot. "I loathe parrots," she cried, "and I
+came out to talk about this bonfire."
+
+"I know you did," said Mr. McBride, "but this parrot ain't like other
+parrots. It's a clown. It would make a rag baby laugh."
+
+Katrina, flushed, angry, at a loss what to say, decided to say nothing.
+The sight of John, discreetly gazing at the roof of the chicken house,
+the grimness of Grandfather's face, the discomfort of the choking
+smoke, urged a dignified retreat. She turned abruptly and left them,
+overwhelmed at the exhibition furnished by Mr. McBride, confounded at
+his sudden leap into activity after years of serene floating and
+absolutely in the dark as to any method of controlling him in the
+future.
+
+For a week, his pipe and his daily bonfire contented Mr. McBride.
+Between himself and Katrina, relations were polite but not cordial.
+Katrina preserved a dignity which deceived neither of them. Both knew
+that she was awaiting something sensational, and the fact worried the
+old gentleman, for already he had exhausted his possibilities. He longed
+for new ideas in this matter of revolution, but none came. He began to
+be bored by bonfires, and the lack of opposition to them. Even the
+parrot failed to amuse, and he was sinking into dull monotony, when a
+walk down the long lane behind the back garden one sunny afternoon
+changed the horizon of his world.
+
+He was gone for two hours; but Katrina was away from the house herself,
+and did not notice. The next afternoon he disappeared for three, finally
+dragging in weary in body, but high in spirit. Twice at dinner he
+chuckled audibly, and three times he recommended the parrot across the
+street to Katrina. The next day he vanished after luncheon, and was late
+for dinner. At this, Katrina decided to take a hand.
+
+"Grandfather," she said abruptly at dessert, after a long interval of
+silence on both sides, "it's all very well to take a vacation, but there
+is such a thing as overdoing it. I'm sure you would do nothing that
+would alarm mother, and I know that if she were at home she would worry
+over you. For days you have had no nap. Please rest to-morrow. Don't go
+walking. Let me drive you to the club for luncheon."
+
+The old gentleman glanced up at Katrina quickly. "I declare if I hadn't
+forgot all about that fellow till this minute," he said. "Speaking of
+the club, how's Sparks, Katriny?"
+
+Katrina sat suddenly erect and her color deepened. "Do you by any chance
+mean Mr. Willoughby Park, Grandfather? If so, I know nothing whatever
+about him. I haven't seen him for a week." This with a jerk.
+
+"Don't you marry that chap, Katriny," went on Mr. McBride, unimpressed,
+"and don't you let him come around here. He's no good. A fellow that
+hangs around a country club when he ain't hangin' around a girl, is
+always no good. You marry a chap with brains, Katriny, even if he ain't
+so long on the cash. Why, I know a young fellow----" Mr. McBride pulled
+himself up short. "You dash in for brains, Triny, and I'll take out my
+pocket book." Here he nodded, as if concluding a bargain, but Katrina
+was already upon her feet.
+
+"Grandfather McBride, you are growing insufferable," she cried. "Simply
+because I mention the club, you assume that I am--angling--for a man
+that--that has been decently polite to me. I have never been invited to
+marry Mr. Park. And you give me low advice about laying traps for some
+other sort of a man. And you mention pocket books! And you go off alone
+for hours and come home worn out. And you smoke your horrible old pipe
+and build your sickening bonfires, just to spite me! I think you are a
+wretch, and I've worried over you every day since mother left." Here she
+stopped suddenly, with a catch in her throat.
+
+The old gentleman looked at her silently. Then he got up and came around
+the table. Awkwardly, he patted her shoulder. Katrina sat down.
+
+"I'm glad you don't like Sparks, my dear," said Mr. McBride, leaning on
+his stick. "And don't worry your heart over Grandfather, Triny.
+Grandfather's no fool. He ain't had so much fun in years." Mr. McBride
+winked just here, and put on an air of profound mystery.
+
+"I wonder where you do disappear to," said Katrina. "I think I'll go
+along."
+
+"Don't you do that," spoke up Mr. McBride alertly. "Don't you do that!
+A man can't stand a woman tagging at his heels. He's got to have room,
+and air to breathe."
+
+"Smoke, you mean," put in Katrina, with returning spirit, "and I warn
+you, Grandfather, that if you make fires off our place, you'll be
+arrested."
+
+"Pooh! Fires!" said Mr. McBride contemptuously. "Amusement for children.
+I ain't a-makin' fires these days, Katriny. I've got other things to
+do." And, with a final pat upon her shoulder, and a last most telling
+wink, Grandfather McBride dragged himself wearily, but triumphantly, to
+bed.
+
+When Katrina, on the lookout next afternoon, saw Mr. McBride join John
+in the back garden, hold with him a whispered consultation broken by
+many stealthy glances toward the house, and finally disappear with him
+down the lane, behind a wheelbarrow laden with boards, she gave orders
+that she was not at home, waited half an hour, and followed.
+
+The lane wound coolly green and deserted from the Prentiss place into
+the heart of the country. Katrina, walking steadily, passed her own,
+passed the Graham and the Haskell boundaries, and stopped in surprise.
+At a branching path hung a new and conspicuous sign. "Private Road! No
+Trespassing, Under Penalty of the Law."
+
+It was a churlish sign. The people of the neighborhood--a summer
+settlement of friends and pleasant informalities--were used to no such
+signs. And Katrina, knowing Grandfather McBride, turned at once into the
+branching path. At some distance in, she passed a similar sign, with
+every mark of disdain. Finally, she was brought up short by a wire
+fence, with a gate, high, wooden, and new, that stretched across the
+path. She tried the gate, but it did not budge. From the wood beyond
+came the sound of voices and the strokes of a hammer. With a quick
+glance behind her, and a determined set to her chin, she began to climb
+the gate.
+
+She was descending upon the other side in safety, when Grandfather
+McBride came upon her. His hat was pushed back upon his head, his stick
+was forgotten. He descended upon her as might a hungry lion upon its
+prey. He roared--in fact, he bellowed.
+
+"Katrina Prentiss, get back over that fence. Climb back over that gate;
+you're trespassing. Didn't you see the signs? Are you blind? Can't you
+read? What do you mean by coming in here where you don't belong? Climb
+back there and go home at once!"
+
+Katrina, unprepared for battle and aware of being at a disadvantage,
+swallowed hard and obeyed. She climbed back over the gate. Once upon
+solid earth, however, and she glared as fiercely at Grandfather McBride
+as he stared ferociously at her.
+
+"I'm not a child," she said furiously, when he stopped to breathe, "to
+be ordered about and sent home and insulted. I have never been so
+treated in my life and I give you fair warning, Grandfather, that I'll
+stand it no longer. After this I'll do as I please." Whereupon Katrina,
+having woman-like, in the act of obedience, said her say, retreated with
+dignity and dispatch. Behind her, Mr. McBride waved his recovered stick
+over the gate and shouted, but she did not turn nor attempt an answer.
+
+He came home within an hour, slowly, leaning heavily upon his stick.
+John followed with the empty wheelbarrow. They parted at the barn and
+Mr. McBride went at once to his room and shut the door. Katrina, sitting
+at her own window, looked thoughtfully into space and swung a key upon
+her forefinger. After a time she stood up, smoothed her hair and pinned
+on her wide, rose-laden hat. Then she went down the hall quietly,
+stopped before Mr. McBride's door, and listened a moment. A gentle snore
+proclaimed Mr. McBride's occupation. Katrina fitted the key into the
+lock and turned it, took it out again and slipped it beneath a corner of
+the rug, listened a further moment and then walked down the stairs, out
+through the back garden, and, with a final glance behind her, turned
+once more into the green and deserted lane.
+
+It must be confessed that Katrina started upon her quest in a spirit far
+removed from that of your single-minded explorer. She was urged by a
+variety of causes. Among them was a determination to disobey Grandfather
+McBride, to serve him with his own medicine, to pay him in his own coin,
+and to do it as quickly and as frankly as possible. Her rapidly
+increasing curiosity concerning the region he guarded with so much
+mystery counted as well, but the paramount force--for Katrina was young
+enough to take her responsibility seriously--was anxiety over the old
+gentleman himself. In fact, Katrina departed, as did Lot's wife, with
+her face and her thought turned backward, a policy not conducive to
+brilliant success in exploration.
+
+This time, however, she was stopped by no one. She passed the gate
+safely, penetrated the wood and came at length upon a part of Mr.
+McBride's secret. It was a rough little flight of steps, made with the
+help of John, the wheelbarrow, and the boards, which led to the top of a
+high brick wall. The wall astounded Katrina even more than did the
+steps, which is saying a good deal. The whole elaborate contrivance for
+keeping people away, puzzled Katrina. It was some time before she
+mounted the steps and looked over the wall, but when she finally did so,
+she ceased to be merely puzzled. She became lost in a maze of wonder.
+
+Stretching before her, was a wide expanse of green. Just opposite stood
+a long, low building of workmanlike appearance. At the left was a very
+presentable rose garden. At the right, a rustic summer-house.
+Surrounding all was the high brick wall. But it was none of these things
+that amazed Katrina.
+
+Moving toward her, from the door of the long building, came a little
+procession--men and women, walking slowly, sedately dressed in old-time
+silks and finery, decked with plumes, jewels, laces, bouquets of
+flowers. Arrived at a broad space near the summer-house, the company,
+after a series of low and preliminary bows, launched forth into a
+stately dance. Katrina, conscious of music, descried an individual in
+very modern blue overalls, who manipulated a phonograph. A voice from
+beyond the summer-house, called forth instructions at intervals, with a
+huskiness vaguely suggestive of old Coney.
+
+"More side-play there, Miss Beals. Just imagine he's a young hobo you're
+in love with and yer father won't let him up the steps. You're doing the
+Merry Widow act while the old man's not looking. Don't bow so low you
+hide your face, Mr. Peters. Your face is worth money to us all. And
+everybody get a move on! You're too slow! Hit it up a bit, Jim."
+
+The overalls, thus adjured, accelerated the time of his machine, and a
+new spirit animated the group. Katrina leaned far over the wall in order
+to miss nothing. At length, the dance, moving toward a finale, reached
+it with a succession of stirring chords, and a flourish of curtseys, and
+the group dissolved.
+
+"That'll do for to-day. You can knock off now," began the husky voice,
+when Jim, glancing up from his phonograph, beheld Katrina in her
+rose-laden hat, leaning far over the wall. If he had stopped to reflect,
+he might have ignored the vision, for he was but man, and the vision a
+guilelessly pretty one, but he did not stop to reflect. With Jim, to see
+a thing was to proclaim it abroad. Immediately, he yelled:
+
+"Hey! Get on to the lady on the wall! Hey! Mr. Connor, come around here.
+There's somebody on the wall. Hey!"
+
+At once Katrina, to her utmost discomfort, became the centre of the
+stage. Everybody turned, saw her, and began to stare. The silken ladies,
+the velvet gentlemen, delayed their return to modern apparel, and took
+her in. Jim stared clamorously. Mr. Connor, rounding the summer-house,
+glared angrily. To Katrina, even the long building blinked its windows
+at her, and she thought, with sudden longing, of Grandfather McBride.
+She wished she had not come. Most of all, she wished to go, but she did
+not quite dare.
+
+At once, Mr. Connor took charge of the situation. "Say, young lady," he
+demanded, in a truculent manner, "what do you mean by gettin' into these
+grounds and rubberin' at us over our wall? Don't you know you can be run
+in for passin' those signs? Didn't you see that gate?"
+
+"Oh, yes," faltered Katrina; "yes--I saw the gate."
+
+"Well, how'd you get past that gate and them signs," Mr. Connor wanted
+to know.
+
+"I--I climbed the gate," hesitated Katrina.
+
+Clearly this was not what Mr. Connor expected. Such simplicity must
+cover guile. A suppressed smile glimmered through the group and Mr.
+Connor became more suspicious of Katrina.
+
+"I don't want no kiddin' now, do you hear?" he burst forth. "You're in a
+tight place, young woman, and you may as well wake up to the fact at
+once. The Knickerbocker is doin' things on a plane of high art, and our
+methods are our own. Now, I want to know who you represent? And
+freshness don't go, d'you see?"
+
+Katrina hardly heard Mr. Connor. Her mind was occupied with the freedom
+that lay clear behind her, and the possible patrol-wagons and police
+stations before her. Perhaps she might conciliate this red-faced man by
+allowing him to talk, by being mild and meek and polite. Perhaps a
+chance might come for a desperate attempt at escape. But Mr. Connor,
+conversing fluently, read her very soul.
+
+"Bring that there light ladder, Jim," he interrupted himself to order,
+"and if you try to get away, young woman, it'll be the worse for you.
+Now, I want to know what yellow sheet you represent?"
+
+"Yellow--why do you take me for a newspaper woman?" cried Katrina. "I'm
+not. I'm nothing of the sort. I've never been inside a newspaper office
+in my life."
+
+"Of course not," observed Mr. Connor, ironically. "They never have.
+Always society ladies that can't write their own names. You stand just
+where you are, miss, till that ladder arrives. Then I'm coming up to
+confiscate any little sketches and things you may have handy.
+
+"You are a brute," said Katrina, lips trembling but head held high. "I
+am Miss Prentiss. I live near here, and you will not dare to detain me."
+
+"Oh, won't I?" returned Mr. Connor. "I have a picture of myself letting
+you go. And where the deuce is Jim?" He turned impatiently toward the
+building across the lawn, then somewhat relaxed his frown. "Oh, well, I
+can take an orchestra chair," observed Mr. Connor. "Here comes the
+boss."
+
+Katrina, with deepening concern, glanced from Mr. Connor toward the long
+building. A young man was sprinting across the stretch of green--a
+clean-cut young man in gray flannels. At the first sight of him, Katrina
+caught her breath sharply and blushed. It was Katrina's despair that she
+blushed so easily. As the young man neared them the spectators achieved
+the effect of obliterating themselves from the landscape. They melted
+into space. There remained the young man, Mr. Connor, and a divinely
+flushed Katrina.
+
+The young man looked up at her without smiling. He bowed to her gravely.
+Then he turned to Mr. Connor. With a few low-spoken words, he wilted Mr.
+Connor. Katrina, gazing at the rose-garden, heard something in spite of
+herself. She heard her name, and caught Mr. Connor's articulate
+amazement. She heard mentioned some "old gentleman." She heard a
+recommendation to Mr. Connor to go more slowly in the future and to mend
+his manners at all times. After a hint to Mr. Connor to look up Jim and
+the ladder, she heard that gentleman withdraw much more quietly than he
+had come, and her eyes finally left the rose-garden and looked straight
+down into those of warm gray, belonging to the young man below her.
+
+"Will you mind--waiting--just a moment longer?" he asked. "This is more
+luck than I've had lately."
+
+Katrina smiled tremulously. "It's in my power to go, then," she said.
+
+"No," said the young man, firmly, "it isn't. On second thoughts, you are
+to stay just where you are till that blockhead brings the ladder. I've
+a good deal to say. I'm going to walk home with you."
+
+"Oh," said Katrina. "And what will become of your fancy-dress party?"
+
+"My fancy-dress party," returned the young man, "will catch the next
+trolley for New York. Oh! Here labors the trusty henchman across the
+green. Right you are, Jim! No, the lady is not to come down. I'm to go
+up." And go up he did, in the twinkling of an eye, and in less than
+another the rose-wreathed hat and the young man's gray cap had
+disappeared from view together.
+
+"Well, what do you know about that?" observed Jim, under his breath,
+staring at the top of the wall. He whistled softly. Then he grinned.
+"Hypnotized, by thunder," concluded Jim, returning with the ladder.
+
+Meanwhile, the two lingered homeward through the deepening twilight. The
+gate opened easily to a key from the young man's pocket; the signs
+glimmered dimly. They talked lightly, but what they said proved to both
+simply an airy veil for what they did not say. Katrina spoke of the club
+and the tennis tournament.
+
+"Of course, we lost," she said. "Our best man," with a sidelong look,
+"did not enter. The committee said that he was away--on business. I see
+now that they were misinformed."
+
+"But they weren't," said the young man, eagerly, "if you mean me. I am
+'away on business.' Why, do you know it's seven days since I've seen
+you?"
+
+Katrina regarded her neat brown shoes.
+
+"The fact is," continued the young man, diffidently, "I've been trying a
+new method with you. I've been endeavoring to be missed. And I'm afraid
+to hear that I haven't been."
+
+"A little wholesome fear is good for anyone," observed Katrina,
+judicially, "but I can truthfully say that I rejoiced at the sight of
+you this afternoon. That red-faced man was about to drag me off the wall
+by the hair."
+
+"Oh, Connor," said the young man. "Connor's not polished, but in his
+line, he's a jewel. He used to be a stage manager, and considered in
+that light, he's really mild."
+
+"Is he?" said Katrina, drily. "Does he stage manage for you?"
+
+"Practically that. Don't scoff--please. You see, there's a big future in
+this business. My father growled at first, but he's come clean around.
+The land was mine, and we are using it this way. The American public are
+going in for this thing. They want amusement and they want it quick. And
+the thing is to provide them with what they want, when they want it."
+
+"Oh," said Katrina. "And you are providing the American public with what
+they want--back there?" with a tilt of her head behind her.
+
+"Exactly," he answered. "That's our plant. We are the Knickerbocker Film
+Manufacturing Company."
+
+"Oh," said Katrina, again. "And the fancy-dress people?"
+
+"We are getting up 'Romeo and Juliet,'" said the young man. "Please
+don't laugh. It's been proven that the moving picture audiences like
+Shakespeare canned."
+
+"Moving picture audiences," repeated Katrina in surprise, and then as
+the light broke, she stopped short and looked at the young man.
+
+"Why, didn't you guess?" he queried. "The summer-house--why, of course,
+the summer-house must have hidden the camera." He looked at her
+dejectedly. "I've wanted you so much to know all about it," he said,
+"and now that you do, it sounds--oh, drivelling."
+
+"But it doesn't," cried Katrina, eyes shining. "It sounds splendid. It
+sounds thrilling. I'm sure it will be a success. You're bound to make it
+one. I congratulate you. You've left out a good deal. You've told your
+story very badly, but I'm good at filling in. The fact is, I'm proud to
+know you, and you may shake hands with me if you wish to."
+
+"Oh, Katrina," murmured the young man, and they clasped hands. It was
+just here that Grandfather McBride turned into the lane from the back
+garden and came upon them. When they became aware of him, leaning
+heavily upon his stick and frowning at them through the dusk, Katrina
+braced herself to meet whatever might come. But, suddenly, to her
+intense surprise, Mr. McBride beamed upon them radiantly.
+
+"Well, well, Katriny," he said, in high good humor, "so you've been over
+that gate again, eh? Been lookin' over that wall, eh? I knew you would,
+my dear, I knew you would. There's some of the McBride spirit in you
+after all, thank God. I meant to take you myself, but you got ahead of
+me." Here he shook hands with the young man. "Glad to see you again, my
+boy," said Grandfather McBride. "Brought my little girl home, eh?"
+
+"Well, we were on the way," admitted the young man with enthusiasm. "I
+see you got the steps up, sir."
+
+"Yes," said Mr. McBride, "oh, yes. I'm much obliged to you for the
+permission. It's as good as any vaudeville, and it's a sight nearer
+home. You're bound to make money. I tell my granddaughter," with a
+triumphant nod to the lady in question, "to bank on brains and energy
+and American push. I tell her," with a profound wink to Katrina, "to let
+this old family nonsense and society racket go hang. I'm glad she met
+you."
+
+"But we mustn't stand here in the lane, Grandfather," put in Katrina,
+hurriedly. "It's getting damp."
+
+"That's so," agreed Mr. McBride, "and it's getting late." He hooked his
+cane about the young man's arm. "Come in and have dinner with us," he
+said.
+
+Katrina stared in amazement at Mr. McBride. The young man looked eagerly
+at Katrina. "If Miss Prentiss will allow me----" he began.
+
+"Huh! Miss Prentiss," spoke up Mr. McBride. "What's she got to say about
+it? I allow you." And as Katrina, behind Mr. McBride's back, smiled and
+nodded, the young man accepted promptly.
+
+Together the three went through the back garden and up to the house.
+Arrived there, Katrina disappeared. Grandfather McBride, after settling
+his guest, came straight upstairs and stopped at her door.
+
+"Little cuss," beamed Mr. McBride, "goin' off, locking up her old
+grandfather and meetin' young chaps. Say, Katriny," he remarked
+casually, "he's a fine fellow, ain't he?"
+
+Katrina, busy with her hair, nodded.
+
+"Now, if I was a girl," continued Mr. McBride, diplomatically, "and a
+fellow like that took a shine to me I'd show a glimmer of sense. I'd up
+and return it."
+
+"Would you?" remarked Katrina. "I'm glad you like him. You see,
+Grandfather, you are too smart for me. I didn't know until just now that
+you had even met Mr. Park."
+
+Mr. McBride's smile stiffened, then froze, finally disappeared. He
+opened his mouth, and shut it. He swallowed hard. At last, he got it
+out. "Katriny--Katriny, is _that_ Sparks--that fellow downstairs? Is
+that _Sparks_?"
+
+"Hush," said Katrina. "Of course, that is Willoughby Park. Why,
+Grandfather, didn't you ask his name?"
+
+"No," said Mr. McBride, "I didn't. I just saw he was a fine, likely----"
+He stopped abruptly. "Well, I'll be damned," said Mr. McBride.
+
+Katrina came over to him and put her hand on his shoulder. Mr. McBride
+looked into space. Standing so, he spoke once more. "Do you--do you
+really like him, Triny?" he asked, and although he looked into space,
+Mr. McBride saw Katrina's blush. He patted her hand once, and left her.
+
+On his way downstairs, the grimness of Mr. McBride's face relaxed. In
+the lower hall, he went so far as to chuckle. When he joined Mr. Park on
+the porch, he grinned at him amiably.
+
+"I'm a good sport," remarked Mr. McBride, irrelevantly, "but I know when
+to retire to my corner and stay there. Say," continued Mr. McBride,
+unconscious of discrepancies between thought and action, "after dinner
+I'm goin' to take you children across the street to see that parrot."
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+RURAL INSURANCE
+
+The Story of a Wayside Halt
+
+By CLOTILDE GRAVES
+
+
+EXHAUSTED by the effort involved in keeping the thermometer of the
+closing day of August at an altitude intolerable to the human kind and
+irksome to the brute, a large, red-hot sun was languidly sinking beyond
+an extensive belt of dusky-brown elms fringing the western boundary of a
+seventy acre expanse of stubbles diagonally traversed by a parish
+right-of-way leading from the village of Bensley to the village of
+Dorton Ware. A knee-deep crop of grasses, flattened by the passage of
+the harvest wains, clothed this strip of everyman's land, and a narrow
+footpath divided the grass down the middle, as a parting divides hair.
+
+A snorting sound, which, accompanied by a terrific clatter of old iron
+and the crunching of road-mendings, had been steadily growing from
+distant to near, and from loud to deafening, now reached a pitch of
+utter indescribability; and as a large splay-wheeled, tall-funneled,
+plowing engine rolled off the Bensley highroad and lumbered in upon the
+right-of-way, the powerful bouquet of hot lubricating oil nullified all
+other smells, and the atmosphere became opaque to the point of solidity.
+As the dust began to settle it was possible to observe that attached to
+the locomotive was a square, solid, wooden van, the movable residence of
+the stoker, the engineer, and an apprentice; that a Powler cultivator, a
+fearsome piece of mechanism, apparently composed of second-hand anchors,
+chain-cables, and motor driving-wheels, was coupled to the back of the
+van, and that a bright green water-cart brought up the rear. Upon the
+rotund barrel of this water-cart rode a boy.
+
+The plowing-engine came to a standstill, the boy got down from the
+water-cart and uncoupled the locomotive from the living-van. During the
+operations, though the boy received many verbal buffets from both his
+superiors, it was curiously noticeable that the engineer and stoker,
+while plainly egging one another on to wreak physical retribution upon
+the body of the neophyte, studiously refrained from personally
+administering it.
+
+"Hook off, can't ye, hook off!" commanded the engineer. "A 'ead like a
+dumpling, that boy 'as!" he commented to the stoker, as Billy wrought
+like a grimy goblin at the appointed task.
+
+"A clout on the side of it 'ud do 'im good!" pronounced the stoker, who
+was as thin and saturnine as the engineer was stout and good-humored.
+"Boys need correction."
+
+"I'll allow you're right," said the engineer. "But it ain't my business
+to 'it Billy for 's own good. Bein' own brother to 'is sister's
+'usband--it's plainly your place to give 'im wot for if 'e 'appens to
+need it."
+
+The stoker grunted and the clock belonging to the Anglo-Norman church
+tower of the village struck six. Both the engineer and his subordinate
+wiped their dewy foreheads with their blackened hands, and
+simultaneously thought of beer.
+
+"Us bein' goin' up to Bensley for a bit, me an' George," said the
+engineer, "an' supposin' Farmer Shrubb should come worritin' along this
+way and ask where us are, what be you a-going to tell 'im, Billy boy?"
+
+"The truth, I 'ope," said the stoker, with a vicious look in an eye
+which was naturally small and artificially bilious.
+
+"Ah, but wot is the truth to be, this time?" queried the engineer.
+"Let's git it settled before we go. As far as I'm consarned, the answer
+Billy's to give in regards to my question o' my whereabouts is:
+'Anywhere but in the tap o' the Red Cow.'"
+
+"And everythink but decently drunk," retorted the stoker.
+
+"That's about it," assented the unsuspecting engineer.
+
+The stoker laughed truculently, and Billy ventured upon a faint echo of
+the jeering cachinnation. The grin died from the boy's face, however, as
+the engineer promptly relieved a dawning sense of injury by cuffing him
+upon one side of the head, while the stoker wrung the ear upon the
+other.
+
+"Ow, hoo," wailed Billy, stanching his flowing tears in the ample sleeve
+of his coat, "Ow, hoo, hoo!"
+
+"Stop that blubberin', you," commanded the stoker, who possessed a
+delicate ear, "and make th' fire an' git th' tea ready against Alfred
+and me gits back. You hear me?"
+
+"Yes, plaize," whimpered Billy.
+
+"An' mind you warms up the cold bacon pie," added the stoker.
+
+"And don't you forget to knock in the top of that tin o' salmon," added
+the engineer, "an' set it on to stew a bit. An' don't you git pickin'
+the loaf wi' they mucky black fingers o' yours, Billy, my lad, or you'll
+suffer for it when I comes home."
+
+"Yes, plaize," gasped Billy, bravely swallowing the recurrent hiccough
+of grief. "An' plaize where be I to build fire?"
+
+"The fire," mused the engineer. He looked at the crimson ball of the
+sun, now drowning in a lake of ruddy vapors behind the belt of elms; he
+nodded appreciatively at the palely glimmering evening star and pointed
+to a spot some yards ahead. "Build it there, Billy," he commanded
+briefly.
+
+The stoker hitched his thumbs in his blackened leather waist-strap and
+spat toward the rear of the van. "You build the fire nigh th' hedge
+there," he ordered, "so as us can sit wi' our faces to'rds yon bit o'
+quick an' hev th' van to back of us, an' git a bit o' comfort outside
+four walls fur once. D' ye hear, boy?"
+
+"Yes, George," quavered Billy.
+
+The sleepy eye of the engineer had a red spark in it that might have
+jumped out of his own engine-furnace as he turned upon the acquiescent
+Billy. "Didn't you catch wot I said to you just now, my lad?" he
+inquired with ill-boding politeness.
+
+"Yes, Alfred," gasped the alarmed Billy.
+
+"If the boy doesn't mind me," came from the stoker, who was thoroughly
+roused, "and if I don't find a blazin' good fire, an' victuals welding
+hot, ready just in the place I've pointed out to 'im, when I've 'ad my
+pipe and my glass at the 'Red Cow,' I'll----" A palpably artificial fit
+of coughing prevented further utterance.
+
+"You'll strap 'im within an inch of 'is life, I dursay," hinted the
+engineer. "You pipe what George says, Billy?" he continued, as Billy
+applied his right and left coat cuffs to his eyes in rapid succession.
+"He's give you his promise, and now I give you mine. If I don't find a
+roarin' good fire and the rest to match, just where I've said they're to
+be when I come back from where I've said I'm a-goin'----"
+
+"You'll wallop 'im a fair treat, I lays you will," said the stoker,
+revealing a discolored set of teeth in a gratified smile. "We'll bide by
+wot the boy does then," he added. "Knowin' that wot 'e gits from either
+of us, he'll earn. An' your road is my road, Alfred, leastways as far as
+the 'Red Cow.'"
+
+The engineer and the stoker walked off amicably side by side. The sun
+sank to a mere blot of red fire behind the elms, and crowds of
+shrilly-cheering gnats rose out of the dry edges and swooped upon the
+passive victim, Billy, who sat on the steps of the living van with his
+knuckles in his eyes.
+
+"Neither of 'em can't kill me, 'cos the one what did it 'ud 'ave to be
+'ung," he reflected, and this thought gave consolation. He unhooked a
+rusty red brazier from the back of the living van, and dumping it well
+into the hedge at the spot indicated by the stoker, filled it with dry
+grass, rotten sticks, coals out of the engine bunker, and lumps of oily
+cotton waste. Then he struck and applied a match, saw the flame leap
+and roar amongst the combustibles, filled the stoker's squat tea-kettle
+with water from the green barrel, put in a generous handful of Tarawakee
+tea, and, innocent of refinements in tea-making, set it on to boil.
+
+"George is more spitefuller nor wot Alfred is," Billy Beesley murmured,
+as the kettle sent forth its first faint shrill note. Then he added with
+a poignant afterthought, "But Alfred is a bigger man than wot George
+be."
+
+The stimulus of this reflection aided cerebration. Possessed by an
+original idea, Billy rubbed the receptacle containing it, and his mouth
+widened in an astonished grin. A supplementary brazier, temporarily
+invalided by reason of a hole in the bottom, hung at the back of the
+living-van. The engineer possessed a kettle of his own. Active as a
+monkey, the small figure in the flapping coat and the baggy trousers
+sped hither and thither. Two hearths were established, two fires blazed,
+two tea-kettles chirped. Close beside the stoker's brazier a bacon pie
+in a brown earthen dish nestled to catch the warmth, a tin of Canadian
+salmon, which Billy had neglected to open, leaned affectionately against
+the other. Suddenly the engineer's kettle boiled over, and as Billy
+hurried to snatch it from the coals, the salmon-tin exploded with an
+awe-inspiring bang, and oily fragments of fish rained from the bounteous
+skies.
+
+"He'll say I did it a purpose, Alfred will!" the aggrieved boy wailed,
+as he collected and restored to the battered tin as much of its late
+contents as might be recovered. While on all fours searching for bits
+which might have escaped him, and diluting the gravy which yet remained
+in the tin with salt drops of foreboding, a scorching sensation in the
+region of the back brought his head round. Then he yelled in earnest,
+for the roaring flame from the other brazier had set the quickset hedge,
+inflammable with drought, burning as fiercely as the naphtha torch of a
+fair-booth, while a black patch, widening every moment, was spreading
+through the dry, white grasses under the clumsy wheels of the
+living-van, whose brown painted sides were beginning to blister and
+char, as Billy, rendered intrepid by desperation, grabbed the broken
+furnace-rake handle, usually employed as a poker, and beat frantically
+at the encroaching fire. As he beat he yelled, and stamped fiercely upon
+those creeping yellow tongues. There was fire from side to side of the
+field pathway now, the straggling hedge on both sides was crackling
+gaily. And realizing the unconquerable nature of the disaster, Billy
+dropped the broken furnace-rake, uttered the short, sharp squeal of the
+ferret-pressed rabbit, and took to his heels, leaving a very creditable
+imitation of a prairie conflagration behind him.
+
+It was quite dark by the time the engineer and his subordinate returned
+from the "Red Cow," and their wavering progress along the field pathway
+was rendered more difficult, after the first hundred yards or so, by the
+unaccountable absence of the hedge. It was a singularly oppressive
+night, a brooding pall of hot blackness hung above their heads, clouds
+of particularly acrid and smothering dust arose at every shuffle of
+their heavy boots, even the earth they trod seemed glowing with heat,
+and they remarked on the phenomenon to one another.
+
+"It's thunder weather, that's wot it be," said the engineer, mopping his
+face. "I'm like my old mother, I feel it coming long before it's 'ere.
+Phew!"
+
+"Uncommon strong smell o' roast apples there is about 'ere," commented
+the stoker, sniffing.
+
+"That beer we 'ad must 'ave bin uncommon strong," said the engineer in a
+low, uneasy voice. "I seem to see three fires ahead of us, that's what I
+do."
+
+"One whopping big one to the left, one little one farther on, right
+plumb ahead, and another small one lower down on my right 'and. I see
+'em as well as you," confirmed the stoker in troubled accents. "And
+that's how that young nipper thinks to get off a licking from one of
+us----"
+
+"By obeying both," said the engineer, quickening his pace indignantly.
+"This is Board School, this is. Well, you'll learn 'im to be clever, you
+will."
+
+"You won't leave a whole bone in his dirty little carcase once you're
+started," said the stoker confidently.
+
+By this time they were well upon the scene of the disaster. Before their
+dazed and horrified eyes rose the incandescent shell of what had been,
+for eight months past, their movable home, and a crawling crisping
+rustle came from the pile of ashes that represented the joint property
+of two men and one boy.
+
+"Pinch me, Alfred," said the stoker, after an interval of appalled
+silence.
+
+"Don't ask me," said the engineer, in a weak voice, "I 'aven't the power
+to kill a flea."
+
+"There ain't one left living to kill," retorted the stoker, as he
+contemplated the smoking wreck. "There was 'undreds in that van, too,"
+he added as an afterthought.
+
+"Burned up the old cabin!" moaned the engineer, "an' my Sunday rig-out
+in my locker, an' my Post Office Savings Bank book sewed up in the
+pillar o' my bunk, along o' my last week's wages what I 'adn't paid in."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder if Government 'ung on to they savings o' yourn,"
+said the stoker, shaking his head. "It's a pity, but you'd invested
+yours as I 'ave mine," he added.
+
+"In public 'ouses?" retorted the engineer.
+
+"Some of it 'as went that way," the stoker admitted, "but for three
+weeks past I've denied myself to put a bit into a concern as I think is
+going to prove a paying thing."
+
+"Owch!" exclaimed the engineer, who had been restlessly pacing in the
+velvety darkness round the still glowing wreck of the living-van.
+
+"Don't you believe wot I've told you?" demanded the stoker haughtily.
+
+"You don't always lie, George," said the engineer, gently. "Wot made me
+shout out like that just now," he explained, "was treading on something
+queer, down by the near side wheels. Somethink brittle that cracked like
+rotten sticks under my 'eel, an' then I slid on something round an'
+squashy. An' the smell like roast apples, what I noticed before, is
+stronger than ever."
+
+"'Ave you a match about you?" asked the stoker eagerly.
+
+"One," said the engineer, delicately withdrawing a solitary "kindler"
+from the bottom of his waistcoat pocket.
+
+The stoker received the match, and struck it on his trousers. A blue
+glimmer resulted, a faint s-s-s! followed, and the match went out.
+
+"On'y a glim," said the stoker in a satisfied tone, "but it showed me as
+I've made my money. An' made it easy, too."
+
+"'Ow much 'ave you pulled orf, then?" asked the engineer.
+
+"Double the value," replied the stoker, smiling broadly through the
+darkness, "of the property what I've lost in this here conflagration."
+
+"That 'ud bring you in about eighteenpence," retorted the engineer
+bitterly.
+
+The stoker laughed pleasantly.
+
+"Wot do you say to three pun' seventeen?" he demanded.
+
+"Better than a poke in the eye with a burnt stick," said the engineer.
+"Wot did you say was the concern you invested in?"
+
+The stoker felt in the darkness for his superior's arm, grasped it, and
+putting his mouth close to where he thought his ear ought to be, said
+loudly:
+
+"A boy."
+
+"Look 'ere, mate," began the engineer, hotly, "if you're trying a joke
+on me----"
+
+"It ain't no joke," responded the stoker cheerfully. "Leastways not for
+the boy, it ain't. But Lord! when I think 'ow near I come to lettin' the
+policy fall through." He chuckled. "It's three weeks gone since I took
+it out," he said contentedly, "an' paid three weeks' money in advance,
+an' at threepence a week, that makes ninepence, an' the thought o' them
+nine half-pints I might 'ave 'ad out o' money 'as drove me 'arf wild
+with thirst, over an' over. I should 'ave 'ad to pay again come Monday,
+if only 'e 'ad 'ave lived."
+
+"If only 'e 'ad lived--" repeated the engineer in a strange far-away
+tone, "Oo's 'e?" he asked eagerly.
+
+"You know old Abey Turner as keeps the little sweet-an'-tobaccer shop
+over to Dorton Ware?" pursued the stoker. "Old Abey is a agint for the
+Popular Thrifty Life Insurance Company----"
+
+"I know 'e is," confirmed the engineer.
+
+"Abey 'as bin at me over an' over again to insure my life," explained
+the stoker, "but I told 'im as I didn't 'old with laying out good money
+wot wouldn't never come 'ome to roost-like, until I was dead. Then Abey
+leans over the counter an' ketches me by the neck 'andkerchief an' says,
+'Think of the worst life you know, an' 'ave a bit on that.' Naturally,
+talkin' o' bad lives, you're the first chap whose name comes into my
+'ead."
+
+"Me!" ejaculated the engineer, starting.
+
+"But it wasn't wickedness old Abey meaned," continued the stoker, "only
+un'ealthiness in general. Somebody wot wasn't likely to live long,
+that's the sort o' man or woman 'e wanted me to insure. 'A child'll do,'
+says 'e, smiling, an' tells me 'ow a large family may be made a source
+of blessing to parents 'oo are wise enough to insure in the Popular
+Thrifty. Then it comes into my mind all of a sudden as 'ow Billy 'ud do
+a treat, an' I names 'im to Old Abey. 'That young shaver!' calls out old
+Abey, disgusted like. 'Why, 'e's as 'ard as nails. Wot's likely to
+'appen to 'im?' 'If you was to see the 'andling 'e gets when my mate is
+in 'is tantrums,' I says to old Abey, 'you'd put your bit o' money on
+'im cheerful an' willin'.' 'Is Alfred Evans such a savage in 'is drink?'
+says old Abey, quite surprised----"
+
+"I'll surprise 'im!" muttered the engineer, "when I meets 'im!"
+
+The stoker continued: "So the long an' the short is, I insured Billy,
+an' Billy's dead!"
+
+"You don't really think so?" cried the engineer, in shocked accents.
+
+"I don't think," said the stoker, in a hard, high tone, "I knows 'e is."
+
+"Not--burned with the van!" gasped the engineer.
+
+"Burned to cinders," said the stoker comfortably. "'Ow about that smell
+o' roasting you kep' a sniffing as we came along, an' wot were it if not
+cooked boy? Wot was it your foot crashed into when you called out awhile
+back? 'Is ribs, 'im being overdone to a crisp. Wot was it you slipped
+on----?"
+
+"Stop!" shuddered the engineer. "'Old 'ard! I can't bear it."
+
+"I can," said the stoker, following his comrade as he gingerly withdrew
+from the immediate scene of the tragedy. "I could if it was twice as
+much."
+
+"It will be that to me!" sighed the engineer, seating himself upon the
+parish boundary stone, over which he had stumbled in his retreat, and
+sentimentally gazing at the star-jewelled skies. "Twice three pound is
+six, an' twice seventeen bob is one-fourteen. Seven pounds fourteen is
+wot that pore boy's crool end 'as dropped into my pocket, and I'd 'ad
+those best clothes ever since I got married; an' there was only eight
+an' fourpence in the piller o' the bunk, an----"
+
+The engineer stopped short, not for lack of words, but because the
+stoker was clutching him tightly by the windpipe.
+
+"You don't durst dare to tell me," the frenzied mechanic shouted, "as
+wot you went an' insured Billy too?"
+
+"That's just wot I 'ave done," replied the half-strangled engineer. Then
+as the dismayed stoker's arms dropped helplessly by his side, he added,
+"you ought to be grateful, George, you 'ad no 'and in it. I couldn't
+'ave enjoyed the money properly, not if you'd 'ad to be 'ung for the
+boy's murder. That's wot I said to old Abey two weeks back, when I told
+'im as 'ow Billy's life went more in danger than anyone else's what I
+could think of, through your being such a brutal, violent-tempered,
+dangerous man."
+
+"An' wot did that old snake in the grass say to that bloomin' lie?"
+demanded the stoker savagely.
+
+"'E said life was a uncertain thing for all," sniggered the engineer,
+gently. "An' I'd better 'ave a bit on the event an' turn sorrow into
+joy, as the saying is. So I give Abey a shillin', bein' two weeks in
+advance, an' the Company sent me the policy, an' 'ere I am in for the
+money."
+
+"Like wot I am, an' with clean 'ands for both of us," said the stoker in
+a tone of cheerful self-congratulation. "I 'aven't laid a finger on that
+boy, not since I insured 'im."
+
+"Nor I ave'n't," said the engineer. "It's wonderful how I've bin able to
+keep my temper since I 'ad the policy to take care of at the same time."
+
+"Same with me," said the stoker happily. "Why, wot's wrong?" he added,
+for a tragic cry had broken from the engineer.
+
+"Mate," he stammered tremulously, "where did you keep your policy?"
+
+"Meanin' the bit o' blue-printed paper I 'ad from the Popular Thrifty?
+Wot do you want to know for?" snapped the stoker suspiciously.
+
+"It just come into my 'ead to arsk," said the engineer, in faltering
+accents.
+
+"In my little locker in the van, since you're so curious," said the
+stoker grudgingly.
+
+"I 'ad mine stitched up in the piller o' my bunk with my Post Office
+Savin's book," said the engineer in the deep, hollow voice of a funeral
+bell. "An' it's burned to hashes, an' so is yours!"
+
+"Then it's nineteen to one the company won't pay up," said the stoker
+after an appalled silence.
+
+"Ten 'underd to one," groaned the engineer.
+
+Another blank silence was broken by the stoker's saying, with a savage
+oath:
+
+"I wish that boy was alive, I do."
+
+"I know your feeling," agreed the engineer sympathetically. "It 'ud be
+a comfort to you to kick 'im--or any-think else weak and small wot
+didn't durst to kick back."
+
+"If I was to give you a bounce on the jor," inquired the stoker,
+breathing heavily, "should you 'ave the courage to land me another?"
+
+The engineer promptly hit out in the darkness, and arrived safe home on
+the stoker's chin. With a tiger-like roar of fury, the stoker charged,
+and on the engineer's dodging conjecturally aside, fell heavily over the
+parish boundary-stone. He rose, foaming, and a pitched battle ensued, in
+which the combatants saw nothing but the brilliant showers of stars
+evoked by an occasional head-blow, and the general advisability of
+homicide. Toward dawn fatigue overcame them. The stoker lay down and
+declined to get up again and the engineer even while traveling on all
+fours in search of him, lost consciousness in slumber.
+
+A yellow glare in the east heralded the rising of the orb of day, as the
+figures of an aged man and a ragged boy moved from the shelter of the
+belt of elms that screened the village of Dorton Ware, and proceeded
+along the right-of-way.
+
+"It's burned, right enough, Billy, my boy," said the old man, shading
+his bleared eyes with his horny hand as he gazed at the blackened
+skeleton of the living-van. "An' all considered, you can't be called to
+blame."
+
+Billy whistled.
+
+"If you'd bin asleep inside the van when that theer blaze got started,"
+said old Abey, rebukingly, as he hobbled along by the boy's side, "you
+wouldn't be whistlin' 'My Own Bluebell' now; your pore widowed mother,
+what lives in that theer little cottage o' mine at Porberry End--and 'om
+I persuaded to insure you in the Popular Thrifty--would 'ave 'ad a bit
+o' money comin' in 'andy for 'er Michaelmas rent, an' one or two other
+people would be a penny o' th' right side, likewise." He paused, and
+shading his bleared eyes under his gnarled hand, looked steadfastly at
+two huddled, motionless, grimy figures, lying in the charred grass
+beside the pathway. "Dang my old eyes!" he cried. "'Tis George an'
+Alfred--Alfred an' George--snatched away i' their drink an' neither of
+'em insured. I'll lay a farden. Here's a judgment on their lives, what
+wouldn't listen to Old Abey an' put into the Popular Thrifty. Here's a
+waste of opportunity--here's----"
+
+Old Abey's voice quavered and broke off suddenly as the corpse of the
+engineer, opening a pair of hideously blood-shot eyes, inquired
+ferociously what in thunder he meant by making such a blamed row, while
+the body of the stoker rolled over, yawned, revealing a split lip, and
+sat up staring.
+
+"We--we thought you was dead, mates," faltered Old Abey. "Didn't us,
+Billy?"
+
+"At first I did," Billy admitted, "an' then I----"
+
+"Then you wot?" repeated the engineer, bending his brows sternly above a
+nose swollen to twice its usual size.
+
+"Out with it!" snarled the stoker, whose lip was painful.
+
+"I was afraid as it couldn't be true," stuttered Billy.
+
+The stoker exchanged a look with the engineer.
+
+"The van's burnt, an' we've both lost our property, to say nothin' of
+our prospects, mate," he said with a sardonic sneer, "but one comfort's
+left us, Billy's alive!"
+
+A little later the plowing engine with its consort was at work under the
+hot September sky. As the Powler cultivator traveled to and fro, ripping
+up the stubbles, the boy who sat on the iron seat and manipulated the
+guiding-wheel, snivelled gently, realizing that the brief but welcome
+interval of icy aloofness on the part of his superiors had passed, never
+to return; and that the injunction of the Prophet would thenceforth be
+scrupulously obeyed.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+HIS HONOR, THE DISTRICT JUDGE
+
+A Tale of India
+
+By JOHN LE BRETON
+
+
+HIS Honor, Syed Mehta, the District Judge of Golampore, had dined with
+the Malcolms, and he was the first of the Collector's guests to leave
+the bungalow. He sauntered down the drive, lifting his contemplative
+gaze to the magnificence of the starry heavens. Behind him, the lamp-lit
+rooms sent long thrusts of light, sword-wise, into the hot darkness.
+Joan Malcolm had taken up her violin, and the sweet, wailing notes of it
+came sighing out on to the heavy air. Ruddy, broad-faced young Capper,
+of the Police, lounged by the open window, eating her up with adoring
+eyes.
+
+His Honor smoked his cigar tranquilly, but at heart, he smouldered.
+Harrow and Lincoln's Inn backed his past, the High Courts awaited him in
+the future. For the present he was a Civil Servant of excellent position
+and recognized ability, a Mohammedan gentleman who had distinguished
+himself in England as well as in the land of his birth. Also, he was of
+less account in the eyes of Joan Malcolm than Capper, a blundering
+English Acting-Superintendent of Police, with a pittance of six hundred
+rupees per mensem.
+
+Possibly Capper had not intended to be offensive, but it is not given to
+the young and the British to entirely conceal all consciousness of
+superiority when speaking with a native. His courtesy was that of a man
+who considered it to be beneath his dignity to use less ceremony. His
+civility was due to his respect for himself, not for the person whom he
+honored with his unintellectual conversation.
+
+The Judge flipped the ash off his cigar, and his slender hand was cool
+and leisurely. His dark, straight-featured face was impassive as carven
+stone. Mentally, he was cursing Capper with curses of inexhaustible fire
+and venom.
+
+Malcolm, the Collector, had a right to speak loudly, and to say this or
+that without cause, for he was Collector; but Capper, a mere
+Superintendent of the Police, a cub of twenty-three, was on a very
+different footing. Yet, not even as an equal had he borne himself toward
+a District Judge.
+
+His Honor's bungalow was on the outskirts of the town, and as he paced
+along the dusty road, he came to a footpath that ran down the hill,
+through dense jungle, to the native village in the valley. There was a
+swarm of dark-skinned fellow-men down there, to whom his name stood for
+all that is highest in authority. They would have loaded him with gifts
+had he permitted them to approach him. To them, it seemed that he was
+placed far above as a god, holding their lives and their fate 'twixt
+finger and thumb, in mid-air. In the unfathomed depths of the Judge's
+educated, well-ordered mind stirred a craving for solace. Galled by the
+brutish indifference of the Englishmen, there was yet left to him the
+reverence of his own people. He looked sharply up and down the road
+before he dived into the moist heat beneath the trees. He knew all that
+he was risking for a mere escapade. He had never trodden that path
+before, excepting when he had gone on a shooting expedition with the
+Collector. There were strange noises in the darkness, stealthy
+rustlings, small, unfamiliar cries. He heard nothing but Capper's
+comment on his carefully reasoned prediction that the day must come when
+India would govern herself.
+
+"Oh! you think so?"
+
+Stupid, unmeaning, absurd, but--successful.
+
+Then, immediately Capper was talking to Miss Malcolm about tennis, and
+she was listening, smiling and intent. The Judge was a crack tennis
+player. He loathed the game, but he had made himself proficient in it,
+because it is one of the things that people expect of a man. He was
+impelled to challenge Capper, and the answer was a drawled excuse.
+
+The Judge was well down the hill now, descending the last precipitous
+slope, and the countless odors of the Indian village rose to his
+nostrils. There was a dull murmurous commotion afar off, such as bees
+make when they are hiving. He listened, without curiosity, as he pressed
+forward. Suddenly he halted. The murmur boomed out into a long,
+thunderous roar. Then silence, and out of the silence a single voice,
+deep and ringing.
+
+"An infernal protest meeting," the Judge's British training informed
+him.
+
+He went forward again, moving noiselessly, and reached the outskirts of
+the crowd, sheltering himself between the bushes that fringed the
+jungle. Torches flared, and smoked, and shed a ruddy, uncertain light on
+hundreds of rapt, upturned faces. The orator stood tall and straight
+above them, fully revealed by purposely clustered lights. He volleyed
+reproach and insult upon his listeners, he gave them taunts instead of
+persuasion. They stood enthralled by the passionate voice, and bitter
+words found their mark, and rankled poisonously.
+
+"These _soors_ of Feringhi, whom you call your masters, beat you, and
+they use your brothers to be their sticks. But for your brothers, who
+wear the uniform of the Feringhi, and carry their guns, these worthless
+masters would be trodden into the dust beneath your feet. The men who
+hedge them in with steel must turn that steel against them."
+
+The roar of voices thundered among the trees, and died away suddenly, so
+that no word from the speaker might be lost.
+
+"They are cunning, these Feringhi, my brothers. They steal the wisest
+from among us while yet they are children, and bear them away to their
+own land, and give them over to their own teachers. Thus come back your
+own, with power and authority to scourge you. Your sons, your brothers
+come back to you, learned, praised greatly, having striven against the
+Feringhi in their own schools, and won what they desired.
+Collector-sahib, Judge-sahib, yea, even padre-sahib, come they back to
+you--not to lift you to honor and happiness beside them, but to side
+with those that oppress you, to grind taxes from you who starve, to
+imprison you who would be free. Sons of unspeakable shame! They drink
+your blood, they fatten on your misery, and they have their reward. _We_
+curse, them, brothers! The Feringhis smile upon them, they eat bread and
+salt in their company, but they spit when they have passed by!"
+
+Something in the scornful voice rang familiarly on the Judge's ears, and
+incautiously he changed his position and tried to get a clearer view of
+the treasonmonger. Instantly the man's bare brown arm shot out, and
+pointed him to public notice.
+
+"Here is one," pealed out the trumpet-voice, "has he come as our
+brother? Or comes he as the slave of our masters, to spy upon our
+meetings, and to deal out punishment to those who dare to be free? O
+brother, do you walk to Calcutta, where the High Courts be, over our
+bodies, and the bodies of our children? Will you go to the
+Collector-sahib with tales of a native rising, and call up our brothers
+of the police to kill and maim us? Or come you to offer us a great
+heart?"
+
+The Judge stood there, a motionless figure, flaring against the dark
+jungle in his spotless, white linen evening dress. There was a broad
+silk cummerband about his lean waist, and a gold signet-ring gleamed on
+his left hand. Half a dozen Englishmen, thread for thread in similar
+garb, still lounged in the Collector's drawing-room. He appeared the
+very symbol of Anglicized India. The brown, half-naked mob surged and
+struggled to look at him. The brown, half-naked orator still pointed at
+him, and waited for reply. Meanwhile, he had been recognized.
+
+"Iswar Chandra--by Jove," muttered the Judge.
+
+The last time they had met was in a London drawing-room. Iswar Chandra,
+the brilliant young barrister-at-law had discoursed to a philanthropic
+peeress upon the social future of his native land, whilst an admiring
+circle of auditors hung upon his words. The fate of India's women, he
+had said, lay at the feet of such fair and noble ladies as her Grace.
+The Judge remembered that people were saying that evening of Iswar
+Chandra that he was a fascinating and earnest man, and that he would be
+the pioneer of great things in the country of his birth.
+
+The eyes of the half-naked savage challenged the Judge over the sea of
+moving heads, and drove away the supercilious smile from his lips.
+
+"Brother, we claim you! You are of our blood, and we need such as you to
+lead us. The Feringhi have sharpened a sword to cut us down, but it
+shall turn to destroy them. Brother, we suffer the torments of
+hell--will you deliver us? Brother, we starve--will you give us food?
+Will you deal out to us life or death, you whose fathers were as our
+fathers? Choose now between great honor and the infamy that dies not!
+You are the paid creature of the British Raj, or you are a leader of
+free men. Brother, speak!"
+
+As in a dream the Judge approached the waiting crowd. His mouth was
+parched, his heart beat fitfully. He wanted that piercing voice to wake
+the echoes again, to take up the story of the old blood-feud, to goad
+him into doing that which he had not the courage to do. Vanished was his
+pride of intellect, and of fine achievement. He was a native, and he
+tugged and crawled at the stretch of the British chain.
+
+"The Feringhi are few, and we are many. Shall the few rule the many?
+Shall we be servants and poor while yet in the arms of our own golden
+mother? In their own country do the Feringhi not say that the word of
+the majority shall be law? So be it! We accept their word. The majority
+shall rule! O brother, skilled in the Feringhi craft, high-placed to
+administer justice to all who are brought before thee, do I not speak
+the truth?"
+
+The Judge threw away the dead end of his cigar, and shouldered his way
+into the inmost circle.
+
+"Peace, thou," he said, thickly; "this is folly. Ye must wait awhile for
+vengeance."
+
+Chandra threw up his arms, writhing in a very ecstasy of fury.
+
+"We have waited--have we not waited?--beside our open graves. Death to
+the Feringhi! Let them no longer desecrate our land. Let us forget that
+they ever were. They be few, and we be many. Brothers! To-night,
+to-night!"
+
+The Judge was tearing off his clothes, he was trampling them beneath his
+feet, he was crying out in a strange, raucous voice; and all the swaying
+crowds were taking up his words, maddening themselves and their fellows
+with the intoxicating sounds.
+
+"Death to the Feringhi! To-night, to-night! Our land for ourselves!"
+
+All but a few torches were extinguished. Secret places were torn up, and
+out came old guns, old swords sharpened to razor-like edges, great
+pistols, clubs, skinning-knives, daggers. Then, up and up through the
+dark jungle they thronged, hordes of them in the grip of a red and
+silent frenzy. Chandra was in the forefront, but the leader was his
+Honor the District Judge, a glassy-eyed, tight-lipped Mussulman in a
+loincloth and a greasy turban.
+
+The lights of the Collector's bungalow came in view, and the leader
+thought of young Capper, and rushed on, frothing like a madman, waving
+his sword above his head. Then he paused, and ran back to meet the
+laggards of a yard or two.
+
+"Only the men!" he shouted.
+
+Chandra mocked at him as the press bore him onward again, with scarcely
+an instant's halt.
+
+"Only the men, my brother!" he echoed.
+
+A few of the native police stood guard at the Collector's gates, but
+they turned and fled before the overwhelming numbers of the attacking
+force. Up the long drive the dark wave poured, and into the wide, bright
+rooms. The bungalow was deserted. Some fleet-footed servant had brought
+warning in time, and the British were well out of the town by the other
+road, with young Capper and a score of his men guarding their rear.
+
+The mob howled with disappointment. The next instant it was screaming
+with triumph as it settled down to sack and burn and destroy.
+
+The Judge went into the dining-room, and looked at the long table still
+decked with silver, and glass, and flowers. He looked at the chair on
+which he had sat, with Joan Malcolm at his side, and he picked it up and
+dashed it with all his might into a great ivory-framed mirror, and
+laughed aloud at the crash, and the ruin, and the rain of jagged
+splinters.
+
+"India must pass into the hands of the Indians!"
+
+"Oh! _you_ think so--you think so--you think so...."
+
+He overthrew a couple of standard lamps, and watched the liquid fire run
+and eat up their silken shades, and run again and leap upon the snowy
+curtains, and so, like lightning, spring to the ceiling, and lick the
+dry rafters with a thousand darting tongues. Then, he was out in the
+night again, the night of his life, the wonderful night that was calling
+for blood, and would not be denied.
+
+There was no lack of light now to make clear the path to vengeance. The
+Collector's bungalow roared red to the very heavens, and flames shot up
+in a dozen different parts of the town. The bazaar was looted, and
+English-made goods were piled upon bonfires in the street. A greater mob
+than had entered the town poured out of it, swift on the road to
+Chinsurah where thousands of their brothers lay, lacking only courage
+and leaders.
+
+At the midway turn of the road where the giant trees rear themselves at
+the side of the well, came a sudden check, and the mob fell back upon
+itself, and grew dead silent. Those in the rear could only wait and
+guess what had happened. The forefront saw that the road was barred. The
+moon had risen, and well out in the white light, was Capper Sahib. Some
+of his men were behind him. There were soldiers there, too, how many
+could not be seen, for they were grouped in the velvety black shadows
+which the trees flung across the road. There might have been only
+fifty--or five hundred.
+
+Young Capper came forward with his hands in his pockets, and stared at
+them. They saw that he was not afraid. He spoke to them in Maharattee,
+bluntly and earnestly, so that some of them wavered, and looked back. He
+said they were fools, led by a few rotten schemers who had only personal
+gain in view.
+
+"Take good advice," he said, "go to your homes while ye may. Ignorant,
+and greatly daring that ye are, the _bandar-log_, or such thievish scum
+among ye, drive ye with idle words and chatterings even to the brink of
+death. So far have ye come, but no farther----"
+
+The Judge had snatched a villager's gun, and fired. Capper Sahib fell,
+unspoken words upon his lips. His fair head draggled in the dust, and a
+red stain showed suddenly upon the white linen over his breast.
+
+A triumphant roar swept the mob from end to end. British rifles cracked
+out the answer, and the bullets went home surely, into the rioting mass.
+Amid shrill screams of pain and fury the leaders rallied their men, and
+charged forward. A second volley stopped them, before young Capper's
+prostrate body could be reached. Few had joined the attack, but now they
+were fewer, and neither of the leaders stood among them.
+
+That was the end. Bearing their dead and wounded, the rebels returned,
+wailing as they went. Before daylight the townsmen were in their houses,
+and the villagers had passed through the jungle, and regained their
+homes. Arms were concealed with all haste. The dead were buried, the
+wounded, for the most part, were hidden. Prisoners had been taken, but
+only an inconsiderable number. Before daylight also, the headman of the
+village, and a native surgeon came stealthily from the Judge's bungalow,
+and went their ways. They had their order, and they went to spread it
+abroad. The order was--_Silence!_ The headman had bowed himself to the
+earth when it was given, for he understood all that it meant. Prisoners
+would be brought before a brother, not only to-day, but to-morrow, and
+for many morrows. So much had the night given them.
+
+At noon His Honor came stiffly into the court-room, leaning upon the arm
+of his native servant. The Collector, who was awaiting him there, feared
+that he had been injured by the rioters on the previous night; but he
+was quickly reassured. The Judge, it seemed, had sprained his knee
+shortly after leaving the Malcolm's hospitable roof. It was nothing. A
+mere trifle, though indisputably painful.
+
+The Collector seated himself near the bench, and talked in a low voice.
+The ladies were all safe. No Europeans had been killed, and few injured.
+Capper had been shot by some cowardly dog while parleying with the
+rioters, but there were good hopes of him.
+
+The Judge was most truly concerned to hear of the calamity which had
+befallen Mr. Capper--immensely thankful to know that things were no
+worse with him.
+
+His Honor had heard little or nothing of what had happened during the
+riot, being laid by the leg, as it were, in his own room.
+
+The first batch of prisoners was brought in. At first the Judge did not
+look at them. Afterward his eyes sought their gaze, and held it, and
+they knew him for their brother. They heard his soft voice speaking of
+them compassionately, as wayward children whom mercy would win over,
+though harshness might confirm them in their foolish resistance to
+authority. The Collector seemed to protest, but with gentle courtesy
+his objections were put aside. He leaned back in his chair, flushed and
+angry, as one after another, the sullen-looking rebels were fined, and
+having paid what was demanded, were set at liberty.
+
+When the Judge looked up again, a single prisoner stood before him, a
+wounded, hawk-faced native, whose eyes blazed hate and contempt. The
+Collector drew his chair closer to the bench, and began to speak in
+gruff undertones.
+
+"A ring-leader. Man of some education, I understand--qualified as a
+barrister, and has taken to journalism. Must make an example of
+him--eh?"
+
+The Judge, straining in agony of mind and body, was aware of sudden
+relief from the pain of his wound. The bandage had slipped, and blood
+was cooling the torturing fire. A deathly faintness was upon him, and
+through it he spoke distinctly--again of mercy.
+
+"They were all blind. The leaders were blind. The blind leading the
+blind. Blind--blind----"
+
+The Collector sprang up with a startled exclamation. A thin stream of
+blood trickled from behind His Honor's desk, and went a twisting way
+down to the well of the court. He caught the Judge in his arms as he
+fell forward, and lowered him gently to the ground. Then it was seen
+that the unconscious man's clothes were saturated with blood.
+
+Instantly the court was cleared. A military surgeon cut away the
+blood-stained clothing from the Judge's thigh, and laid bare the clean
+wound made by a British bullet. A look passed between him and the
+Collector, but never a word. Syed Mehta's life had ebbed with his blood,
+and so he passed, unawakened, from swoon to death.
+
+The English, as their way is, betrayed nothing. It was His Honor, the
+District Judge of Golampore, who had died, and they gave him burial the
+next day with due regard to the high position which he had held in the
+service of H.M. the King and Emperor.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+A FOG-HORN CONCLUSION
+
+The Story of a Gramophone
+
+By FOX RUSSELL
+
+
+THE _Saucy Sally_ was a vessel of renown. No blustering liner, no fussy
+tug, no squattering steamer, she; but a bluff-bowed, smartly painted,
+trim-built sailing barge, plying chiefly from the lower reaches of the
+Thames to ports west of Dover. She had no equal of her class, at any
+point of sailing, and certainly her Master, Mr. Joseph Pigg, was not the
+man to let her fair fame suffer for want of seamanship.
+
+"Cap'n Pigg," as he insisted upon being called, was a great, hairy-faced
+man, with brawny muscles and a blood-shot eye. And in these respects,
+his mate, Bob Topper, greatly favored him--in fact, their physical
+resemblance was rather marked; but their tastes were in no way similar;
+'the Cap'n' was fond of his glass, whilst the mate was a blue-ribbon
+man; Joseph Pigg couldn't bear music, in any form, whilst the total
+abstainer had a weakness for the flute and would not infrequently burst
+into song; the Skipper hated women, whereas the mate was, what he
+himself called "a bit of a gay Lathero." But notwithstanding these
+dissimilarities of tastes and disposition, they got along fairly well
+together, and both met on the common ground of getting as much work out
+of the two "hands" as was ordinarily possible. The Skipper didn't drink
+alcoholic liquors before the mate, and the mate returned the compliment
+by refraining from any musical outrage in the hearing of his superior
+officer.
+
+One hot summer afternoon, when the _Saucy Sally_ was taking in cargo and
+the Skipper was ashore, Mr. Topper, seated on the coamings of the
+hatchway, abandoned himself to the melancholy pleasures of Haydn's
+"Surprise," the tune being wrung out of a tarnished German-silver flute.
+"Kittiwake Jack," one of the crew, was seated as far as possible
+for'ard, vainly trying to absorb his tea and stop his ears, at one and
+the same time, whilst his fellow-sufferer, Bill Brown, having hastily
+dived below, lay in his bunk, striving to deaden the weird, wailing
+sounds that filled the ship. And just as Haydn's "Surprise" was half way
+through, for the seventh time, the Skipper walked on board.
+
+The flutist stopped short, and stared up at him.
+
+"Didn't expect you back so soon, Cap'n," he said in confused tones.
+
+"No. What's that 'owlin' row you're making?"
+
+"I dunno about no 'owlin' row, but----"
+
+"Well, I do. I s'pose, accordin' to you, I ain't got no musical h'ear,"
+sneered Cap'n Pigg.
+
+"This--this here tune----"
+
+"Yes. This disgustin' noise--what is it?"
+
+The mate looked sulky.
+
+"This is Haydn's 'Surprise,'" he growled.
+
+"So I should think. I dunno who the bloke was, but it must have given
+Haydn quite a turn! Don't let's 'ave no more of it."
+
+"Well, I don't see as there's no 'arm in music. And I didn't loose it
+off when you was about. I know you don't like it, so I studied your
+pecooliarities. Fact is, I studies yer too much," and the mate looked
+mutinous.
+
+Cap'n Pigg scowled.
+
+"You shet yer 'ead," he grunted as he stamped off below. He went to a
+small cupboard in the corner of the cabin, and mixed himself a stiff
+"go" of gin and water, which he tossed off at one gulp, saying:
+
+"Haydn's 'S'prise,' eh? Haydn's S'prise be d--dished! 'E don't come no
+s'prises 'ere while I'm master of the _Saucy Sally_!"
+
+After this slight breeze, things quickly settled down again on the old
+lines between master and mate, and the voyage to Chichester Harbor was
+entirely uneventful, the barge bringing up at a snug anchorage near
+Emsworth.
+
+The next day Mr. Topper had undressed and gone overboard for a swim.
+After this, climbing up the bobstay, he regained the deck, and proceeded
+to dry his hairy frame on an ancient flannel shirt. In the midst of this
+occupation, temporarily forgetful of his superior officer's prejudices,
+he broke into song.
+
+Thirty seconds after he had let go the first howl, the Skipper's head
+was thrust up the companion-way.
+
+"Wodjer want to make all that row about? Anything disagreed with yer? If
+so, why don't yer take something for it?"
+
+"It's a funny thing yer carn't let a man alone, when all 'e's a doin' is
+making a bit of 'armony on board," replied the mate, pausing in the act
+of drying his shock head.
+
+"'Armony be d--driven overboard!" cried Mr. Pigg, wrathfully. "Now, look
+'ere, Bob Topper, I ain't a onreasonable man in my likes and dislikes,
+but it ain't fair to sing at a feller creature with the voice nature
+fitted you out with! I never done you no 'arm."
+
+Next day the _Saucy Sally_ shipped some shingle ballast, got under weigh
+on the first of the ebb tide, and safely threading her way past the
+shallows and through the narrow channels of the harbor, emerged into the
+open sea, and turned her bluff-bowed stem eastwards.
+
+The following afternoon, as Bob Topper took his trick at the wheel, he
+ruminated on the mutability of human affairs in general, and the
+"contraryness" of skippers in particular.
+
+"Won't 'ave no music, won't he? Well, I reckon it's like religion when
+the missionaries is a shovin' of it into the African niggers--they just
+jolly well got to 'ave it! An' so it'll be with the ole man. I'll jest
+fix up a scheme as'll do 'im a treat."
+
+He smiled broadly; and when Bob Topper smiled, the corners of his mouth
+seemed to almost meet at the back of his head.
+
+And as soon as the _Saucy Sally_ had pitched and tossed her way up
+channel--for she was light as a cork in ballast--and dropped anchor a
+little way off Gravesend, Bob Topper sculled himself ashore. Twenty
+minutes after stepping out of the boat, he was seated in the back-parlor
+of a friend, a musical-instrument maker.
+
+When Mr. Topper went aboard again, he carried under his arm a large
+brown paper package, which he smuggled below, without encountering the
+Skipper, who was in his cabin at the time, communing with a bill of
+lading and a glass of Hollands neat. And, soon after the mate had come
+aboard, "the Cap'n" went ashore.
+
+And then Mr. Topper laid himself out for some tranquil enjoyment, on
+quite an unusual scale. He unfastened the package, produced a
+gramophone, brought it on to the deck, and started "The Washington
+Post."
+
+"Kittiwake Jack" and Bill Brown immediately fled below.
+
+The mate sat on the edge of the hatch and gazed lovingly at the new
+instrument of torture, as he beat time to the inspiring strains, with a
+belaying pin. When the "Washington Post," was finished, he laid on
+"Jacksonville," with a chorus of human laughter, which sounded quite
+eerie. And so intent was he on this occupation, that he never even
+noticed the approach of Cap'n Pigg's boat until it was almost alongside.
+
+The Skipper clambered aboard, looking black as thunder. This new outrage
+was not to be borne. Just as his foot touched the deck the instrument
+gave forth its unholy cachinnation of "Ha! Ha! Ha!" in the high nasal
+tones peculiar to its kind.
+
+Cap'n Pigg was not easily disconcerted, but this ghostly "Ha! Ha! Ha!"
+was a distinct trial to his nerves; he thrust his hands deep into his
+coat pockets, glared at the mate, and then growled:
+
+"Wodjer got there? More 'armony?"
+
+"Grammarphone," was the mate's brief reply. He was getting sulky.
+
+"Grammar be blowed! Worst grammar I ever 'eard," returned Pigg. "Turn
+the bloomin' thing off--and turn it off at the main. Enough to give any
+respectable, law-abidin' sailor-man the 'ump!"
+
+He proceeded two steps down the companion; then hurled this parting shot
+at the offending mate:
+
+"You oughter be 'ead of a laundry where the 'andle of the mangle turns a
+pianer-horgan as well--work and play!" he concluded scornfully, as he
+disappeared from the musician's sight below.
+
+The mate whistled softly; then he stopped the offending instrument and
+conveyed it below.
+
+"P'raps the old man'll be glad of it, one o' these days," he muttered
+mysteriously.
+
+The next trip of the _Saucy Sally_ was a more eventful one. She left
+Tilbury in a light haze, which first thickened into a pale-colored fog,
+and then, aided by the smoke from the tall chimneys, to a regular
+"pea-souper." The mate, taking advantage of the Captain's spell below,
+brought up a long yard of tin, which looked remarkably like the _Saucy
+Sally's_ fog-horn, and quietly slipped it overboard.
+
+As they got lower and lower down the river, the fog increased, and both
+Cap'n Pigg and Topper experienced a certain amount of anxiety as, first
+another barge, then a tramp steamer, and finally, a huge liner, all
+sounding their fog-horns loudly, passed them considerably too close for
+comfort. The Skipper himself was at the wheel and, coughing the raw,
+damp fog out of his throat, he shouted hoarsely to Topper:
+
+"Better get our fog-horn goin', mate."
+
+"Aye, aye, Skipper. It's in your cabin, ain't it?"
+
+"Yes, in the first locker."
+
+The mate descended the companion-steps, with a mysterious smile on his
+face, and his dexter optic closed. The casual observer might have
+thought that Mr. Topper was actually indulging in a wink.
+
+After a time, he reappeared on deck, walked aft, and said:
+
+"Fog-horn don't seem nowheres about, Skipper. Thought you always kept
+her in your charge."
+
+Cap'n Pigg whisked the wheel round just in time to escape a tug, fussing
+up-stream, and feeling her way through the fog at half-speed, and then
+he grunted sourly:
+
+"So I do. What the d--delay in findin' it is, I can't understand. 'Ere,
+ketch 'old o' the spokes, and I'll go; always got to do everything
+myself on this old tank, seems to me."
+
+And thus grumbling, Cap'n Pigg went below--not altogether unwillingly,
+as, being a man who understood the importance of economizing time, he
+combined his search for the fog-horn with the quenching of a highly
+useful thirst. But when he came on deck again, wiping his mouth with the
+back of his hand, he was unaccompanied by the fog-horn.
+
+"Where the blamed thing's got to, I dunno, more'n the dead. I see it
+there, myself, not two days ago, but it ain't nowheres to be found now."
+
+"Rather orkard, Skipper, ain't it, in all this maze o' shippin'?"
+returned Mr. Topper with a half turn at the wheel.
+
+"Yes, I don't more'n 'arf like it," returned the Cap'n uneasily. "My
+nerves arn't quite what they was. An' a fog's a thing as I never could
+abide."
+
+On glided the _Saucy Sally_, almost the only one on the great water way
+which spoke not, in the midst of a babel of confusing sounds. Syrens
+whooped, steam whistles shrieked hoarsely; the raucous voices of
+fog-horns proclaimed the whereabouts of scores of craft, passing up and
+down the river; but the trim-built barge slid noiselessly along,
+ghost-like, in the dun-colored "smother," giving no intimation of her
+proximity.
+
+Then it was that Mr. Bob Topper's moment for action arrived. In casual
+tones, he observed to the Skipper:
+
+"Pity, we ain't got something as'll make a sound o' some kind, so's to
+let people know as we 're a-comin'."
+
+Cap'n Pigg said nothing: but the anxiety deepened perceptibly in his
+face.
+
+"Where the blank blank are yer comin' to?" roared the voice of another
+bargeman, as, tooting loudly on a fog-horn, one of the "Medway flyers,"
+shaved past them.
+
+"Near thing, that," observed the mate, calmly.
+
+Cap'n Pigg went a shade paler beneath the tan on his weather-beaten
+face.
+
+"Cuss 'im! careless 'ound!" he muttered. "Might a' sunk us."
+
+"'Ad no proper lookout, I expect," returned Mr. Topper, "even if 'e 'ad,
+'e couldn't see anything, and we got no fog-'orn to show 'em where we
+was, yer see."
+
+"No. An' p'raps we shall go to the bottom, all along o' our 'aving lost
+our ole bit o' tin. It's a orful thing to think of, ain't it?" said
+Cap'n Pigg solemnly.
+
+The mate appeared to be in a brown study. Then, as though he had
+suddenly been inspired, he exclaimed:
+
+"What about the grammarphone, Skipper?"
+
+Even in the midst of his perturbation, Cap'n Pigg looked askance at
+mention of the hated instrument. But it was a case of 'any port in a
+storm,' and, with a grim nod, he relieved the mate at the wheel, and
+said:
+
+"Fetch the bloomin' consarn up."
+
+Mr. Topper obeyed, with alacrity in his step, and a wink in his eye. The
+'consarn' was quickly brought on deck, and the 'Washington Post' let
+loose on the astonished ears of fog-smothered mariners, right and left
+of them.
+
+One old shell-back, coming up river on a Gravesend shrimper, listened in
+blank astonishment for a minute, and then confided huskily to his mate
+that he thought their time had come.
+
+"'Eavenly, strains! It's wot they calls 'the music o' the spears,'" he
+said mysteriously, "Hangels' music wot comes just before a bloke's
+time's up. We better prepare for the wust."
+
+His mate, less superstitious and with more common sense, rejoined:
+
+"Garn! 'Music o' the spears' be blowed! It's more like a pianer-horgan
+or a 'urdy-gurdy."
+
+The shrimper glided on, and a tramp steamer, going dead slow, just
+shaved past the musical barge. Its master roared derisively from the
+bridge:
+
+"'Ullo, barge, ahoy! Wot yer got there? Punch and Judy show aboard?"
+
+Which cost Cap'n Pigg a nasty twinge. He had always prided himself on
+his seaman-like ways, and to proceed thus, down the great river, like a
+mountebank, or a Cockney out on a Bank Holiday, hurt his feelings more
+than he could say.
+
+Yet another insult was to be hurled at the _Saucy Sally_, for
+"Jacksonville," with its weird human chorus, having been turned on--when
+the "Ha! Ha! Ha!" rang out on the ears of a passing tug's captain, that
+outraged gentleman, thinking he was being personally derided, shouted,
+as the tide swept them out of sight:
+
+"Yah! 'Oo yer larfin' at? Set o' bloomin' monkeys!"
+
+But the gramophone was certainly playing a useful part in warning others
+off the _Saucy Sally_, down that fog-laden river. And, when, at the end
+of their day's slow journey, they let go their anchor, the "Washington
+Post" was again nasally shrieking out its march-time glories.
+
+The mate stopped the machine and carried it tenderly below, then,
+returning to the deck, he observed.
+
+"Good job as we 'ad the grammarphone aboard, Cap'n."
+
+Cap'n Pigg swallowed a lump in his throat, and looked like a child
+confronted with a dose of nauseous medicine, as he gruffly replied:
+
+"It's better n' nothin' when yer wants a row made."
+
+A pause ensued, and then the Skipper went on:
+
+"In future, I don't object--not very much--to the
+dammarphone--grammarphone, I mean--If you can stand music, well, so can
+I. But you can't contrarst the beauty o' the two instruments, and I'm
+goin' ashore, straight away, to buy myself a good, old-fashioned
+fog-'orn. The tone of that is altogether more 'armonious and more
+soothin' to the hear, than that there beastly grammarphone ever could
+be!"
+
+The mate heaved a deep sigh and sorrowfully went below. In the effort to
+ram music into his superior officer he had to admit himself defeated.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+MARY JANE'S DIVERSION
+
+A Western Tale
+
+By CHARLES ALDEN SELTZER
+
+
+TEXAS RANKIN stood in the street in front of the High Card Saloon, his
+lank body trembling with surprise, indecision, and indignation; his face
+alight with the fire of outraged dignity. Three long paces from him
+stood Sheriff Webster, indifferently fondling an ivory-handled .45.
+
+The sheriff was nonchalantly deliberative in his actions, betraying only
+a negative interest in Rankin's movements--for Rankin's holster yawned
+with eloquent emptiness. With his empty holster dragging on his desires,
+it seemed to Rankin that to await the sheriff's pleasure was his most
+logical course.
+
+And so he waited.
+
+The sheriff had come upon him, when, in an incautious moment, he had
+emerged from the High Card Saloon, having forgotten the very important
+fact that the sheriff was looking for him. This forgetfulness had been
+the cause of his undoing, for at the instant he had turned to go down
+the street the sheriff had reached for his gun. The empty holster was
+evidence of his success.
+
+After that there was no use in getting excited. True, Texas had flashed
+around in his tracks when he had felt the gun leaving its holster, and
+had made a lightning movement with his hand to prevent such a
+disgraceful occurrence. But he might just as well have reached for a
+rainbow. As he had faced about, rage-flushed and impotent, he saw his
+gun swinging loosely in Webster's left hand, while in Webster's right
+hand another big six-shooter had reached a foreboding level.
+
+The distance between the two men approximated ten feet; for Webster had
+wisely stepped back, knowing Rankin's reluctance toward submission.
+
+And now, over the ten feet of space, captive and captor surveyed one
+another with that narrowing of the eyes which denotes tension and warns
+of danger.
+
+"I reckon I was too quick for you, Texas," said Webster, with a
+gentleness that fell too softly to be genuine.
+
+Rankin gazed dolefully at his empty holster. The skin tensed over his
+teeth in a grinning sneer.
+
+"I ain't sayin' that you took a mean advantage," he said, raising his
+eyes and allowing them an expression of mild innocence that contrasted
+strangely with his drawn lips, "but you might have given me a chance to
+fight it out square. I wouldn't have took your gun, Jim."
+
+Knowing Texas less intimately, the sheriff might have been misled by
+this crude sentiment; but the sheriff's fingers only drew more closely
+around the ivory handle of his .45. And there came a glint of humor into
+his eyes.
+
+"I ain't sayin' you would, Texas. But as sheriff of Socorro County I
+ain't takin' any chances. I wanted to talk to you, an' I knew if I had
+your gun I'd feel easier."
+
+"Which means that you didn't want me to have a chance," complained Texas
+glumly. "Socorro's always been meaner'n ----"
+
+"'T ain't Socorro's fault," interrupted the sheriff with a sudden
+coldness; "you've been cuttin' didoes in Socorro for so long a time that
+you've disgraced yourself. You've gambled an' shot yourself into
+disfavor with the _elite_. You've been as ornery an' as compromisin' as
+it's possible for any human maverick to get without havin' to
+requisition the unwillin' mourners."
+
+"Not that I'm sayin' you're naturally bad, Texas. It's that you've got
+an overdose of what them modern brain specialists call exaggerated ego;
+which us common critters would call plain swell head. That there
+disease is listed an' catalogued in the text books of the New York
+Medical Institoot as bearin' a close relationship to the geni Loco;
+which is a scientific way of sayin' that you've got buzzers in your
+attic."
+
+Texas smiled, showing his teeth in wan sarcasm.
+
+"You wouldn't say that if I had my gun, Jim. It ain't like you to pour
+out your blackguardisms on a man what ain't armed."
+
+"I ain't blackguardin' you none," said Webster easily. "It's the naked
+truth, an' you know it. Takin' your gun was part of my official duty.
+Personally I could have talked to you without trampling down any of the
+niceties of etiquette, but officially I had to have your gun."
+
+Rankin's face lengthened with a deep melancholy. With this expression he
+intended to convey the impression that he was suffering a martyrdom. But
+the sheriff's acquaintance with Texas was not recent.
+
+"An' now that you've got the gun," said Texas, after an embarrassed
+silence, "what's the next thing on the programme?"
+
+"Takin' your gun," said the sheriff heavily, "was a preliminary; like
+they say in the sporting papers. The big event is that you're goin' to
+say your adoos to Socorro without bein' allowed to make any farewell
+announcement. The reason is that you an' Socorro is incongruous--like a
+side-saddle on a razor-back hog. Socorro won't stand for you a minute
+longer. You're a Public Favorite which has lost its popularity an' which
+has become heterogeneous to the established order of things. In other
+words, you're an outlaw; a soft-spoken, lazy, good-for-nothin'
+road-agent. An' though Socorro ain't never had anything on you before,
+it knows you had a hand in robbin' the express office last night. An'
+it's----"
+
+"You're a damn ----"
+
+"----like playin' a king-full against three deuces that you done the
+trick. You was seen goin' toward the station about an hour before Budd
+Tucker found Ridgely, the agent, stretched out on the floor of the
+office, a bullet from a .45 clean through him. An' there's five thousand
+dollars in gold gone, an' no trace of it. An' there's been no strangers
+in town. An' here's your gun, showin' plain that it's been shot off
+lately, for there's the powder smudge on the cylinder an' the barrel.
+That's a pay streak of circumstantial evidence or I ain't sheriff of
+Socorro!"
+
+Rankin's eyes had flashed with an unusual brilliancy as the sheriff had
+spoken of him being seen going toward the station previous to the
+finding of the agent's body, but they glazed over with unconcern during
+the rest of the recital. And as the sheriff concluded, Rankin gazed
+scornfully at him, sneering mildly:
+
+"I couldn't add nothin' to what you've just said." He idly kicked the
+gray dust that was mounded at his feet, standing loose and inert, as
+though he cared little what might be the outcome of this impromptu
+interview. And then, suddenly, his blue eyes twinkled humorously as he
+raised them to meet the sheriff's.
+
+"Give you time you might tell me where I spent the money," he said
+drily. "There's no tellin' where your theorizin' might end."
+
+The sheriff ignored this, but he eyed his prisoner meditatively.
+
+"There's been a rumor," he said coldly, "that you've got cracked on my
+daughter, Mary Jane. But I ain't never been able to properly confirm it.
+I meant to tell you some time ago that while I ain't had no objection to
+livin' in the same town with you, I'm some opposed to havin' you for a
+son-in-law. But now, since the express robbery, it won't be necessary
+for me to tell you not to nose around my house, for you're goin' to ride
+straight out of Socorro County, an' you ain't comin' back any more. If
+you do, I reckon you'll discover that Socorro's present leniency ain't
+elastic enough to be stretched to cover your home-comin'."
+
+"I ain't sayin' nothin'," said Texas, glancing with pensive eyes to a
+point far up the sun-baked street where his gaze rested upon a
+pretentious house in a neatly-fenced yard where there were green things
+that gave a restful impression. "Circumstantial evidence is sure
+convincin'." he sighed deeply. "I reckon you knowed all along that I
+thought a heap of Mary Jane. That's the reason you picked me out for the
+express job."
+
+He scowled as his eyes took in the meagre details of Socorro's one
+street. Because of long association these details had become mental
+fixtures. Socorro had been his home for ten years, and in ten years
+things grow into a man's heart. And civic pride had been his one great
+virtue. If in the summer the alkali dust of the street formed into
+miniature hills of grayish white which sifted into surrounding hollows
+under the whipping tread of the cow-pony's hoofs, Texas likened it unto
+ruffled waters that seek a level. The same condition in another town
+would have drawn a curse from him. If in the winter the huge windrows of
+caked mud stretched across the street in unlovely phalanx, Texas was
+reminded of itinerant mountain ranges. The stranger who would be so
+unwary as to take issue with him on this point would regret--if he
+lived. The unpainted shanties, the huddled, tottering dives, the
+tumble-down express station--all, even the maudlin masquerade of the
+High Card Saloon--were institutions inseparable from his thoughts,
+inviolable and sacred in the measure of his love for them.
+
+And now! Something caught in his throat and gave forth a choking sound.
+
+"But I reckon it's just as well," he said resignedly. "I sure ain't of
+much account." He hesitated and smiled weakly at the sheriff. "I ain't
+croakin'," he said apologetically; "there's the circumstantial
+evidence." He hesitated again, evidently battling a ponderous question.
+"You didn't happen to hear Mary Jane say anything about the express
+job?" he questioned with an expression of dog-like hopefulness.
+"Anything that would lead you to believe she knowed about it?"
+
+"I don't see what----"
+
+"No, of course!" He shuffled his feet awkwardly. "An' so she don't know
+anything. Didn't mention me at all?" The hopefulness was gone from his
+eyes, and in its place was the dull glaze of puzzled wonder. "Not that
+it makes any difference," he added quickly, as he caught a sudden sharp
+glance from the sheriff's eyes.
+
+"An' so I'm to leave Socorro." He looked dully at the sheriff. "Why, of
+course, there's the circumstantial evidence." His eyes swept the
+shanties, the street, the timber-dotted sides of the mountains that rose
+above the town--familiar landmarks of his long sojourn; landmarks that
+brought pleasant memories.
+
+"I've lived here a long time," he said, with abrupt melancholy, his
+voice grating with suppressed regret. "I won't forget soon."
+
+There ensued a silence which lasted long. It brought a suspicious lump
+into the sheriff's throat.
+
+"I wouldn't take it so hard, Texas," he said gently. "Mebbe it'll be the
+best for you in the long run. If you get away from here mebbe you make a
+man----"
+
+"Quit your damn croakin'!" flashed back Texas. "I ain't askin' for none
+of your mushy sentiment!" He straightened up suddenly and smiled with
+set lips. "I guess I've been a fool. If you'll hand over that
+six-shooter I'll be goin'. I've got business in San Marcial."
+
+"I'll walk up to the station platform an' lay the gun there," said the
+sheriff coldly; for Texas was less dangerous at a distance; "an' when
+you see me start away from the platform you can start for the gun. I'm
+takin' your word that you'll leave peaceable."
+
+And so, with his gun again in its holster, Texas threw himself astride
+his Pinto pony and loped down toward the sloping banks of the Rio Grande
+del Norte.
+
+A quarter of a mile from town he halted on the bare knob of a low hill
+and took a lingering look at the pretentious house amid the green
+surroundings.
+
+Near the house was something he had not seen when he had looked
+before--the flutter of a white dress against the background of green. As
+he looked the white figure moved rapidly through the garden and
+disappeared behind the house.
+
+"She didn't say a word," said Texas chokingly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ten hours out of Socorro Texas Rankin rode morosely into San Marcial.
+Into San Marcial the unbeautiful, with its vista of unpainted shanties
+and lurid dives. For in San Marcial foregathered the men of the mines
+and the ranges; men of forgotten morals, but of brawn and muscle, whose
+hearts beat not with a yearning for high ideals, but with a lust for
+wealth and gain--white, Indian, Mexican, half-breed; predatory spirits
+of many nations, opposed in the struggle for existence.
+
+For ten hours Texas had ridden the river trail, and for ten hours his
+ears had been burdened with the dull beat of his pony's hoofs on the
+matted mesquite grass, and the rattle of his wooden stirrups against the
+chaparral growth. And for ten hours his mind had been confused with a
+multitude of perplexities and resentments.
+
+But all mental confusions reach a culminating point when the mind
+finally throws aside the useless chaff of thought and considers only the
+questions that have to do with the heart. Wherefore, Texas Rankin's mind
+dwelt on Mary Jane. Subconsciously his mind harbored rebellion against
+her father, who had judged him; against Socorro, which had misunderstood
+him; against Fate, which had been unjust. All these atoms of personal
+interest were elements of a primitive emotion that finally evolved into
+one great concrete determination that he would show Jim Webster,
+Socorro, Mary Jane--the world, that he was not the creature they had
+thought him. Tearing aside all mental superfluities, there was revealed
+a new structure of thought:
+
+"I am goin' to be a man again!"
+
+And so Texas rode his tired pony in the gathering dusk; down the wide
+street that was beginning to flicker with the shafts of light from grimy
+windows; down to the hitching rail in front of the Top Notch
+Saloon--where he dismounted and stood stiffly beside his beast while he
+planned his regeneration.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Half an hour later Texas sat opposite a man at a card table in the rear
+of the Top Notch Saloon.
+
+The man conversed easily, but it was noticeable that he watched Texas
+with cat-like vigilance, and that he poured his whiskey with his left
+hand.
+
+Ordinarily Texas would have noticed this departure from the polite
+rules, but laboring under the excitement that his new determination
+brought him he was careless. For he had planned his regeneration, and
+his talk with the man was the beginning.
+
+"You lifted the express box at Socorro, Buck!" said Texas, so earnestly
+that the table trembled.
+
+Buck Reible, gambler, outlaw, murderer, pushed back his broad-brimmed
+hat with his hand--always he used his left--and gazed with level,
+menacing eyes at Texas. His lips parted with a half-sneer.
+
+"If a man does a job nowadays, there's always some one wants in on it!"
+he declared, voicing his suspicion of Rankin's motive in bringing up the
+subject. "Because you was lucky in bein' close when the game come off is
+the reason you want a share of the cash," he added satirically. "How
+much----"
+
+"Go easy, Buck," said Texas. "I ain't no angel, but I never played your
+style. I ain't askin' for a share."
+
+"Then what in----"
+
+"It's a new deal," declared Texas heavily. "A square deal. You took five
+thousand dollars out of Socorro, an' you salivated the agent doin' it.
+Jim Webster thought it was me, an' I was invited to a farewell
+performance in which I done the starrin'. Some night-prowler saw me
+down near the station just before you made your grand entree, an'----"
+
+"Serves you right for spoonin' with a female so close to where gentlemen
+has business," said Buck. "I saw her when you come toward me shootin'."
+
+"An' what makes it more aggravatin'," continued Texas, unmoved by the
+interruption; "is that the lady was Jim Webster's daughter, an' we was
+thinkin' of gettin' married. But we didn't want Jim to know just then,
+an' she told me to keep mum, seein' that Jim was opposed. She said we'd
+keep it secret until----"
+
+"I admire the lady's choice," said Buck, sneering ironically.
+
+"----until I braced up an' was a man again," went on Texas, with
+bull-dog persistency.
+
+"Then you wasn't thinkin' of gettin' married soon," slurred Buck.
+
+"I reckon we was," returned Texas coldly; "that's why I came here. I'm
+goin' to take that five thousand back to Socorro with me!"
+
+And now Buck used his right hand. But quick as he was, he was late.
+Rankin's gun gaped at him across the table the while his own weapon
+lagged tardily half-way in its holster.
+
+"I'm goin' to be a man again," said Texas. There was a positiveness in
+his voice that awoke thoughts of death and violence.
+
+"You damn----" began Buck.
+
+"I'll count ten," said Texas frigidly. "If the money ain't on the table
+then I reckon you won't care what becomes of it!"
+
+"One!--Two!"
+
+With a snarl of rage and hate Buck rose from his chair and sprang clear,
+his gun flashing to a level with the movement, its savage roar
+shattering the silence.
+
+Texas did not wince as the heavy bullet struck him, but his face went
+white. He had been a principal in more than one shooting affray, and
+experience had taught him the value of instantaneous action. And so,
+even with the stinging pain in his left shoulder, his hand swept his gun
+lightly upward, and before it had reached a level he had begun to pull
+the trigger. But to his astonishment only the metallic click, click of
+the hammer striking the steel of the cylinder rewarded his efforts.
+Once, twice, thrice; so rapidly that the metallic clicks blended.
+
+And now he saw why he was to meet his death at the muzzle of Buck's gun.
+Fearing him, Jim Webster had removed the cartridges from his weapon
+before returning it to him that morning. He had committed a fatal error
+in not examining it after he had received it from Webster's hand. The
+Law, in judging him, had removed his chance of life.
+
+But he smiled with bitter irony into Buck's eyes as the latter, still
+snarling and relentless, deliberately shot again; once, twice.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+According to the ancient custom--which has many champions--and to the
+conventions--which are not to be violated with impunity--Texas should
+have recovered from his wounds to return to Mary Jane and Socorro. No
+narrative is complete without the entire vindication of the brave and
+the triumph of the honorable. But to the chronicler belongs only the
+simple task of true and conscientious record.
+
+Therefore is the end written thus:
+
+Came to Jim Webster's home in Socorro a week later a babbler from San
+Marcial, who told a tale:
+
+"There was a man by the name of Texas Rankin came down to San Marcial
+last week an' went gunnin' for Buck Reible. Quickest thing you ever saw.
+Buck peppered him so fast you couldn't count; an' I'm told Texas wasn't
+no slouch with a gun, either."
+
+"Dead?" questioned Webster.
+
+"As a door nail," returned the babbler.
+
+"Socorro's bad man," said Webster, sententiously. "Wasn't a bit of good
+in him. Gamblin', shootin', outlaw. Best job Buck ever done."
+
+He found Mary Jane in the kitchen, singing over the supper dishes.
+
+"Texas Rankin is dead over at San Marcial," he said, with the importance
+of one communicating delectable news.
+
+Mary Jane continued with her dishes, looking at her father over her
+shoulder with a mild unconcern.
+
+"At San Marcial?" she said wonderingly. "I didn't know he had left
+Socorro!"
+
+"A week now," returned Webster with much complacence. "Fired him from
+Socorro for doin' that express job. Socorro's bad enough without
+Texas----"
+
+His mouth opened with dumb astonishment as Mary Jane whirled around on
+him with a laugh on her lips.
+
+"Why, dad! Texas Rankin didn't do that job! It was Buck Reible. Texas
+told me the night it happened. We were walking down near the station and
+we heard some shooting. I wasn't close enough to see plainly, but Texas
+said he could recognize Buck by the flash of his gun. And so Texas is
+dead!"
+
+"I thought," said Webster feebly, "that you was pretty sweet on Texas."
+
+"Sweet!" said Mary Jane, blushing with maidenly modesty. "Socorro is so
+dull. A young lady must have some diversion."
+
+"Then you don't care----"
+
+"Why, dad! You old sobersides. To think--why I was only fooling with
+him. It was fun to see how serious----"
+
+"In that case----" began Webster. And then he went out and sat on the
+front stoop.
+
+Far into the night he sat, and always he stared in the direction of San
+Marcial.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+BETWEEN FRIENDS
+
+A Story of the Italian Quarter
+
+By ADRIANA SPADONI
+
+
+VINCENZA looked from the three crisp dollar bills to her husband, and
+back again, wonderingly and with fear in her eyes.
+
+"I understand nothing, Gino, and I am afraid. Perhaps it will bring the
+sickness, the money--it is of the devil, maybe----"
+
+Luigi laughed, but a little uneasily. "It is time, then, that the devil
+went to paradise; he makes better for us than the saints, to whom you
+pray so----"
+
+"S-sh!" Vincenza crossed herself quickly. "That is a great wickedness."
+
+Luigi picked up the bills, examining them closely. Apparently they were
+good. Nevertheless he put them down again, and went on carving a wooden
+cow for the little Carolina, with a puzzled look in his black eyes.
+
+"Gino," Vincenza stopped undressing the baby suddenly when the thought
+came to her. "Go thou and ask Biaggio. He has been many years in this
+country, and, besides, he is also a Genovese. He will tell thee."
+
+Luigi's eyes cleared, but he condescended to make no reply. It is not
+for a man to take the advice of a woman. But when it was dark, and
+Vincenza had gone to lie down with the Little One, Luigi took his hat
+and went over to the shop of Biaggio Franchini.
+
+Biaggio listened attentively; his pudgy hands, crossed on his stomach,
+rose and fell with the undulations of the rolls of flesh beneath. From
+time to time he ceased for a moment the contemplation of the strings of
+garlic and sausage that hung from the fly-specked ceiling of his
+diminutive shop, and turned his little black eyes sharply on Luigi.
+
+"So," he said at last, "to-day a lady came to thy house, and after to
+ask many questions left these three dollars. It was in this way?"
+
+"Just so," replied Luigi, "and questions the most marvelous I have ever
+heard. And in this country, where everyone asks the questions. How long
+that I do not work, and if we have to eat?" Luigi laughed; "of a surety,
+Biaggio, she asked that. She sees that we live--and she asks if we
+eat--_ma! che!_ And then, if we have every day the meat? When I said
+once, sometimes twice in the week--thou knowest it is not possible to
+have more often, when one waits to buy the house--then it was she put on
+the table the three dollars, and gave me a paper to sign----"
+
+"Thou didst sign nothing?" Biaggio spoke eagerly.
+
+"No. Once I signed the paper in English and it cost me two dollars; not
+again. I said I could not write, and she wrote for me."
+
+"_Bene_," Biaggio nodded approval. "It is not thy writing. It can do
+nothing."
+
+"Perhaps it is because I voted twice at the election last week? But
+already I have taken the money for that. It was one only dollar. I----"
+
+"Non, non, it is not that. Listen!" Slowly Biaggio shut both eyes, as if
+to keep out the tremendous light that had dawned upon him, and nodded
+his head knowingly. Then he opened them, shifted his huge bulk upright,
+and clapped Luigi on the knee.
+
+"Thou art in great luck friend," he cried, "and it is well that thou
+hast asked me. If thou hadst gone to another, to a man not honest, who
+knows? Listen. In our country when a rich man dies, he leaves always
+something for the poor, but he leaves it to the church and it is the
+fathers who give away the money. Corpo di Bacco! what that means thou
+knowest well. Sometimes a little gets to the poor. Sometimes---- But in
+this country it is not so. He leaves to a society. There are many. And
+they pay the women, and sometimes the men, to give away the money----"
+
+"Santo Cristo," gasped Luigi, "they pay to give away the money?"
+
+"For them it is a job like any other. Didst think it was for love of
+thee or the red curls of thy Vincenza?"
+
+"Marvelous, most marvelous," murmured Luigi, "and it is possible then
+for all people to get----"
+
+"Ma, that no one can explain," and Biaggio shrugged his shoulders; in a
+gesture of absolute inability to solve the problem.
+
+"She will come then again, this lady?" Luigi leaned forward eagerly. He
+was beginning to grasp it.
+
+"It is for thee to say stop, my son, if thou hast in thy head anything
+but fat. But thou art a Genovese. Only I say," Biaggio laid a grimy
+thumb across his lips and winked knowingly--"Tell to none."
+
+"Thanks, many thanks friend," Luigi's voice was deeply grateful,
+"perhaps some day I can do for thee----?"
+
+"It is nothing--nothing," insisted Biaggio, patting the air with his
+pudgy hands in a gesture of denial, "a little kindness between friends."
+
+At great inconvenience to himself, Biaggio held the door open to give
+Luigi more light in crossing the street. As he closed it and turned out
+the gas, he smiled to himself. "And each bottle of oil will cost thee
+ten cents more, friend. Business is business, and yesterday thy Vincenza
+returned the carrots because they were not fresh. Ecco!"
+
+Back in his own room, Luigi folded the three notes neatly, while
+Vincenza watched him, her gray eyes wide with wonder.
+
+"Marvelous, marvelous," she whispered just as Luigi had done, "to-night
+I thank the Virgin."
+
+As Biaggio had foretold, the Lady in Fur came every day. Luigi did not
+understand all that she said, but he always listened politely and
+smiled, with his dark eyes and his lips and his glistening white teeth.
+It made her feel very old to see Luigi smile like that, when he had to
+live in one room with a leaking water pipe and a garbage can outside the
+door. Sometimes she was almost ashamed to offer the three dollars, and
+she was grateful for the gentle, sweet way Luigi accepted it.
+
+Then one day when the air was thick with snow, and the air in the
+tenement halls cut like needles of ice and the lamps had to be lit at
+two o'clock, the Lady in Brown Fur came unexpectedly. She had found work
+for Luigi. She kissed the Little One, patted Vincenza's shoulder and
+shook hands with Luigi. Again and again she made him repeat the name and
+address to make sure he had it quite right. The Lady in Brown Fur was
+very happy. When she went Vincenza leaned far over the banisters with
+the lamp while Luigi called out in his soft, broken English, directions
+for avoiding the lines of washing below and the refuse piled in dark
+turns of the stairs. When the Lady in Brown Fur had disappeared Vincenza
+turned to Luigi.
+
+"Of a surety, cara, the saints are good. Never before didst thou work
+before April. In the new house we will keep for ourselves two rooms.
+
+"These people have the 'pull' even more than the alderman, Biaggio
+says," replied Luigi with a dreamy look in his eyes. "It may be that
+from this work I shall take three dollars each day."
+
+"Madonna mia," gasped Vincenza, "it is beyond belief."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For five days Luigi stood four hours each afternoon, bent forward, to
+the lifting of a cardboard block, while Hugh Keswick painted, as he had
+not painted for months, the tense muscles under the olive skin, the
+strong neck and shoulders. The Building of the Temple advanced rapidly.
+And Luigi's arms and back ached so that each night Vincenza had to rub
+them with the oil which now cost ten cents more in the shop of Biaggio.
+
+On the Sixth day Luigi refused to go.
+
+"I tell thee it is a stupidness--to stand all day with the pain in the
+back. For what? Fifty cents. It is a work for old men and children----"
+
+"But thou canst not make the money, sitting in thy chair, with thy feet
+on the stove, like now----"
+
+"Dost thou wish then that I have every night the knives in my back? If
+so----"
+
+"Not so, caro, but----"
+
+"Listen. You understand nothing and talk as a woman. A lady comes to my
+house. She says--you have no work, here is money. Then she comes and
+says--here is work. But at this work I make not so much as before she
+gave; and in addition, I have the pain in the back. Ecco, when she comes
+again, I no longer have the work. It is her job to give away the money.
+She is not a fool, that Lady in Brown Fur. It is that I make her a
+kindness. Not so?"
+
+"As thou sayest," and Vincenza went on with her endless washing.
+
+But when the week passed and the Lady in Brown Fur did not come, Luigi's
+forehead wrinkled with the effort to understand. When the second had
+gone, Luigi was openly troubled. When the third was half over, he again
+took his hat and went over to the shop of Biaggio.
+
+As before Biaggio listened attentively, his eyes closed, until Luigi had
+finished. Then he opened them, made a clicking noise with his tongue,
+and laid one finger along the side of his nose.
+
+"Holy Body of Christ," he said softly, "in business thou hast the head
+like a rock. In one curl of thy Vincenza there is more sense than in all
+thy great body. Did I not tell thee to be careful, and it would stop
+only when thou didst wish. And now, without to ask my advice, you make
+the stupidness, bah----"
+
+"Ma, Dio mio," Luigi's hands made angry protest against the invective of
+Biaggio, "I said only like a man of sense. It is her job, it make no
+difference----"
+
+"Blood of the Lamb! Thou hast been in America eight months, and thou
+dost not know that they are mad, all quite mad, to work? Never do they
+stop. Even after to have fifty years, think, fifty years, still they
+work. They work even with the children old enough to keep them. For many
+months The Skinny One, she who gives milk to the baby of Giacomo, had
+the habit to find him such work, like the foolishness of your painter.
+And Giacomo has already three children more than fifteen. Ma----"
+Biaggio snorted his contempt. Then suddenly his manner changed. He
+leaned back in his chair, and apparently dismissed the subject with a
+wave of his fat hand.
+
+"And the little Carolina she is well in this weather of the devil?" But
+Luigi did not answer. He was thinking with a pucker between his black
+eyes. Biaggio watched him narrowly. At last he spoke, looking fixedly at
+the sausages above his head.
+
+"Of course--it--is--possible--you have made a--mistake--but----"
+
+Luigi leaned forward eagerly. "It is possible then to----"
+
+"All things are possible," Biaggio nodded his head at the sausages,
+blinking like a large, fat owl. Then he stopped.
+
+"Perhaps, you will tell--to me," Luigi was forced to it at last.
+
+Biaggio gave a little grunt as if he were being brought back from a deep
+meditation. "There is a way," he said slowly. "If thou write to her of
+the Brown Fur that thou art sick and cannot do the work----"
+
+"But never in my life was I better. Only last week Giacomo said I have
+grown fat. How the----"
+
+"It is possible," replied Biaggio wearily, "to be sick of a sickness
+that makes one neither thin nor white. With a sickness--of the legs like
+the rheumatism, for example, one eats, one sleeps, only one cannot walk
+or stand for many hours."
+
+In spite of his efforts to the contrary, the wonder and admiration grew
+deeper in Luigi's eyes. "Thou thinkest the----?"
+
+"I am sure," now that Luigi was reduced to the proper state of humility
+Biaggio gave up his attitude of distant oracle, and leaned close. "Thou
+hast made a mistake, but it is not too late. If thou dost wish I will
+write it for thee."
+
+"If thou sayest," replied Luigi and now it was his turn to gaze at the
+strings of garlic, "if you will do this favor."
+
+"With pleasure," Biaggio's fat hands made little gestures of willingness
+to oblige. "Of a truth it is not much, but when one wishes to buy the
+house, and already the family is begun, two dollars and a half each
+week----"
+
+Luigi glanced at him sharply. "Two and----"
+
+Biaggio drew the ink to him and dipped his pen. "Two and a half for
+thee, and for me----"
+
+"Bene, bene," Luigi interrupted quickly, "it is only just."
+
+"Between friends," explained Biaggio as he began to write.
+
+"Between friends," echoed Luigi, and added to himself, "closer than the
+skin of a snake art thou--friend."
+
+The Lady in the Brown Fur came next day. She had been very angry and
+disappointed in Luigi, too angry and disappointed to go near him. Now
+she felt very sorry and uncomfortable when she saw his right leg
+stretched out before, so stiff that he could not bend it. He smiled and
+made the motion of getting up, but could not do it, and sank back again
+with a gesture of helplessness more eloquent than words. When the Lady
+in Brown Fur had gone, Vincenza found an extra bill, brand new, tucked
+into the pocket of the little Carolina.
+
+Luigi waited until he was quite sure that Biaggio would be alone. There
+was a look of real sorrow in his dark eyes as he slipped a shiny quarter
+across the counter. "She left only two," he explained, "the reason I do
+not know. Perhaps next time----"
+
+"It is nothing, nothing between friends." Biaggio slipped the quarter
+into the cigar box under the counter and smiled a fat smile at Luigi.
+But he did not hold the door open when Luigi went, and his little eyes
+were hard like gimlet points. "So," he whispered softly. "So. One learns
+quickly, very quickly in this new country. Only two dollars this time.
+Bene, Gino mio, the price of sausage, as that of oil, goes up--between
+friends."
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+THE HAMMERPOND BURGLARY
+
+The Story of an Artist
+
+By H.G. WELLS
+
+
+IT is a moot point whether burglary is to be considered as a sport, a
+trade, or an art. For a trade the technique is scarcely rigid enough,
+and its claims to be considered an art are vitiated by the mercenary
+element that qualifies triumphs. On the whole it seems to be most justly
+ranked as sport, a sport for which no rules are at present formulated,
+and of which the prizes are distributed in an extremely informal manner.
+It was this informality of burglary that led to the regrettable
+extinction of two promising beginners at Hammerpond Park.
+
+The stakes offered in this affair consisted chiefly of diamonds and
+other personal _bric-a-brac_ belonging to the newly married Lady
+Aveling. Lady Aveling, as the reader will remember, was the only
+daughter of Mrs. Montague Pangs, the well-known hostess. Her marriage to
+Lord Aveling was extensively advertised in the papers, the quantity and
+quality of her wedding presents, and the fact that the honeymoon was to
+be spent at Hammerpond. The announcement of these valuable prizes
+created a considerable sensation in the small circle in which Mr. Teddy
+Watkins was the undisputed leader, and it was decided that, accompanied
+by a duly qualified assistant, he should visit the village of Hammerpond
+in his professional capacity.
+
+Being a man of naturally retiring and modest disposition, Mr. Watkins
+determined to make his visit _incog_, and, after due consideration of
+the conditions of his enterprise, he selected the role of a landscape
+artist, and the unassuming surname of Smith. He preceded his assistant,
+who, it was decided, should join him only on the last afternoon of his
+stay at Hammerpond. Now the village of Hammerpond is perhaps one of the
+prettiest little corners in Sussex; many thatched houses still survive,
+the flint-built church, with its tall spire nestling under the down, is
+one of the finest and least restored in the county, and the beech-woods
+and bracken jungles through which the road runs to the great house are
+singularly rich in what the vulgar artist and photographer call "bits."
+So that Mr. Watkins, on his arrival with two virgin canvases, a
+brand-new easel, a paint-boy, portmanteau, an ingenious little ladder
+made in sections; (after the pattern of that lamented master, Charles
+Peace), crowbar, and wire coils, found himself welcomed with effusion
+and some curiosity by half a dozen other brethren of the brush. It
+rendered the disguise he had chosen unexpectedly plausible, but it
+inflicted upon him a considerable amount of aesthetic conversation for
+which he was very imperfectly prepared.
+
+"Have you exhibited very much?" said young Porson in the bar-parlor of
+the "Coach and Horses," where Mr. Watkins was skilfully accumulating
+local information on the night of his arrival.
+
+"Very little," said Mr. Watkins; "just a snack here and there."
+
+"Academy?"
+
+"In course. _And_ at the Crystal Palace."
+
+"Did they hang you well?" said Porson.
+
+"Don't rot," said Mr. Watkins; "I don't like it."
+
+"I mean did they put you in a good place?"
+
+"Whatyer mean?" said Mr. Watkins suspiciously. "One 'ud think you were
+trying to make out I'd been put away."
+
+Porson was a gentlemanly young man even for an artist, and he did not
+know what being "put away" meant, but he thought it best to explain
+that he intended nothing of the sort. As the question of hanging seemed
+a sore point with Mr. Watkins, he tried to divert the conversation a
+little.
+
+"Did you do figure work at all?"
+
+"No, never had a head for figures," said Mr. Watkins. "My miss--Mrs.
+Smith, I mean, does all that."
+
+"She paints too!" said Porson. "That's rather jolly."
+
+"Very," said Mr. Watkins, though he really did not think so, and,
+feeling the conversation was drifting a little beyond his grasp, added:
+"I came down here to paint Hammerpond House by moonlight."
+
+"Really!" said Porson. "That's rather a novel idea."
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Watkins, "I thought it rather a good notion when it
+occurred to me. I expect to begin to-morrow night."
+
+"What! You don't mean to paint in the open, by night?"
+
+"I do, though."
+
+"But how will you see your canvas?"
+
+"Have a bloomin' cop's----" began Mr. Watkins, rising too quickly to the
+question, and then realizing this, bawled to Miss Durgan for another
+glass of beer. "I'm goin' to have a thing called a dark lantern," he
+said to Porson.
+
+"But it's about new moon now," objected Porson. "There won't be any
+moon."
+
+"There'll be the house," said Watkins, "at any rate. I'm goin', you see,
+to paint the house first and the moon afterward."
+
+"Oh!" said Porson, too staggered to continue the conversation.
+
+Toward sunset next day Mr. Watkins, virgin canvas, easel, and a very
+considerable case of other appliances in hand, strolled up the pleasant
+pathway through the beech-woods to Hammerpond Park, and pitched his
+apparatus in a strategic position commanding the house. Here he was
+observed by Mr. Raphael Sant, who was returning across the park from a
+study of the chalk-pits. His curiosity having been fired by Porson's
+account of the new arrival, he turned aside with the idea of discussing
+nocturnal art.
+
+Mr. Watkins was mixing color with an air of great industry. Sant,
+approaching more nearly, was surprised to see the color in question was
+as harsh and brilliant an emerald green as it is possible to imagine.
+Having cultivated an extreme sensibility to color from his earliest
+years, he drew the air in sharply between his teeth at the very first
+glimpse of this brew. Mr. Watkins turned round. He looked annoyed.
+
+"What on earth are you going to do with that _beastly_ green?" said
+Sant.
+
+Mr. Watkins realized that his zeal to appear busy in the eyes of the
+butler had evidently betrayed him into some technical error. He looked
+at Sant and hesitated.
+
+"Pardon my rudeness," said Sant; "but, really, that green is altogether
+too amazing. It came as a shock. What _do_ you mean to do with it?"
+
+Mr. Watkins was collecting his resources. Nothing could save the
+situation but decision. "If you come here interrupting my work," he
+said, "I'm a-goin' to paint your face with it."
+
+Sant retired, for he was a humorist and a peaceful man. Going down the
+hill he met Porson and Wainwright. "Either that man is a genius or he is
+a dangerous lunatic," said he. "Just go up and look at his green." And
+he continued his way, his countenance brightened by a pleasant
+anticipation of a cheerful affray round an easel in the gloaming, and
+the shedding of much green paint.
+
+But to Porson and Wainwright Mr. Watkins was less aggressive, and
+explained that the green was intended to be the first coating of his
+picture. It was, he admitted, in response to a remark, an absolutely new
+method, invented by himself.
+
+Twilight deepened, first one then another star appeared. The rooks amid
+the tall trees to the left of the house had long since lapsed into
+slumberous silence, the house itself lost all the details of its
+architecture and became a dark gray outline, and then the windows of
+the salon shone out brilliantly, the conservatory was lighted up, and
+here and there a bedroom window burnt yellow. Had any one approached the
+easel in the park it would have been found deserted. One brief uncivil
+word in brilliant green sullied the purity of its canvas. Mr. Watkins
+was busy in the shrubbery with his assistant, who had discreetly joined
+him from the carriage-drive.
+
+Mr. Watkins was inclined to be self-congratulatory upon the ingenious
+device by which he had carried all his apparatus boldly, and in the
+sight of all men, right up to the scene of operations. "That's the
+dressing-room," he said to his assistant, "and, as soon as the maid
+takes the candle away and goes down to supper, we'll call in. My! how
+nice the house do look, to be sure, against the starlight, and with all
+its windows and lights! Swop me, Jim, I almost wish I _was_ a
+painter-chap. Have you fixed that there wire across the path from the
+laundry?"
+
+He cautiously approached the house until he stood below the
+dressing-room window, and began to put together his folding ladder. He
+was too experienced a practitioner to feel any unusual excitement. Jim
+was reconnoitring the smoking-room. Suddenly, close beside Mr. Watkins
+in the bushes, there was a violent crash and a stifled curse. Some one
+had tumbled over the wire which his assistant had just arranged. He
+heard feet running on the gravel pathway beyond. Mr. Watkins, like all
+true artists, was a singularly shy man, and he incontinently dropped his
+folding ladder and began running circumspectly through the shrubbery. He
+was indistinctly aware of two people hot upon his heels, and he fancied
+that he distinguished the outline of his assistant in front of him. In
+another moment he had vaulted the low stone wall bounding the shrubbery,
+and was in the open park. Two thuds on the turf followed his own leap.
+
+It was a close chase in the darkness through the trees. Mr. Watkins was
+a loosely built man and in good training, and he gained hand over hand
+upon the hoarsely panting figure in front. Neither spoke, but, as Mr.
+Watkins pulled up alongside, a qualm of awful doubt came over him. The
+other man turned his head at the same moment and gave an exclamation of
+surprise. "It's not Jim," thought Mr. Watkins, and simultaneously the
+stranger flung himself, as it were, at Watkins's knees, and they were
+forthwith grappling on the ground together. "Lend a hand, Bill," cried
+the stranger, as the third man came up. And Bill did--two hands, in
+fact, and some accentuated feet. The fourth man, presumably Jim, had
+apparently turned aside and made off in a different direction. At any
+rate, he did not join the trio.
+
+Mr. Watkins's memory of the incidents of the next two minutes is
+extremely vague. He has a dim recollection of having his thumb in the
+corner of the mouth of the first man, and feeling anxious about its
+safety, and for some seconds at least he held the head of the gentleman
+answering to the name of Bill to the ground by the hair. He was also
+kicked in a great number of different places, and apparently by a vast
+multitude of people. Then the gentleman who was not Bill got his knee
+below Mr. Watkins's diaphragm and tried to curl him up upon it.
+
+When his sensations became less entangled he was sitting upon the turf,
+and eight or ten men--the night was dark, and he was rather too confused
+to count--standing around him, apparently waiting for him to recover. He
+mournfully assumed that he was captured, and would probably have made
+some philosophical reflections on the fickleness of fortune, had not his
+internal sensations disinclined him to speech.
+
+He noticed very quickly that his wrists were not handcuffed, and then a
+flask of brandy was put in his hands. This touched him a little--it was
+such unexpected kindness.
+
+"He's a-comin' round," said a voice which he fancied he recognized as
+belonging to the Hammerpond second footman.
+
+"We've got 'em, sir, both of 'em," said the Hammerpond butler, the man
+who had handed him the flask. "Thanks to _you_."
+
+No one answered his remark. Yet he failed to see how it applied to him.
+
+"He's fair dazed," said a strange voice; "the villain's half-murdered
+him."
+
+Mr. Teddy Watkins decided to remain fair dazed until he had a better
+grasp of the situation. He perceived that two of the black figures round
+him stood side by side with a dejected air, and there was something in
+the carriage of their shoulders that suggested to his experienced eye
+hands that were bound together. In a flash he rose to his position. He
+emptied the little flask and staggered--obsequious hands assisting
+him--to his feet. There was a sympathetic murmur.
+
+"Shake hands, sir, shake hands," said one of the figures near him.
+"Permit me to introduce myself. I am very greatly indebted to you. It
+was the jewels of my wife, Lady Aveling, which attracted these
+scoundrels to the house."
+
+"Very glad to make your lordship's acquaintance," said Teddy Watkins.
+
+"I presume you saw the rascals making for the shrubbery, and dropped
+down on them?"
+
+"That's exactly how it happened," said Mr. Watkins.
+
+"You should have waited till they got in at the window," said Lord
+Aveling; "they would get it hotter if they had actually committed the
+burglary. And it was lucky for you two of the policemen were out by the
+gates, and followed up the three of you. I doubt if you could have
+secured the two of them--though it was confoundedly plucky of you, all
+the same."
+
+"Yes, I ought to have thought of all that," said Mr. Watkins; "but one
+can't think of everything."
+
+"Certainly not," said Lord Aveling. "I am afraid they have mauled you a
+little," he added. The party was now moving toward the house. "You walk
+rather lame. May I offer you my arm?"
+
+And instead of entering Hammerpond House by the dressing-room window,
+Mr. Watkins entered it--slightly intoxicated, and inclined now to
+cheerfulness again--on the arm of a real live peer, and by the front
+door. "This," thought Mr. Watkins, "is burgling in style!" The
+"scoundrels," seen by the gaslight, proved to be mere local amateurs
+unknown to Mr. Watkins, and they were taken down into the pantry and
+there watched over by the three policemen, two gamekeepers with loaded
+guns, the butler, an ostler, and a carman, until the dawn allowed of
+their removal to Hazelhurst police-station. Mr. Watkins was made much of
+in the salon. They devoted a sofa to him, and would not hear of a return
+to the village that night. Lady Aveling was sure he was brilliantly
+original, and said her idea of Turner was just such another rough,
+half-inebriated, deep-eyed, brave, and clever man. Some one brought up a
+remarkable little folding-ladder that had been picked up in the
+shrubbery, and showed him how it was put together. They also described
+how wires had been found in the shrubbery, evidently placed there to
+trip up unwary pursuers. It was lucky he had escaped these snares. And
+they showed him the jewels.
+
+Mr. Watkins had the sense not to talk too much, and in any
+conversational difficulty fell back on his internal pains. At last he
+was seized with stiffness in the back and yawning. Everyone suddenly
+awoke to the fact that it was a shame to keep him talking after his
+affray, so he retired early to his room, the little red room next to
+Lord Aveling's suite.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The dawn found a deserted easel bearing a canvas with a green
+inscription, in the Hammerpond Park, and it found Hammerpond House in
+commotion. But if the dawn found Mr. Teddy Watkins and the Aveling
+diamonds, it did not communicate the information to the police.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+A FO'C'S'LE TRAGEDY
+
+An Ancient Mariner's Yarn
+
+By PERCY LONGHURST
+
+
+"YEH may gas about torpedoes an' 'fernal machines an' such like, but yeh
+can't learn me nothin'; onct I had t' do wi' suthin' o' th' sort that
+turned th' heads o' a dozen men from black ter white in 'bout ten
+minutes," and the ancient mariner looked at me with careful
+impressiveness.
+
+"Bad, eh?" I inquired.
+
+"Sh'd think it was--for them poor chaps."
+
+"Didn't turn your hair white, Uncle?"
+
+"Gue-e-ss not," and the ancient mariner had a fit of chuckling that
+nearly choked him.
+
+When he recovered he told me the yarn. I had heard several of old
+Steve's yarns, and I considered that his fine talents were miserably
+wasted; he ought to have been a politician or a real estate agent. This
+yarn, however, might very well have been true.
+
+"It was 'bout nineteen years ago," Steve commenced, "an' I'd jest taken
+up a job as cook on the _Here at Last_, a blamed old Noah's Ark of a
+wind-jammer from New York to Jamaica. She did th' trip in 'bout th' same
+time as yeh'd walk it. She was a beauty--an' th' crew 'bout fitted her.
+Where th' old man had gathered 'em from th' Lord on'y knows; but they
+was th' most difficult lot I've ever sailed with, which is sayin' a deal
+consid'rin' that, man an' boy, I've been a sailor for forty years. They
+was as contrairy as women, an' as stoopid as donkeys. I couldn't do
+nothin' right for 'em. They complained of the coffee, grumbled at th'
+biscuit, an' swore terrible at th' meat. But most of all they swore at
+me."
+
+"'It all lies in th' cookin',' an old one-eyed chap, named Barton, used
+ter say. 'Any cook that is worth his salt can do wonders wi' th' worst
+vittles'; an' he told me how he'd once sailed with a cook as c'd make a
+stewed cat taste better'n a rabbit. An', durn me, when I went ashore
+next, an' at great risk managed to lay holt of a big tom and cooked it
+for em, hopin' to please 'em, an' went inter th' fo'c's'le arter dinner
+an' told 'em what I'd done, ef that self-same chap, Barton, didn't hit
+me over th' head wi' his tin can for tryin' ter poison 'em, as he said.
+They complained to th' old man, too, which was worse; for when we got t'
+th' next port my leave ashore was stopped, an' all for tryin' to please
+'em. Rank ingratitood, I call it.
+
+"Another time I tried to give the junk--it really was bad, but as I hadn't
+bought th' stores, that wasn't no fault o' mine--a bit of a more
+pleasant flavor by bilin' with it a packet o' spice I found in th'
+skipper's cabin. One o' th' sailors comes into my galley in a towerin'
+rage arter dinner.
+
+"'Yer blamed rascal,' he said, an' there was suthin' like murder in his
+starin' eyes. 'Yeh blamed rascal, whatcher been doin' ter our grub now?'
+
+"'What's th' trouble, Joe?' I asks quietly.
+
+"'Trouble, yeh skunk,' he howls; 'our throats is hot as hell, all th'
+skin's comin' off 'em; Bill Tomson's got his lips that blistered he
+can't hold his pipe between 'em. What yeh been doin?'
+
+"'Hold hard a jiffy,' I said, an' looks at what was left o' th' spice
+I'd used. I nearly had a fit.
+
+"'Go 'way,' I says, pullin' myself together; ''t ain't nuthin'.'
+
+"An' it wasn't nuthin'; but there was such an almighty run on th' water
+barrel that arternoon th' old man was beginnin' ter think a teetotal
+revival had struck th' _Here at Last_. But though cayenne pepper drives
+a chap ter water pretty often while th' effect lasts, it don't have no
+permanent result, as th' old man found out. Course it was a mistake o'
+mine; but ain't we all liable to go a bit astray?
+
+"I'm jest givin' yeh these few examples t' show yeh that things wasn't
+altogether O.K. 'tween me an' the crew. They was always swearin' at me,
+an' callin' of me names, an' heavin' things at me head, because I'd done
+or hadn't done suthin' or other. An angel from heaven wouldn't have
+pleased 'em; an' as I never held much stock in the angelic trust yeh kin
+easily understand we was most times very much at sixes an' sevens.
+
+"One evenin' I was sittin' in th' fo'c's'le patiently listenin' ter th'
+horrible language in which they reproached me because one o' 'em had
+managed t' break a front tooth in biting a bit o' th' salt pork they'd
+had for dinner, which was certainly no fault o' mine, when one of 'em,
+an English chap he was, an' the worst grumbler of all, suddenly cries:
+
+"'Jeerusalem, wouldn't I give somethin' fer a drop of beer just now.
+Strike me pink if I ain't a'most forgotten what the taste o' it's like.'
+
+"'Me, too,' said Harry Towers, the carpenter. 'A schooner o' lager an'
+ale! Sakes! Wouldn't it jest sizzle down a day like this?'
+
+"'My aunt! I'd give a month's pay f'r a quart,' the surly Britisher says
+fiercely.
+
+"'A quart, why don't yeh ask for a barrel while yeh're about it; then
+I'd help yeh drink it,' I says.
+
+"'Yer, yer blighted, perishin' idiot,' he shouts--it was him that'd
+broken his tooth. 'What, waste good beer on yer that's fit fer nothin'
+but cuttin' up into shark bait!'
+
+"'That ain't th' way t' talk to a man as is always ready an' willin' t'
+help yeh,' I says reproachfully.
+
+"The chap glares at me like a tiger with the colic. His language was
+awful. 'Lord 'elp us,' he finishes up with, 'why, yer've done nuthin'
+but try ter pizen us ever since we come aboard. Ain't I right, mates?'
+
+"'Righto,' they choruses; an' I begin t' think they'd soon be gittin' up
+to mischief.
+
+"'P'raps I might help yeh t' git some beer if yer was more respectful,'
+I says hurriedly.
+
+"'Beer!' they all yells, an' looks up at me all to onct as if I was a
+dime museum freak.
+
+"'Yes, beer,' I says quietly.
+
+"'An' where'd you be gittin' it from?' asks one.
+
+"'Never yeh mind that,' I answers. 'I've a dozen or two bottles of
+English stout I brought aboard, an' since yeh're so anxious to taste a
+drop o' beer, I don't mind lettin' yeh have some--at a price, o'
+course.'
+
+"'What's the figure?' Towers inquires suspiciously. He was a Michigan
+man.
+
+"'A dollar th' bottle.'
+
+"'What!' shouts th' man as was ready t' give a month's pay fer a quart.
+'A dollar th' bottle! Why, yer miserable old skinflint!'
+
+"'A dollar th' bottle. That's the terms, take 'em or leave 'em,' says I,
+very firmly.
+
+"They talked a lot, and they swore a lot more, but finally seem' as I
+wasn't t' be moved, and that they couldn't get the beer except at my
+price, the hull ten of 'em agreed to have a bottle apiece.
+
+"'Money down,' I stipulates; an' after a lot o' trouble they collects
+seven dollars between 'em, an' tells me it's all they've got, an' if I
+didn't bring up th' ten bottles mighty quick they'd knock me on th' head
+an' drop me overboard.
+
+"'Mind,' I said, as I goes off to th' galley, money in my hand; 'don't
+yeh let th' officers see yeh drinkin' it or they'll think yeh've been
+broachin' cargo, an' that's little short o' mutiny.'
+
+"'Bring up that beer,' growls the Britisher, almost foamin' at th'
+mouth.
+
+"When I came back with th' ten bottles o' stout in a basket they all
+looked so pleased an' happy it did my heart good ter look at 'em.
+
+"'Hand it over,' they shouts impatiently.
+
+"'I'm afraid it's gone a bit flat,' I said, as I handed th' bottles
+round. 'But I've tried to pull it round.'
+
+"Flat or not, they weren't goin' to kick; an' they was jest 'bout to
+unscrew the stoppers when the second mate suddenly shoves his head down
+the hatchway an' yells out:
+
+"'On deck, yer lazy, skulking, highly colored lubbers. Tumble up at
+once, an' git a lively move on, or I'll be down an' smarten ye up!'
+
+"McClosky, the second mate, was not a fellow who stood any nonsense, an'
+th' men weren't long before they was out o' th' fo'c's'le, grumblin'
+an' swearin' as only men who've lost their watch below can. They just
+stayed long enough t' shove th' unopened bottles o' stout well out o'
+sight underneath th' mattresses o' their bunks an' then they was up on
+deck working like niggers. A squall had struck the _Here at Last_;
+mighty inconvenient, these squalls in the Caribbean Sea are, an' th'
+_Here at Last_ wasn't best calc'lated t' weather 'em. For two mortal
+hours everyone was hard at it, takin' in sail, doublin' ropes, an'
+makin' all ready for what promised t' be a dirty night. All thoughts o'
+beer was driven out o' their heads. An' when everythin' was ship-shape
+an' they came below again, soakin' wet an' dog-tired, they just climbed
+into their berths without stoppin' to think of th' precious bottles o'
+stout.
+
+"'Bout two o'clock in th' mornin', I was woke up by what sounded like a
+pistol shot in th' fo'c's'le, an' before I c'd rub th' sleep out er my
+eyes, there was another, an' another an' another, an' I saw four sailors
+tumble outer their bunks an' fall on th' floor shriekin' as if they'd
+been attacked by th' most awful pain. Everyone else in th' fo'c's'le
+sits up, wide awake, an' starin' at th' sufferin' wretches on th' floor.
+
+"'Wot th' 'ell's up?' asks th' Britisher; but no one knew, an' th' nex'
+second there was another explosion, an' he suddenly gave a scream that
+lifted th' hair on my scalp, an' leaps outer his bunk as if he'd been
+suddenly prodded in a tender spot wi' a red hot poker.
+
+"'My Gawd!' he screeches; 'th' bunk's exploded an' I'm bleedin' ter
+death;' an' he starts yellin' like a catamount, runnin' up an' down th'
+gangway, an' tramplin' upon th' four shriekin', cursin', prayin' sailors
+who'd been attacked fust.
+
+"'It's an infernal machine, an' it's blowed a hole in me back,' the
+Britisher yelled; an' we who was lookin' on c'd certainly hear suthin'
+drippin' from th' bunk he'd just got out of.
+
+"'Owch! I'm blowed t' bits. I'm bein' murdered. I'm dyin', Lord help
+me,' Harry Towers, the carpenter, wails; an' there was another terrific
+bang, an' outer his bunk Harry shot, landin', on th' chest o' one o' th'
+moanin' squirmin' sailors. Th' poor fellow, findin' himself thus
+flattened out, an' not knowin' what it was had fallen on him, gives a
+gaspin' sort er yell, an' drives Towers in th' back wi' his fist.
+
+"Th' row goin' on was suthin' terrible; a' 'sylum full o' ravin'
+lunatics on th' rampage couldn't have made more noise; an' them that
+hadn't been hurt was beginnin' t' feel as bad as them that was, when
+someone scrambles down th' companionway.
+
+"It was McClosky, th' second mate, whose watch on deck it was. He'd
+heard th' row--an' no wonder--an' thinkin', I dessay, that murder or
+mutiny was goin' on, came forward to investigate. He was a red-headed,
+hot-tempered Irishman, an' c'd handle a crew in rare style.
+
+"'What th' dickens----' he commences, when one o' th' men on th' floor,
+seein' th' gun in his hand, an' not recognizin' him, shouted, 'They're
+comin' t' finish us,' an' grabs th' mate round th' legs wi' th' grip of
+a boa constrictor.
+
+"Th' mate, sure it was mutiny, lets off his gun permiscuous. A clip on
+the jaw made th' sailor let go, an' th' mate, seein' Towers groanin' on
+th' floor quite close, kicks him hard an' asks what's th' matter.
+
+"'We're blown up, sir,' Towers whimpers.
+
+"'Blown up, ye fool, what d' ye mean? Who's blowin' ye up?' demands
+McClosky.
+
+"'Dunno, sir,' Harry stammered; an' just then there was two more
+explosions, an' a couple more o' the seamen bundled headlong out er
+their berths, utterin' doleful shrieks that'd make yer heart stand
+still.
+
+"Th' mate was kickin', swearin', and shoutin' like a demon, th' men all
+th' while keepin' up their row as if they was bein' paid a dollar a
+minute to yell. Then th' skipper put in an appearance. His face was
+white as chalk, but his hands, in each o' which was a big Colt, were
+steady as rocks, an' he come down th' ladder like a man who reckons he's
+in for a good fight.
+
+"'What's all this mean, Mr. McClosky?' he asks, pausin' when he sees
+there's no fightin' goin' on.
+
+"Whatever th' mate said was drowned by th' row th' sailors was makin',
+though he bellowed like a frisky bull. Th' old man didn't seem a bit
+frightened; droppin' one o' th' Colts inter his pocket, he roars,
+'Silence'; and steps over to th' berth where Joe Harper, th' bo'sun, was
+sittin' upright, stiff as a poker, an' his eyes fairly startin' out er
+his head wi' terror.
+
+"'Now, then, Harper,' he says, an' judgin' by his face th' skipper was
+'bout as mad as a bear with a sore head. 'What th' blazes does it mean?
+Have yeh all gone mad?'
+
+"But th' bo'sun, he was too scared to do more than gape at th' skipper
+like a codfish three days out er water, an th' old man gits a bit
+madder.
+
+"'Answer, yeh damn rascal,' he shouted; an' he grabs Harper by th'
+shoulder an' shakes him until his teeth fairly rattled. But th' bo'sun
+couldn't say a word.
+
+"'If this ain't enough t' drive a man crazy,' th' skipper yells;
+'McClosky, have yeh lost yer senses like all these condemned rascals
+here? What's th' meanin' o' it?'
+
+"'Don't know, sir; I heard 'em ravin' an' screamin' like lunatics, but I
+can't get a word out of 'em. Think they must all have become mad,' an'
+th' mate kicked Towers again t' relieve his feelin's.
+
+"He'd just finished speakin' when suthin' busted underneath th' bo'sun.
+Harper screams, th' skipper gives a jump an' lets go of his arm, an'
+Harper falls out er his berth as if he'd been suddenly shot dead, only
+he was makin' a row like a man suddenly attacked wi' D.T.'s. And at that
+all th' other miserable wretches on th' floor starts worse than ever.
+
+"Th' skipper pulls himself together, an' goin' t' th' bo'sun's bunk,
+leans over an' examines it. He poked about f'r a bit, put his fingers
+into a stream of suthin' that was fallin' from th' bunk to th' floor,
+an' then by th' light o' th' swingin' oil lamp, I see his face turn a
+blazin' crimson. I see him take suthin' outer th' bed, an' then he
+swings round an' faces th' men.
+
+"'Yeh low down, thievin', chicken-hearted, blank, blank scoundrels,' he
+yells, an' his voice was that loud an' so full o' passion th' sailors
+were scared into quietness. 'Yeh miserable sneakin' apologies for men!
+So this is what's th' matter, is it? By gum! If I don't have every
+mother's son of ye clapped into jail soon as we reach Kingstown, call me
+a crimson Dutchman. Blown up, are ye? I wish t' th' Lord some of ye had
+been. Sailors, yeh calls yeh-selves! Why, by gosh! yeh haven't enough
+spirit t' rob a mouse. What's that yeh say, Towers? Infernal machines,
+eh? Dyin'! If yeh don't all get a move on ye in double quick time, some
+of yeh will be. Git out o' my sight, ye blubberin' babies; I'm sick an'
+ashamed of ye.'
+
+"A more sick an' unhappy lookin' drove I never saw when th' men got on
+their legs again an' found out they weren't hurt a little bit; an'
+discovered what it was had caused th' explosions. They wouldn't look at
+each other; an' they daren't speak or else there'd have been fightin'.
+
+"I went about in fear of my life for days, but they did nothin'; though
+if they'd known that I--quite innocent o' mischief, yeh understand--had
+put a dozen grains or so of rice inter every bottle o' stout--amazin'
+stuff rice for causin' fermentation in hot climates--they wouldn't have
+stopped short at mere profanity. My life wouldn't have been worth a
+moment's purchase."
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+THE ADOPTED SON
+
+A Tale of Peasant Life
+
+From the French of GUY de MAUPASSANT
+
+
+THE two cottages stood side by side at the foot of a hill near a little
+seaside resort. The two peasants labored hard on the unproductive soil
+to rear their little ones, of which each family had four.
+
+In front of the adjoining doors the whole troop of urchins sprang and
+tumbled about from morning till night. The two eldest were six years
+old, and the two youngest were about fifteen months; the marriages, and
+afterward the births, having taken place nearly simultaneously in both
+families.
+
+The two mothers could hardly distinguish their own offspring among the
+lot, and as for the fathers, they were altogether at sea. The eight
+names danced in their heads; they were always getting them mixed up; and
+when they wished to call one child, the men often called three names
+before getting the right one.
+
+The first of the two dwellings, coming from the direction of the
+sea-bath, Belleport, was occupied by the Tuvaches, who had three girls
+and one boy; the other house sheltered the Vallins, who had one girl and
+three boys.
+
+They all subsisted with difficulty on soup, potatoes, and the open air.
+At seven o'clock in the morning, then at noon, then at six o'clock in
+the evening, the housewives got their nestlings together to give them
+their food, as the goose-herds collect their charges. The children were
+seated, according to age, before the wooden table, varnished by fifty
+years of use; the mouths of the youngest hardly reaching the level of
+the table. Before them was placed a deep dish filled with bread, soaked
+in the water in which the potatoes had been boiled, half a cabbage, and
+three onions; and the whole line ate until their hunger was appeased.
+The mother herself fed the smallest.
+
+A little meat, boiled in a soup, on Sunday, was a feast for all; and the
+father on this day sat longer over the repast, repeating: "I should like
+this every day."
+
+One afternoon, in the month of August, a light carriage stopped suddenly
+in front of the cottages, and a young woman, who was driving the horses,
+said to the gentleman sitting at her side:
+
+"Oh, look, Henri, at all those children! How pretty they are, tumbling
+about in the dust, like that!"
+
+The man did not answer, being accustomed to these outbursts of
+admiration, which were a pain and almost a reproach to him. The young
+woman continued:
+
+"I must hug them! Oh, how I should like to have one of them--that one
+there--the little bit of a one!"
+
+Springing down from the carriage, she ran toward the children, took one
+of the two youngest--that of the Tuvaches, and lifting it up in her
+arms, she kissed him passionately on his dirty cheeks, on his frowzy
+hair daubed with earth, and on his little hands, which he swung
+vigorously, to get rid of the caresses which displeased him.
+
+Then she got up into the carriage again, and drove off at a lively trot.
+But she returned the following week, and seating herself on the ground,
+took the youngster in her arms, stuffed him with cakes, gave bon-bons to
+all the others, and played with them like a young girl, while the
+husband waited patiently in the frail carriage.
+
+She returned again; made the acquaintance of the parents, and reappeared
+every day with her pockets full of dainties and of pennies.
+
+Her name was Madame Henri d'Hubieres.
+
+One morning, on arriving, her husband alighted with her, and without
+stopping with the children, who now knew her well, she entered the
+peasants' cottage.
+
+They were busy splitting wood to cook the soup. They straightened up,
+much surprised, offered chairs, and waited expectantly.
+
+Then the woman, in a broken, trembling voice, began:
+
+"My good people, I have come to see you, because I should like--I should
+like to take--your little boy with me----"
+
+The country people, too stupefied to think, did not answer.
+
+She recovered her breath, and continued: "We are alone, my husband and
+I. We should keep it--Are you willing?"
+
+The peasant woman began to understand. She asked:
+
+"You want to take Charlot from us? Oh, no, indeed!"
+
+Then M. d'Hubieres intervened:
+
+"My wife has not explained clearly what she means. We wish to adopt him,
+but he will come back to see you. If he turns out well, as there is
+every reason to expect, he will be our heir. If we, perchance, should
+have children, he will share equally with them; but if he should not
+reward our care, we should give him, when he comes of age, a sum of
+twenty thousand francs, which shall be deposited immediately in his
+name, with a notary. As we have thought also of you, we should pay you,
+until your death, a pension of one hundred francs a month. Have you
+quite understood me?"
+
+The woman had arisen, furious.
+
+"You want me to sell you Charlot? Oh, no, that's not the sort of thing
+to ask of a mother! Oh, no! That would be an abomination!"
+
+The man, grave and deliberate, said nothing; but approved of what his
+wife said by a continued nodding of his head.
+
+Mme. d'Hubieres, in dismay, began to weep, and turning to her husband,
+with a voice full of tears, the voice of a child used to having all its
+wishes gratified, she stammered:
+
+"They will not do it, Henri, they will not do it."
+
+Then he made a last attempt: "But, my friends, think of the child's
+future, of his happiness, of----"
+
+The peasant woman, however, exasperated, cut him short:
+
+"It's all considered! It's all understood! Get out of this, and don't
+let me see you here again--the idea of wanting to take away a child like
+that!"
+
+Then Mme. d'Hubieres bethought herself that there were two children,
+quite little, and she asked, through her tears, with the tenacity of a
+wilful and spoiled woman:
+
+"But is the other little one not yours?"
+
+Father Tuvache answered: "No, it is our neighbors'. You can go to them,
+if you wish." And he went back into his house whence resounded the
+indignant voice of his wife.
+
+The Vallins were at table, in the act of slowly eating slices of bread
+which they parsimoniously spread with a little rancid butter on a plate
+between the two.
+
+M. d'Hubieres recommenced his propositions, but with more insinuations,
+more oratorical precautions, more guile.
+
+The two country people shook their heads, in sign of refusal, but when
+they learned that they were to have a hundred francs a month, they
+considered, consulting one another by glances, much disturbed. They kept
+silent for a long time, tortured, hesitating. At last the woman asked:
+"What do you think about it, man?" In a sententious tone he said: "I say
+that it's not to be despised."
+
+Then Mme. d'Hubieres, trembling with anguish, spoke of the future of
+their child, of his happiness, and of the money which he could give them
+later.
+
+The peasant asked: "This pension of twelve hundred francs, will it be
+promised before a notary?"
+
+M. d'Hubieres responded: "Why, certainly, beginning with to-morrow."
+
+The woman, who was thinking it over, continued:
+
+"A hundred francs a month is not enough to deprive us of the child. That
+child would be working in a few years; we must have a hundred and twenty
+francs."
+
+Stamping with impatience, Mme. d'Hubieres granted it at once, and as she
+wished to carry off the child with her, she gave a hundred francs as a
+present, while her husband drew up a writing. And the young woman,
+radiant, carried off the howling brat, as one carries away a wished-for
+knick-knack from a shop.
+
+The Tuvaches, from their door, watched her departure; mute, severe,
+perhaps regretting their refusal.
+
+Nothing more was heard of little Jean Vallin. The parents went to the
+notary every month to collect their hundred and twenty francs, and they
+were angry with their neighbors, because Mother Tuvache grossly insulted
+them, repeating without ceasing from door to door, that one must be
+unnatural to sell one's child; that it was horrible, nasty, and many
+other vile expressions. Sometimes she would take her Chariot in her arms
+with ostentation, exclaiming, as if he understood:
+
+"I didn't sell _you_, I didn't! I didn't sell _you_, my little one! I'm
+not rich, but I don't sell my children!"
+
+The Vallins lived at their ease, thanks to the pension. That was the
+cause of the inappeasable fury of the Tuvaches, who had remained
+miserably poor. Their eldest son went away into service; Charlot alone
+remained to labor with his old father, to support the mother and two
+younger sisters which he had.
+
+He had reached twenty-one years, when, one morning, a brilliant carriage
+stopped before the two cottages. A young gentleman, with a gold watch
+chain, got out, giving his hand to an aged, white-haired lady. The old
+lady said to him: "It is there, my child, at the second house." And he
+entered the house of the Vallins, as if he were at home.
+
+The old mother was washing her aprons; the infirm father slumbered at
+the chimney-corner. Both raised their heads, and the young man said:
+
+"Good morning, papa; good morning, mamma!"
+
+They both stood up, frightened. In a flutter, the peasant woman dropped
+her soap into the water, and stammered:
+
+"Is it you, my child? Is it you, my child?"
+
+He took her in his arms and hugged her, repeating: "Good morning,
+mamma," while the old man, all in a tremble, said, in his calm tone
+which he never lost: "Here you are, back again, Jean," as if he had seen
+him a month before.
+
+When they had got to know one another again the parents wished to take
+their boy out through the neighborhood, and show him. They took him to
+the mayor, to the deputy, to the cure, and to the schoolmaster.
+
+Charlot, standing on the threshold of his cottage, watched him pass.
+
+In the evening, at supper, he said to the old people: "You must have
+been stupid to let the Vallins's boy be taken."
+
+The mother answered, obstinately: "I wouldn't sell _my_ child."
+
+The father said nothing. The son continued:
+
+"It is unfortunate to be sacrificed like that." Then Father Tuvache, in
+an angry tone, said:
+
+"Are you going to reproach us for having kept you?" And the young man
+said, brutally:
+
+"Yes, I reproach you for having been such simpletons. Parents like you
+make the misfortune of their children. You deserve that I should leave
+you."
+
+The old woman wept over her plate. She moaned, as she swallowed the
+spoonfuls of soup, half of which she spilled: "One may kill one's self
+to bring up children."
+
+Then the boy said, roughly: "I'd rather not have been born than be what
+I am. When I saw the other my heart stood still. I said to myself: 'See
+what I should have been now!'" He arose: "See here, I feel that I would
+do better not to stay here, because I should bring it up against you
+from morning till night, and I should make your life miserable. I shall
+never forgive you that, you know!"
+
+The two old people were silent, downcast, in tears.
+
+He continued: "No, the thought of that would be too hard. I'd rather go
+look for a living somewhere else."
+
+He opened the door. A sound of voices entered. The Vallins were
+celebrating the return of their child.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+PROVIDENCE AND MRS. URMY
+
+The Story of an International Marriage
+
+By ARMIGER BARCLAY and OLIVER SANDYS
+
+
+LADY HARTLEY (_nee_ Miss Persis Van Ness) gave a little gasp. In her
+excitement the paper rustled noisily to her knee.
+
+"O-h! Have you seen this?" She shot the _Morning Post_ across the
+breakfast table to Mrs. Rufus P. Urmy, with her finger marking a
+paragraph.
+
+Mrs. Urmy glanced at it. "I guess it ought to corral him right away,"
+she said, with the merest suspicion of embarrassment. "You see, it's
+Jeannette's last chance. Two seasons in England and never a catch, so
+I----"
+
+"_You_ did it?" Lady Hartley looked at her friend in round-eyed wonder.
+
+"I--I had to do something," allowed Mrs. Urmy, with a dawning suspicion
+that perhaps she had, after all, run afoul of British conventions, which
+she found as difficult of comprehension as her regular morning study of
+Debrett.
+
+"But Jeannette!"
+
+"That's so. Jeannette'll raise Cain." Mrs. Urmy got up from the table.
+"It's this a-way, Persis. I reckon I fixed your little affair up with
+Lord Hartley to home, and you've got to thank me for it. Now, I'm trying
+to do the same for my girl. She can't, or she won't, play her own hand.
+Every chance she's had she's let slide, and I allow she's got to marry a
+title before I go back to the States. Some one's got to hustle when
+Providence isn't attending to business, and as there's nobody else to do
+it, I've taken on the contract." She pointed to the paragraph. "I own
+up I don't see just how, but there wasn't much time, and it was the best
+I could do."
+
+Lady Hartley slowly reread the incriminating paragraph:
+
+"A marriage has been arranged, and will shortly take place between the
+Earl of Chilminster, of Sapworth Hall, Wilts, and Miss Jeannette L.
+Urmy, of Boston, Massachusetts."
+
+"It knocks me out!" she murmured, lapsing into the Western idiom which a
+whole week spent in the society of her bosom friend was bound to call
+up. "But why Lord Chilminster?" She pronounced the name Chilster.
+
+"Why won't he do? Isn't he the real thing? I picked him out in my sample
+book of the aristocracy, and when I fitted the name on to Jeannette--the
+Countess of Chilminster--it sounded quite elegant."
+
+"Then it wasn't because you knew I knew him?" demanded Mrs. Urmy's
+hostess with growing amazement.
+
+Mrs. Urmy's face took on a blank expression.
+
+"You've heard me mention the name. That's how it's pronounced,"
+explained Lady Hartley. "His place isn't far from here."
+
+"You don't say! The way these British titles are pronounced is enough to
+make you doubt your own eyesight. I didn't know. But if he's a friend of
+yours that'll likely make it all the easier."
+
+"Lord Chilminster!" Lady Hartley spoke in an awed tone.
+
+She felt it would be useless to make Mrs. Urmy understand the enormity
+of her offence against good taste, and presently her astonishment gave
+way to amusement.
+
+"Lavinia," she rippled, "as a matchmaker you take the cake! I don't
+believe----" She paused, listening. "Hush! Here's Jeannette!"
+
+Miss Jeannette Urmy came in through the open French window. She was
+dressed in a natty little cotton frock, looked fresh and chic, and only
+pleasantly American. Perhaps she inherited her good looks and refined
+tastes from "popper" Urmy, deceased, in which case that gentleman must
+have committed one serious error of taste and judgment when he selected
+Jeannette's mother for his better half.
+
+"My! You're late, Jeannette!" observed Mrs. Urmy, shooting a quick
+glance at Lady Hartley.
+
+At the same moment, both ladies, by common consent, sauntered toward the
+door. They knew Jeannette's temperament. A crisis, such as the
+announcement in the _Morning Post_ was sure to evoke, was one at which
+they were not anxious to assist.
+
+"Oh, I'm ahead of time," answered Jeannette. "I've been up since six
+looking for eggs."
+
+"Eggs?" echoed Lady Hartley.
+
+"Yes; I collect birds' eggs." She picked up the newspaper and let her
+eye wander along the items in the Court Circular. "But getting up early
+makes me homesick. The best time of my life was when I was a kid, when I
+hadn't an idea beyond the woods on the old Massachusetts farm, when
+popper kept his store, and--Oh!"
+
+She had reached the fatal announcement, and sat with parted lips, rigid
+as stone, while the world seemed toppling about her ears. There was a
+long pause. Jeannette's lips gradually tightened, and her firm hand
+crumpled up the paper.
+
+"Mommer!" she exclaimed. "Here, Mommer!" But Mrs. Urmy and Lady Hartley
+had beaten a diplomatic retreat. Jeannette jumped to her feet, the color
+flaming in her face, her eyes snapping with indignation. "Oh!" she
+cried, impotently. "I'll--I'll--oh! what can I do? It must come out! He
+must apologize. Who did it? Oh, I don't even know him, the--wretch!"
+
+The "chuff-chuff" of a motor-car coming up the drive interrupted her
+outburst, and she looked up to see it being driven up and halted before
+the entrance. Lady Hartley had a perfect fleet of cars. Jeannette at
+once jumped to the conclusion that this was one of them. She had a
+sudden inspiration. It was running free--ready to start. There was
+temptation in the soft purr of its engine. The driver, quietly dressed,
+but not in livery, she appraised as one of Lady Hartley's motor-men.
+
+"Shall I?" she whispered. "Dare I? I can set things straight at once if
+I do. Persis will be wild with me for going off without a word, but
+I'll--I'll chance it!"
+
+She ran into the hall, slipped into her motoring coat, and, throwing
+discretion to the winds, walked out to the front of the house and
+quickly up to the car.
+
+"How soon can you drive me to Sapworth Hall?" she asked, getting in and
+pulling the rug around her.
+
+The barefaced appropriation of his car by an unknown young woman almost
+took Lord Chilminster's breath away. He had, at much inconvenience to
+himself, motored all the way to Lady Hartley's to contradict and sift an
+amazing and annoying report that he had discovered in the _Morning
+Post_. He had heard Lady Hartley mention the name of Urmy as that of a
+friend of hers, and naturally decided that she was the proper person to
+consult. But before he had time to get out of his car and ring the bell
+here was a young person, springing from goodness knows where, mistaking
+him for a motor-man, and ordering him about. For a moment he was
+speechless. Then, as the humor of the situation began to appeal to him,
+so did the good looks of the girl.
+
+"Really," he began. "You see I----"
+
+"Don't talk, get under way!" commanded Jeannette. "Quick! Her ladyship
+has altered her mind about going out. You've got to take me to Sapworth
+Hall. It's thirty miles. I want to be there by lunch-time. Do you know
+the way?"
+
+"I--I think so," stammered Chilminster.
+
+Her bewildering eagerness to be off was infectious. The noble owner of
+the car felt it. But apart from that, he was quite ready for an
+adventure in such pleasant company. He forgot all about the object of
+his visit. Without another word he let in the clutch and started.
+
+Jeannette sank back with a sigh of relief. She credited herself with
+having secured Persis's car very neatly. The man might, perhaps, get
+into trouble, but she could make that up to him by a generous tip. Her
+one idea was to contradict and confute the disgraceful announcement at
+its fountain-head. It was providential that the unknown Lord
+Chilminster's place was so near; but had it been ten times as far off,
+Jeannette, boiling with justifiable indignation, and with her mind made
+up to exact reparation, would have gone there.
+
+"It's awful! It's unheard of! I--I won't have it! Who can have done it?"
+she kept repeating through white teeth set viciously. "I'll have it
+contradicted in large print by this time to-morrow, or the American
+Ambassador shall----"
+
+She was not quite sure what ambassadors did under similar circumstances,
+and she left the mental threat unfinished. Anyhow, it was a disgrace to
+herself, and her sex, if not a slight on her country, and it redoubled
+her determination to "get even" with the perpetrator of it. She leaned
+forward to make herself heard.
+
+"Set a killing pace," she called. "I'll make it up to you."
+
+Chilminster nodded, hid a smile, and let the car out to the top of its
+speed. It ate up mile after mile; and as it came to Jeannette that each
+one brought her nearer and nearer to the hateful person whose name had
+been so scandalously bracketed with her own, she experienced a feeling
+of nervousness. The boldness of her escapade began to alarm her. What
+should she say? How express in words her view of an intolerable
+situation which no self-respecting girl could even calmly think about?
+
+Lord Chilminster's mind was almost similarly engaged. He was wondering
+who Miss Jeannette L. Urmy could be, and whether she was aware of the
+obnoxious paragraph in the paper. He did not do her the injustice to
+suppose that she had inspired it (he had an open mind on that point),
+but as he was not responsible for it himself, he had a suspicion that
+she might be. Chilminster had met very few unmarried American girls, but
+like most Englishmen, he was aware of their capacity for resolution in
+most matters. Then, again, it was leap year. Suppose---- For a little
+while he did a lot of hard thinking.
+
+"I say," he called suddenly, looking over his shoulder. "Isn't there a
+Miss Urmy staying at the White House?"
+
+Jeannette drew herself up and fixed him with a stony stare.
+
+"I am Miss Urmy," she answered frigidly.
+
+The start that Chilminster gave unconsciously affected the
+steering-wheel, and the car swerved sharply.
+
+"What are you doing? You're driving disgracefully!" exclaimed Jeannette.
+
+"I--I beg your pardon," faltered Chilminster. "I thought you were her
+lady's maid."
+
+He felt he owed her that one. A girl who could announce her approaching
+marriage with a stranger (Chilminster no longer gave her the benefit of
+the doubt) and follow up that glaring indiscretion by a visit to her
+victim, was---- The imminence of such a thing alarmed him. Was she
+coming to propose--to molest him? He got hot thinking of it.
+
+The situation had undergone a complete change since he had started out
+in a rage, and some trepidation, to confront Miss Urmy herself, if need
+be. Now trepidation over-balanced all his other emotions. Miss Urmy was
+behind him, in his own automobile, and he was meekly driving her at a
+cracking speed to his own house! It was too late to turn back now. The
+thing had to be seen through. Besides, he could not help feeling a
+curiosity to know what was in his passenger's mind, and to discover her
+bewildering plan of action.
+
+Neither spoke for the rest of the journey, and at length the car passed
+through the lodge gates, swept up the drive, and stopped at the entrance
+to Sapworth Hall. Jeannette got out.
+
+"You had better go round to the stables and ask for something to eat. I
+may be some time," was all she volunteered as she rang the bell.
+
+Rather staggered by the order, but foreseeing a bad quarter of an hour
+ahead of him, Chilminster was glad of the respite. He opened the
+throttle and slid out of sight as Jeannette was admitted.
+
+His lordship was out, the butler informed her. Then she would wait--wait
+all day, if necessary, she said decisively, following the man into the
+library. No, she was in no need of refreshment, but her _chauffeur_, who
+had gone round to the stables, might be glad of something in the
+servants' hall.
+
+With a foot impatiently tapping the polished floor, she sat summoning up
+all her determination whilst awaiting the ordeal before her. For, by
+this time had come the inevitable reaction, and the sudden impulse that
+had made her act as she had seemed, somehow, out of relation to the
+motive that had inspired it. Not that she regretted having come: her
+self-respect demanded that sacrifice; but she wished the unpleasant
+affair over.
+
+An intolerable ten minutes passed. The beautiful seventeenth century
+room, like a reflection on the spirit of democracy, was getting on
+Jeannette's nerves. The strain of listening, watching the big mahogany
+door for the expected entrance of Lord Chilminster, at last reduced her
+to a state of apathy, and when he did come quietly in she was taken by
+surprise.
+
+"I'm so sorry to have kept you waiting," he said.
+
+Jeannette stared. Bareheaded, gaiterless, minus his driving coat, very
+self-contained and eminently aristocratic, the supposed motor-man
+advanced into the room.
+
+"You see, you told me to take the car round to the stables," he
+proceeded, with a touch of apology in his tone.
+
+"You--you are the Earl of Chilminster?" she gasped.
+
+"Of Sapworth Hall, Wilts," he augmented, like one who quotes. "And you
+are Miss Jeannette L. Urmy, of Boston, Massachusetts, I believe."
+
+There was quite a long silence.
+
+"You knew all along," she flushed angrily.
+
+Chilminster raised a hand in protest. "Not until you told me."
+
+"Then why didn't you stop? You ought to have taken me back immediately
+you knew who I was."
+
+"So I would have if----"
+
+"You mean you didn't believe me. You thought I was a lady's maid!"
+Jeannette interrupted indignantly.
+
+"That was an error of judgment for which I humbly apologize. We are all
+liable to make mistakes sometimes. You, Miss Urmy, for instance, took me
+for a motor-man. You also appropriated my car, and commanded me to bring
+you here at a murderous--no, a killing pace. And I think you added that
+you would make it up to me."
+
+Jeannette's face tingled. She had come to accuse, and, instead, found
+herself patiently listening to a recital of her indiscretions. But if
+Lord Chilminster was a strategist, Jeannette was a tactician. She
+appreciated the danger of a passive defense, and conversely, of the
+value of a vigorous aggression. Without a moment's hesitation she began
+a counter attack.
+
+"In to-day's _Morning Post_----" she commenced.
+
+"Ah, the _Morning Post_!" echoed Chilminster, also changing front.
+
+"There was a disgraceful announcement."
+
+"Half of it certainly was--irksome."
+
+"Which half?" asked Jeannette suspiciously.
+
+"I have no conscientious scruples about matrimony in the abstract,"
+parried Chilminster.
+
+"But I have. I object altogether to the paragraph. I resent it."
+
+"Then you did not insert it?"
+
+"I insert it? _I?_" flamed Jeannette. She drew herself up as haughtily
+as a pretty woman can under the disadvantage of being seated in a
+yielding easy chair. "Do you mean to assert, Lord Chilminster, that
+I----?"
+
+She was interrupted by the entrance of the butler.
+
+"Luncheon is served, my lord," he announced.
+
+"You will take off your coat?"
+
+Lord Chilminster turned to Miss Urmy, and advanced a step in
+anticipation. The butler--with a well-trained butler's promptness--was
+behind her, and before she could frame a word of objection, the
+fur-lined garment had slipped from her shoulders.
+
+Thus must martyrs have marched to the stake, was one of Jeannette's
+bewildered reflections as she preceded her host out of the room, and, as
+in a dream, found herself a few minutes later facing him across the
+luncheon table. Outwardly, the meal proceeded in well-ordered calm. Lord
+Chilminster made no further reference to the debatable topic; only
+talked lightly and pleasantly on a variety of non-committal subjects.
+
+As the lady's host that, of course, was the only attitude he could
+adopt; but the fact remains that he did so _de bonne volonte_. Perhaps
+because, so far, he had scored more points than his opponent in the
+morning's encounter; perhaps, also, because of her undeniable good
+looks, his irritation, due to the circumstances that had prompted that
+encounter, began to lessen with _truites en papilotte_, was almost
+forgotten in face of a _mousse de volaille_, and entirely vanished among
+_asperges vertes mousseline_.
+
+Miss Jeannette L. Urmy, with her veil lifted, and relieved of her
+voluminous coat, was, he had to admit, distractingly pretty; not at all
+the type he had pictured as the original of the name. Young, pretty, and
+charming women (he was convinced that _au fond_ she was charming) ought
+to have no obstinate prejudices against marriage. He even ventured to
+think that Miss Urmy's mind had become obscured on that point by
+those--well, indiscreet lines in the _Morning Post_. They had upset him;
+then why not her? They were so--premature.
+
+As for Jeannette, in spite of Lord Chilminster's effortless ease, her
+powers of conversation were frozen. She was reduced to monosyllables,
+and she ate in proportion. It was a humiliating experience to be
+accepting the hospitality of the enemy; one, moreover, that made it
+awkward for her to prolong hostilities. Having broken bread in his
+tents (a Puritan strain was responsible for the illustration) she felt
+disarmed. Besides, she was rather ashamed of her maladroitness in
+mistaking Lord Chilminster for a common motor-man. It argued
+_gaucherie_. Perhaps he thought her unconventional call a violation of
+good taste--considered her forward! He had plainly shown his annoyance
+about that obnox--that embarrassing paragraph, and that fact spiked most
+of her batteries. He might, after all, prove to be quite----
+
+"Do you mind if I smoke?"
+
+Lord Chilminster's voice startled her out of her reverie. The servants
+had noiselessly retired, and they were alone.
+
+"I--I feel ready to sink through the floor," she rejoined
+inconsequently.
+
+He returned his cigarette case to his pocket, looking quite concerned.
+"I'm so sorry. I ought not to have----"
+
+"No, no. Please smoke. It isn't that," stammered Jeannette.
+
+"It's the _Morning Post_?"
+
+Jeannette evaded his eye.
+
+"Yes; it does put us in rather a tight place," mediated Chilminster.
+
+Nothing was said for a moment.
+
+"Engaged!" he murmured.
+
+Jeannette raised her eyes and noted his reflective attitude.
+
+"Who can have put it in?" he went on.
+
+"I can't imagine."
+
+"And why?"
+
+"It does seem strange," admitted Jeannette in a detached tone.
+
+"It's not as if we were----"
+
+"No," she interposed hurriedly.
+
+"Well, what ought we to do about it? Of course, we can contradict it,
+but----"
+
+"But what?" she asked, filling his pause.
+
+"I hate advertisement--that is, _unnecessary_ advertisement,"
+Chilminster corrected himself. "It would make us--I mean me--look so--so
+vacillating."
+
+He looked up rather suddenly, and just missed Jeannette's eyes by the
+thousandth of a second.
+
+What could he mean? she asked herself, while her heart pumped
+boisterously. Was he magnanimous enough to be thinking of accepting a
+compromising situation to save her? What he had said sounded very
+unselfish. Of course, she couldn't allow him to. What a pity he was not
+an American--or something quite ordinary. Then she might----
+
+"There's nothing for it but to write to the paper, I suppose?" he said
+ruefully.
+
+"I--I suppose not." The comment was dragged from Jeannette in a tone as
+unconsciously reluctant as his was rueful.
+
+Chilminster sighed. "It's so rough on you."
+
+Jeannette felt a consuming anxiety to know whether his sympathy was
+occasioned by the announcement or the suggested denial of it.
+
+"And on you, too," she admitted. "What were you thinking--how did you
+propose to phrase it?"
+
+"I?" he asked apprehensively. "To be quite frank. I haven't got as far
+as that. Never wrote to the papers in my life," he added
+pusillanimously.
+
+"But _I_ can't," argued Jeannette. Her determination of two hours ago
+had vanished into the Ewigkeit.
+
+Chilminster had an inspiration. "What do you say if we do it together?"
+
+While she digested this expedient he fetched paper and pencil, and then
+sat gazing at the ceiling for inspiration.
+
+"Well?" she queried at the end of a minute.
+
+"How ought one to begin these things?" asked the desperate man.
+
+Jeannette cogitated deeply. "It's so difficult to say what one wants to
+a stranger in a letter, isn't it?" she hesitated. "Wouldn't a telegram
+do?"
+
+"By Jove! Yes; and simply say: 'Miss Urmy wishes to deny----'"
+
+"In _my_ name!" exclaimed Jeannette.
+
+"Well--you are the person aggrieved."
+
+"I really don't think it's fair to put the whole of the responsibility
+on my shoulders," she demurred.
+
+"No, I suppose not," Chilminster admitted grudgingly. "How would this
+do: 'Miss Urmy and Lord Chilminster wish to contradict their
+engagement----'"
+
+"But that implies that there _was_ an engagement!"
+
+Chilminster pondered the deduction. "So it does. I see. People would
+jump to the conclusion that we were in a desperate hurry to alter our
+minds!"
+
+"And, of course, we haven't."
+
+"Y-es. I don't know how you feel about it, but if there's one thing I
+dislike it's tittle-tattle about my private affairs."
+
+"Horrid!" shivered Jeannette. "What _are_ we to do?"
+
+Her tone was so hopeless, so full of tears, that it melted Chilminster.
+Susceptibilities that had been simmering within him for an hour past
+came unexpectedly to the boil; and as they did so the difficulty
+vanished.
+
+"Why need we bother at all about it?" he asked impulsively.
+
+For a world of moments, Jeannette stared at him, revolving the question.
+Then a faint radiance came into her face, and grew and grew until it
+burned. Jeannette bit her lip. Jeannette looked down.
+
+"What do you mean?" she asked in confusion.
+
+"Don't--don't you think we had better--take the consequences?" said
+Chilminster, as he reached across the table and let his hand fall on
+hers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mrs. Urmy stood at the window looking with lack-lustre eyes across the
+park. She had had six solid hours in which to reflect on that risky
+communication of hers to the _Morning Post_, and Jeannette's
+disappearance since breakfast time provided a gloomy commentary on it.
+She fidgeted uneasily as she recalled her daughter's scared look when
+reading the paper, and maternal forebodings discounted her interest in
+an automobile that showed at intervals between the trees of the drive as
+it approached the White House.
+
+But two moments later it occurred to her that it was Jeannette who sat
+on its front seat beside the driver; and, as the car drew up, her
+experienced eye detected something in the demeanor of the pair that
+startled but elated her.
+
+"Here's Jeannette!" she called over her shoulder to Lady Hartley. "In an
+auto with a young man. Say, Persis, who is he?"
+
+Lady Hartley hurried to the window, gave one look, and doubted the
+evidence of her eyes.
+
+"Lavinia, it's Lord Chilminster!" she cried, with a catch in her voice.
+
+The two women flashed a glance brimful of significance at one another.
+Lady Hartley's expressed uncertainty; Mrs. Urmy's triumph--sheer,
+complete, perfect triumph.
+
+"Didn't I say it was a sure thing?" she shrilled excitedly. "It's fixed
+them up! Come right ahead and introduce me to my future son-in-law!"
+
+As she raced to the door she added half to herself: "I don't want to
+boast, but, thank the Lord, I've got Jeannette off this season!"
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+THE MILLION DOLLAR FREIGHT TRAIN
+
+The Story of a Young Engineer
+
+By FRANK H. SPEARMAN
+
+
+IT WAS the second month of the strike, and not a pound of freight had
+been moved. Things did look smoky on the West End. The General
+Superintendent happened to be with us when the news came. "You can't
+handle it, boys," said he nervously. "What you'd better do is to turn it
+over to the Columbian Pacific."
+
+Our contracting freight agent on the Coast at that time was a fellow so
+erratic that he was nicknamed "Crazy-horse." Right in the midst of the
+strike Crazy-horse wired that he had secured a big silk shipment for New
+York. We were paralyzed. We had no engineers, no firemen, and no motive
+power to speak of. The strikers were pounding our men, wrecking our
+trains, and giving us the worst of it generally; that is, when we
+couldn't give it to them. Why the fellow displayed his activity at that
+particular juncture still remains a mystery. Perhaps he had a grudge
+against the road; if so, he took an artful revenge. Everybody on the
+system with ordinary railroad sense knew that our struggle was to keep
+clear of freight business until we got rid of our strike. Anything
+valuable or perishable was especially unwelcome. But the stuff was
+docked, and loaded, and consigned in our care before we knew it. After
+that, a refusal to carry it would be like hoisting the white flag; and
+that is something which never yet flew over the West End.
+
+"Turn it over to the Columbian," said the General Superintendent; but
+the General Superintendent was not looked up to on our division. He
+hadn't enough sand. Our head was a fighter, and he gave tone to every
+man under him. "No," he thundered, bringing down his fist. "Not in a
+thousand years. We'll move it ourselves. Wire Montgomery (the General
+Manager) that we will take care of it. And wire him to fire
+Crazy-horse--and to do it right off." And before the silk was turned
+over to us Crazy-horse was looking for another job. It is the only case
+on record where a freight hustler was discharged for getting business.
+
+There were twelve carloads; it was insured for $85,000 a car; you can
+figure how far the title is wrong, but you never can estimate the worry
+the stuff gave us. It looked as big as twelve million dollars' worth. In
+fact, one scrub car-link, with the glory of the West End at heart, had a
+fight over the amount with a skeptical hostler. He maintained that the
+actual money value was a hundred and twenty millions; but I give you the
+figures just as they went over the wire, and they are right.
+
+What bothered us most was that the strikers had the tip almost as soon
+as we had it. Having friends on every road in the country, they knew as
+much about our business as we ourselves. The minute it was announced
+that we should move the silk, they were after us. It was a defiance; a
+last one. If we could move freight--for we were already moving
+passengers after a fashion--the strike might be well accounted beaten.
+
+Stewart, the leader of the local contingent, together with his
+followers, got after me at once. "You don't show much sense, Reed," said
+he. "You fellows here are breaking your necks to get things moving, and
+when this strike's over, if our boys ask for your discharge, they'll get
+it. This road can't run without our engineers. We're going to beat you.
+If you dare try to move this silk, we'll have your scalp when it's over.
+You'll never get your silk to Zanesville, I'll promise you that. And if
+you ditch it and make a million-dollar loss, you'll get let out anyway,
+my buck."
+
+"I'm here to obey orders, Stewart," said I. What was the use of more? I
+felt uncomfortable; but we had determined to move the silk; there was no
+more to be said.
+
+When I went over to the round-house and told Neighbor the decision, he
+said never a word; but he looked a great deal. Neighbor's task was to
+supply the motive power. All that we had, uncrippled, was in the
+passenger service, because passengers should be taken care of first of
+all. In order to win a strike, you must have public opinion on your
+side.
+
+"Nevertheless, Neighbor," said I, after we had talked awhile, "we must
+move the silk also."
+
+Neighbor studied; then he roared at his foreman. "Send Bartholomew
+Mullen here." He spoke with a decision that made me think the business
+was done. I had never happened, it is true, to hear of Bartholomew
+Mullen in the department of motive power; but the impression the name
+gave me was of a monstrous fellow, big as Neighbor, or old man Sankey,
+or Dad Hamilton. "I'll put Bartholomew ahead of it," said Neighbor
+tightly.
+
+I saw a boy walk into the office. "Mr. Garten said you wanted me, sir,"
+said he, addressing the Master Mechanic.
+
+"I do, Bartholomew," responded Neighbor.
+
+The figure in my mind's eye shrunk in a twinkling. Then it occurred to
+me that it must be this boy's father who was wanted.
+
+"You have been begging for a chance to take out an engine, Bartholomew,"
+began Neighbor coldly; and I knew it was on.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"You want to get killed, Bartholomew."
+
+Bartholomew smiled as if the idea was not altogether displeasing.
+
+"How would you like to go pilot to-morrow for McCurdy? You to take the
+44 and run as first Seventy-eight. McCurdy will run as second
+Seventy-eight."
+
+"I know I could run an engine all right," ventured Bartholomew, as if
+Neighbor were the only one taking the chances in giving him an engine.
+"I know the track from here to Zanesville. I helped McNeff fire one
+week."
+
+"Then go home, and go to bed; and be over here at six o'clock to-morrow
+morning. And sleep sound, for it may be your last chance."
+
+It was plain that the Master Mechanic hated to do it; it was simply
+sheer necessity. "He's a wiper," mused Neighbor, as Bartholomew walked
+springily away. "I took him in here sweeping two years ago. He ought to
+be firing now, but the union held him back; that's why he don't like
+them. He knows more about an engine now than half the lodge. They'd
+better have let him in," said the Master Mechanic grimly. "He may be the
+means of breaking their backs yet. If I give him an engine and he runs
+it, I'll never take him off, union or no union, strike or no strike."
+
+"How old is that boy?" I asked.
+
+"Eighteen; and never a kith or a kin that I know of. Bartholomew
+Mullen," mused Neighbor, as the slight figure moved across the flat,
+"big name--small boy. Well, Bartholomew, you'll know something more by
+to-morrow night about running an engine, or a whole lot less: that's as
+it happens. If he gets killed, it's your fault, Reed."
+
+He meant that I was calling on him for men when he couldn't supply them.
+
+"I heard once," he went on, "about a fellow named Bartholomew being
+mixed up in a massacre. But I take it he must have been an older man
+than our Bartholomew--nor his other name wasn't Mullen, neither. I
+disremember just what it was; but it wasn't Mullen."
+
+"Well, don't say I want to get the boy killed, Neighbor," I protested.
+"I've got plenty to answer for. I'm here to run trains--when there are
+any to run; that's murder enough for me. You needn't send Bartholomew
+out on my account."
+
+"Give him a slow schedule, and I'll give him orders to jump early;
+that's all we can do. If the strikers don't ditch him, he'll get through
+somehow."
+
+It stuck in my crop--the idea of putting that boy on a pilot engine to
+take all the dangers ahead of that particular train; but I had a good
+deal else to think of besides. From the minute the silk got into the
+McCloud yards, we posted double guards around. About twelve o'clock that
+night we held a council of war, which ended in our running the train
+into the out freight-house. The result was that by morning we had a new
+train made up. It consisted of fourteen refrigerator cars loaded with
+oranges which had come in mysteriously the night before. It was
+announced that the silk would be held for the present and the oranges
+rushed through at once. Bright and early the refrigerator train was run
+down to the icehouses, and twenty men were put to work icing the
+oranges. At seven o'clock, McCurdy pulled in the local passenger with
+engine 105. Our plan was to cancel the load and run him right out with
+the oranges. When he got in, he reported that the 105 had sprung a tire;
+this threw us out entirely. There was a hurried conference in the
+round-house.
+
+"What can you do?" asked the Superintendent in desperation.
+
+"There's only one thing I can do. Put Bartholomew Mullen on it with the
+44, and put McCurdy to bed for Number Two to-night," responded Neighbor.
+
+It was eight o'clock. I looked into the locomotive stalls. The
+first--the only--man in sight was Bartholomew Mullen. He was very busy
+polishing the 44. He had good steam on her, and the old tub was wheezing
+away as if she had the asthma. The 44 was old; she was homely; she was
+rickety; but Bartholomew Mullen wiped her battered nose as deferentially
+as if she had been a spick-span, spider-driver, tail-truck mail-racer.
+She wasn't much--the 44. But in those days Bartholomew wasn't much:
+and the 44 was Bartholomew's.
+
+"How is she steaming, Bartholomew?" I sang out; he was right in the
+middle of her. Looking up, he fingered his waste modestly and blushed
+through a dab of crude-petroleum over his eye. "Hundred and thirty
+pounds, sir. She's a terrible free steamer, the old 44. I'm all ready
+to run her out."
+
+"Who's marked up to fire for you, Bartholomew?"
+
+Bartholomew Mullen looked at me fraternally. "Neighbor couldn't give me
+anybody but a wiper, sir," said Bartholomew, in a sort of a
+wouldn't-that-kill-you tone.
+
+The unconscious arrogance of the boy quite knocked me: so soon had
+honors changed his point of view. Last night a despised wiper; at
+daybreak, an engineer; and his nose in the air at the idea of taking on
+a wiper for fireman. And all so innocent.
+
+"Would you object, Bartholomew," I suggested gently, "to a train-master
+for fireman?"
+
+"I don't--think so, sir."
+
+"Thank you; because I am going down to Zanesville this morning myself,
+and I thought I'd ride with you. Is it all right?"
+
+"Oh, yes, sir--if Neighbor doesn't care."
+
+I smiled: he didn't know whom Neighbor took orders from; but he thought,
+evidently, not from me.
+
+"Then run her down to the oranges, Bartholomew, and couple on, and we'll
+order ourselves out. See?"
+
+The 44 looked like a baby-carriage when we got her in front of the
+refrigerators. However, after the necessary preliminaries, we gave a
+very sporty toot, and pulled out. In a few minutes we were sailing down
+the valley.
+
+For fifty miles we bobbed along with our cargo of iced silk as easy as
+old shoes; for I need hardly explain that we had packed the silk into
+the refrigerators to confuse the strikers. The great risk was that they
+would try to ditch us.
+
+I was watching the track as a mouse would a cat, looking every minute
+for trouble. We cleared the gumbo cut west of the Beaver at a pretty
+good clip, in order to make the grade on the other side. The bridge
+there is hidden in summer by a grove of hackberries. I had just pulled
+open to cool her a bit when I noticed how high the back-water was on
+each side of the track. Suddenly I felt the fill going soft under the
+drivers; felt the 44 wobble and slew. Bartholomew shut off hard, and
+threw the air as I sprang to the window. The peaceful little creek ahead
+looked as angry as the Platte in April water, and the bottoms were a
+lake.
+
+Somewhere up the valley there had been a cloudburst, for overhead the
+sun was bright. The Beaver was roaring over its banks, and the bridge
+was out. Bartholomew screamed for brakes: it looked as if we were
+against it--and hard. A soft track to stop on; a torrent of storm-water
+ahead, and ten hundred thousand dollars' worth of silk behind, not to
+mention equipment.
+
+I yelled at Bartholomew, and motioned for him to jump; my conscience is
+clear on that point. The 44 was stumbling along, trying like a drunken
+man to hang to the rotten track.
+
+"Bartholomew!" I yelled; but he was head out and looking back at his
+train while he jerked frantically at the air-lever. I understood: the
+air wouldn't work; it never will on those old tubs when you need it. The
+sweat pushed out on me. I was thinking of how much the silk would bring
+us after the bath in the Beaver. Bartholomew stuck to his levers like a
+man in a signal-tower, but every second brought us closer to open water.
+Watching him intent only on saving his first train--heedless of his
+life--I was actually ashamed to jump. While I hesitated he somehow got
+the brakes to set; the old 44 bucked like a bronco.
+
+It wasn't too soon. She checked her train nobly at the last, but I saw
+nothing could keep her from the drink. I gave Bartholomew a terrific
+slap, and again I yelled; then turning to the gangway, I dropped into
+the soft mud on my side: the 44 hung low, and it was easy lighting.
+
+Bartholomew sprang from his seat a second later; but his blouse caught
+in the teeth of the quadrant. He stooped quick as thought, and peeled
+the thing over his head. Then he was caught fast by the wristbands, and
+the ponies of the 44 tipped over the broken abutment. Pull as he would
+he couldn't get free. The pilot dipped into the torrent slowly. But
+losing her balance, the 44 kicked her heels into the air like
+lightning, and shot with a frightened wheeze plump into the creek,
+dragging her engineer with her.
+
+The head car stopped on the brink. Running across the track, I looked
+for Bartholomew. He wasn't there; I knew he must have gone down with his
+engine. Throwing off my gloves, I dived, just as I stood, close to the
+tender, which hung half submerged. I am a good bit of a fish under
+water, but no self-respecting fish would be caught in that yellow mud. I
+realized, too, the instant I struck the water, that I should have dived
+on the upstream side. The current took me away whirling; when I came up
+for air, I was fifty feet below the pier. I scrambled out, feeling it
+was all up with Bartholomew; but to my amazement, as I shook my eyes
+open the train crew were running forward, and there stood Bartholomew on
+the track above me, looking at the refrigerator. When I got to him, he
+explained how he was dragged under and had to tear the sleeve out of his
+blouse under water to get free.
+
+The surprise is how little fuss men make about such things when they are
+busy. It took only five minutes for the conductor to hunt up a coil of
+wire and a sounder for me, and by the time he got forward with it,
+Bartholomew was half-way up a telegraph pole to help me cut in on a live
+wire. Fast as I could, I rigged a pony, and began calling the McCloud
+despatcher. It was rocky sending, but after no end of pounding, I got
+him and gave orders for the wrecking gang, and for one more of
+Neighbor's rapidly decreasing supply of locomotives.
+
+Bartholomew, sitting on a strip of fence which still rose above water,
+looked forlorn. To lose in the Beaver the first engine he ever handled
+was tough, and he was evidently speculating on his chances of ever
+getting another. If there weren't tears in his eyes, there was
+storm-water certainly. But after the relief engine had pulled what was
+left of us back six miles to a siding, I made it my first business to
+explain to Neighbor, who was nearly beside himself, that Bartholomew not
+only was not at fault, but that by his nerve he had actually saved the
+train.
+
+"I'll tell you, Neighbor," I suggested, when we got straightened
+around. "Give us the 109 to go ahead as pilot, and run her around the
+river division with Foley and the 216."
+
+"What'll you do with Number Six?" growled Neighbor. Six was the local
+passenger west.
+
+"Annul it west of McCloud," said I instantly. "We've got this silk on
+our hands now, and I'd move it if it tied up every passenger train on
+the division. If we can get the stuff through, it will practically beat
+the strike. If we fail, it will beat the company."
+
+By the time we had backed to Newhall Junction, Neighbor had made up his
+mind my way. Mullen and I climbed into the 109, and Foley, with the 216,
+and none too good a grace, coupled on to the silk, and flying red
+signals, we started again for Zanesville over the river division.
+
+Foley was always full of mischief. He had a better engine than ours, and
+he took great satisfaction the rest of the afternoon in crowding us.
+Every mile of the way he was on our heels. I was throwing the coal, and
+have reason to remember. It was after dark when we reached the Beverly
+Hill, and we took it at a lively pace. The strikers were not on our
+minds then; it was Foley who bothered.
+
+When the long parallel steel lines of the upper yards spread before us,
+flashing under the arc lights, we were away above yard speed. Running a
+locomotive into one of those big yards is like shooting a rapid in a
+canoe. There is a bewildering maze of tracks, lighted by red and green
+lamps, which must be watched the closest to keep out of trouble. The
+hazards are multiplied the minute you pass the throat, and a yard wreck
+is a dreadful tangle; it makes everybody from road-master to flagman
+furious, and not even Bartholomew wanted to face an inquiry on a yard
+wreck. On the other hand, he couldn't afford to be caught by Foley, who
+was chasing him out of pure caprice.
+
+I saw the boy holding the throttle at a half and fingering the air
+anxiously as we jumped over the frogs; but the roughest riding on track
+so far beats the ties as a cushion, that when the 109 suddenly stuck her
+paws through an open switch we bounced against the roof of the cab like
+footballs. I grabbed a brace with one hand, and with the other reached
+instinctively across to Bartholomew's side to seize the throttle. But as
+I tried to shut him off, he jerked it wide open in spite of me, and
+turned with lightning in his eye. "No!" he cried, and his voice rang
+hard. The 109 took the tremendous shove at her back, and leaped like a
+frightened horse. Away we went across the yard, through the cinders, and
+over the ties; my teeth have never been the same since. I don't belong
+on an engine, anyway, and since then I have kept off. At the moment, I
+was convinced that the strain had been too much, that Bartholomew was
+stark crazy. He sat clinging like a lobster to his levers and bouncing
+clear to the roof.
+
+But his strategy was dawning on me; in fact, he was pounding it into me.
+Even the shock and scare of leaving the track and tearing up the yard
+had not driven from Bartholomew's noddle the most important feature of
+our situation, which was, above everything, to _keep out of the way of
+the silk train_.
+
+I felt every moment more mortified at my attempt to shut him off. I had
+done the trick of the woman who grabs the reins. It was even better to
+tear up the yard than to stop for Foley to smash into and scatter the
+silk over the coal chutes. Bartholomew's decision was one of the traits
+which make the runner: instant perception coupled to instant resolve.
+The ordinary dub thinks what he should have done to avoid disaster after
+it is all over; Bartholomew thought before.
+
+On we bumped, across frogs, through switches, over splits, and into
+target rods, when--and this is the miracle of it all--the 109 got her
+forefeet on a split switch, made a contact, and after a slew or two,
+like a bogged horse, she swung up sweet on the rails again, tender and
+all. Bartholomew shut off with an under cut that brought us up
+stuttering, and nailed her feet with the air right where she stood. We
+had left the track and plowed a hundred feet across the yards and jumped
+on to another track. It is the only time I ever heard of its happening
+anywhere, but I was on the engine with Bartholomew Mullen when it was
+done.
+
+Foley choked his train the instant he saw our hind lights bobbing. We
+climbed down, and ran back. He had stopped just where we should have
+stood if I had shut off.
+
+Bartholomew ran to the switch to examine it. The contact light (green)
+still burned like a false beacon; and lucky it did, for it showed that
+the switch had been tampered with and exonerated Bartholomew Mullen
+completely. The attempt of the strikers to spill the silk in the yards
+had only made the reputation of a new engineer. Thirty minutes later,
+the million-dollar train was turned over to the East End to wrestle
+with, and we breathed, all of us, a good bit easier.
+
+Bartholomew Mullen, now a passenger runner who ranks with Kennedy and
+Jack Moore and Foley and George Sinclair himself, got a personal letter
+from the General Manager complimenting him on his pretty wit; and he was
+good enough to say nothing whatever about mine.
+
+We registered that night and went to supper together: Foley, Jackson,
+Bartholomew, and I. Afterward we dropped into the despatcher's office.
+Something was coming from McCloud, but the operator to save his life
+couldn't catch it. I listened a minute; it was Neighbor. Now, Neighbor
+isn't great on despatching trains. He can make himself understood over
+the poles, but his sending is like a boy's sawing wood--sort of uneven.
+However, though I am not much on running yards, I claim to be able to
+take the wildest ball that ever was thrown along the wire, and the chair
+was tendered me at once to catch Neighbor's extraordinary passes at the
+McCloud key. They came something like this:
+
+"To Opr. Tell Massacree"--that was the word that stuck them all, and I
+could perceive that Neighbor was talking emphatically. He had apparently
+forgotten Bartholomew's last name, and was trying to connect with the
+one he had "disremembered" the night before. "Tell Massacree," repeated
+Neighbor, "that he is al-l-l right. Tell hi-m I give him double mileage
+for to-day all the way through. And to-morrow he gets the 109 to
+keep.--NEIGHB-B-OR."
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+THE BULLDOG BREED
+
+A Story of the Russo-Japanese War
+
+By AMBROSE PRATT
+
+
+"WHAT do you make of her, Maclean?" asked Captain Brandon anxiously.
+
+First mate Hugh Maclean did not reply at once. Embracing a stanchion of
+the S.S. _Saigon's_ bridge in order to steady himself against the
+vessel's pitching, he was peering with strained eyes through the
+captain's binoculars at two small brown needle-points, set very close
+together, that stabbed the northeastern horizon.
+
+At length, however, he lowered the glass, and resumed the perpendicular.
+
+"You were right, sir," he declared. "She has altered her course, and our
+paths now converge."
+
+"Which proves that she is one of those d----d Russian volunteer
+pirates."
+
+"Or else a Japanese cruiser, sir."
+
+"Nonsense! The Jap cruisers have only one mast."
+
+"So they have, sir. I was forgetting that."
+
+"What to do!" growled the captain, and he fell to frowning and cracking
+his long fingers--his habit when perplexed. He was a short, thick-set
+man, with a round, red face, keen blue eyes, and strong, square jaws: a
+typical specimen of the old-time British sailor. Hugh Maclean, on the
+other hand, was a lean and lank Australian, of evident Scottish
+ancestry. His long, aquiline nose and high cheek-bones were tightly
+covered with a parchment-like skin, bronzed almost to the hue of
+leather. He wore a close-cropped, pointed beard, and the deep-set gray
+eyes that looked out from under the peak of his seaman's cap twinkled
+with good health and humor.
+
+"We might alter our course, too, sir," he suggested.
+
+"Ay!" snapped the other, "and get pushed for our pains on to the
+Teraghlind Reef. We are skirting those rocks more closely than I like
+already."
+
+"You know best, sir, of course. But I meant that we might slip back
+toward Manila, and try the other channel after we have given that fellow
+the go-by."
+
+"What!" snorted the captain, his blue eyes flashing fire, "run from the
+Russian! I'll be ---- first. We haven't a stitch of contraband aboard,"
+he added more calmly a moment later. "He daren't do more than stop and
+search us."
+
+But Maclean shook his head. "One of them took and sunk the _Acandaga_
+last month, sir, and she carried no contraband either."
+
+"Russia will have to foot the bill for that."
+
+"May be, sir. But Captain Tollis--as fine a chap as ever breathed,
+sir--has lost his ship, and the Lord knows if he'll ever get another."
+
+"Are you trying to frighten me, Maclean?" asked Captain Brandon,
+stormily.
+
+The mate shrugged his shoulders. "No, sir; but I am interested in this
+venture, and if the _Saigon_ gets back all right to Liverpool I'm due to
+splice Mr. Keppel's niece, and the old gentleman, as you know, has
+promised me a ship."
+
+"And hasn't it entered your thick skull that to return as you suggest
+would cost fifty pounds' worth of coal? How do you suppose old Kep would
+like that?"
+
+"Better burn a few tons of coal than risk losing the _Saigon_, sir, and
+mark time till God knows when in a Russian prison."
+
+Captain Brandon shut his mouth with a snap, and muttered something about
+Scottish caution that was distinctly uncomplimentary to the Caledonian
+race. Then, to signify the end of the argument, he strode to the ladder,
+and prepared to descend. Maclean, however, was of an equally stubborn
+character. "About the course, sir?" he demanded, touching his cap with
+ironical deference.
+
+"Carry on!" snarled the captain, and he forthwith disappeared.
+
+Two hours afterward Hugh Maclean knocked at the door of the captain's
+cabin, and was hoarsely bidden enter. Captain Brandon was seated before
+a bottle of whisky, which was scarce half full.
+
+"Have a nip?" he hospitably inquired.
+
+Maclean nodded, and half filled a glass.
+
+"Thank you, sir. Queer thing's happened," he observed, as he wiped his
+lips. "The Russian----"
+
+"I know," interrupted the captain. "I've been watching her through the
+port. She's the _Saigon's_ twin-sister ship, that was the _Saragossa_
+which old Kep sold to Baron Dabchowski six months ago. Much good it
+would have done us to run. She has the heels of us. Old Kep had just put
+new triple-expansion engines into her before she changed hands. But
+they've killed the look of her, converting her into a cruiser. She's
+nothing but a floating scrap-heap now."
+
+"But she has six guns," observed Maclean. "Don't you think you'd better
+come up, sir? She is almost near enough to signal."
+
+"Well, well," said the captain, and putting away the whisky bottle, he
+led the way to the bridge.
+
+Some half-dozen miles away, steaming at an angle to meet the _Saigon_ at
+a destined point, there plowed through the sea a large iron steamer of
+about three thousand tons' burden. She exactly resembled the _Saigon_ in
+all main points of build, and except for the fact that two guns were
+mounted fore and aft on her main deck above the line of steel bulwarks,
+and that her masts were fitted with small fighting tops, she might very
+well have passed for an ordinary merchantman.
+
+For twenty minutes or thereabouts the two officers watched her in
+silence, taking turn about with the binoculars; then, quite suddenly,
+the vessel, now less than two miles distant, luffed and fell slightly
+away from her course.
+
+"She is going to speak," said Captain Brandon, who held the glasses.
+"Look out!"
+
+Maclean smiled at the caution; but next instant a bright flash quivered
+from the other vessel's side, and involuntarily he ducked his head, for
+something flew dipping and shrieking over the _Saigon_. In the following
+second there was heard the clap of the distant cannon and the splash of
+a shell striking the sea close at hand. Invisible hands unfolded and
+shook out three balls of bunting at the truck of the war-ship's signal
+boom. They fluttered for awhile, and then spread out to the breeze. The
+arms of Russia surmounted two lines of symbolic letters.
+
+"Quartermaster!" shouted Captain Brandon.
+
+"Ay, ay, sir!" rang out a sailor's voice, and the _Saigon's_ number
+raced a Union Jack to the mast-head.
+
+"Well, Mac?" cried the captain, with his hand on the engine-room
+signal-bell.
+
+Maclean looked up from the book. "His Imperial Majesty of Russia, by the
+commander of the converted cruiser _Nevski_, orders us to stop."
+
+Captain Brandon pressed the lever, and before ten might be counted the
+shuddering of the _Saigon's_ screw had ceased.
+
+"What next?" he muttered.
+
+As if in answer, another flag fluttered up the _Nevski's_ halliards.
+
+"He will send a boat," interpreted Maclean.
+
+A short period of fret and fume ensued, then a small steam launch
+rounded the _Nevski's_ bows, and sped like a gray-hound across the
+intervening space. The _Nevski_ now presented her broadside to the
+_Saigon_, and all of her six guns were trained upon the English
+steamer's decks. The launch was crammed with men. Captain Brandon
+ordered a gangway to be lowered, and although the tars sprang to the
+task with great alacrity, it was hardly completed before the launch
+touched the _Saigon's_ side. An officer, bedizened with gold lace, and
+accompanied by two glittering subordinates, climbed aboard, and Captain
+Brandon met him on the main deck. Hugh Maclean, from the bridge,
+watched them file into the captain's cabin. Ten minutes later they
+emerged, and without waiting a moment the Russians hurried back into the
+launch. Captain Brandon's face was purple. He hurriedly mounted to the
+bridge, and leaning over the rail cursed the departing launch at the top
+of his voice in five different languages.
+
+"What's the trouble, sir?" asked Maclean when his superior appeared at
+last to be exhausted.
+
+"They want our coal. C----t them to ---- for all eternity," gasped the
+frenzied captain. "And they'll blow us out of the water if we don't
+follow them to Tramoieu."
+
+"Where is that?"
+
+"It's a little island off the Cochin coast, a hundred miles from
+anywhere, with a harbor. By ---- they'll smart for this!"
+
+"Not they," said Maclean. "That is, if you obey. They'll gut and scuttle
+the _Saigon_, and then kill every mother's son of us. Dead men tell no
+tales. We'll be posted at Lloyds as a storm loss."
+
+"But what can we do?"
+
+"Full speed ahead, and ram her while she's picking up the launch! Chance
+the guns!"
+
+"By ----! I'll do it!" shrieked the captain, and he sprang to the
+signal-bell. But even as he grasped the lever with his hand, he paused.
+
+"What now?" demanded the mate, his face tense with passion. "Hurry's the
+word, sir. Hurry!"
+
+The captain, however, turned and looked him in the eye. "You've
+counseled me to murder--wholesale murder, Maclean. Avast there, man!
+Keep your mouth shut. This is my bridge, and I'll not hear another word
+from you."
+
+The mate bit his lips and shrugged his shoulders. His eyes were blazing
+with contempt and rage, but he kept his self-control, and was rewarded
+by a dozen sympathetic glances from those of the crew grouped upon the
+deck who had heard the controversy. From that moment he was their idol.
+The second mate, too, who was standing by the wheel, turned and nodded
+to him as he passed.
+
+The captain, who missed nothing of this by-play, felt himself to have
+been absolutely isolated. But he was a strong man, and he knew that he
+acted rightly. Five minutes later four thunderous reports rang out, and
+shells splashed the sea on all sides of the _Saigon_. Then the
+machine-guns began to speak, and a perfect storm of bullets tore through
+the vessel's rigging, some directed so low that they pierced the top rim
+of the funnel smoke-stack. The display lasted sixty seconds. When it was
+over, a very sheepish looking lot of men arose from the recumbent
+attitudes they had assumed. Of the whole ship's company on deck, Captain
+Brandon, Hugh Maclean, and the chief engineer had alone remained
+standing.
+
+There was a new flag at the _Nevski's_ truck. "Follow at full speed!" it
+commanded. The _Saigon_ instantly obeyed. Before night fell, the moon
+rose, three-quarters full. It lighted the procession into dawn. Sunrise
+brought them to a rock-bound coast, and so nicely had the _Nevski's_
+navigator steered, that the first headland circumvented made room for
+the revelation of a little bay. It was enclosed on three sides with gray
+hills, and across the mouth was stretched a broken line of
+hungry-looking surf-crowned reefs. The _Nevski_ steamed boldly through
+the first opening, and dropped her anchor in smooth water three-quarters
+of a mile beyond. The _Saigon_, currishly obedient to the Russian's
+signals, followed suit, bringing up within a biscuit cast of her consort
+and captor. An hour later Hugh Maclean, the engineer, and the lesser
+officers and thirty-two men of the _Saigon's_ company and some two score
+of Russian sailors were working like slaves transferring, under the
+supervision of a strong guard, the _Saigon's_ coal and cargo into the
+_Nevski's_ boats.
+
+Captain Brandon was not among the toilers. He would have been, perhaps,
+but for the circumstance that he had permitted himself the liberty of
+striking a Russian officer in the face. A marine having retorted with
+the butt end of a carbine, the Englishmen had helplessly watched their
+captain being carried off, bleeding and insensible, and dumped with a
+sickening thud into the Russian launch. The incident encouraged them so
+much that they worked without complaint throughout the day, and they did
+not even grumble at the rations which their taskmasters served out to
+them. Shortly before dusk the breeze that had been blowing died away,
+and the Russians took advantage of the calm to warp the vessels
+together. After that the business in hand proceeded at such a pace that
+by dawn the _Saigon_ was completely gutted, and she rode the water like
+a swan, the greater part of her bulk in air. The weary Englishmen were
+thereupon driven like sheep upon the _Nevski's_ deck, and forced to
+descend the small after-hold, which was almost empty. The hatches were
+then fastened over them for their greater security, and they were left
+in darkness. But they were too worn out to care. Within five minutes
+every man of them was sleeping dreamlessly, lying listlessly stretched
+out upon the ship's false bottom, excepting only Hugh Maclean. He was
+too tired to sleep. He was, therefore, the only one who heard an hour
+later the muffled boom of a distant explosion and a faint cheer on deck.
+
+"They have sunk the poor old _Saigon_," muttered Maclean. "There goes
+the last hope of my captaincy and Nellie Lane." He uttered a low groan,
+and covered his face with his grimy paws. Maclean was very much in love,
+but he was too young and of too strenuous a temperament to rest for long
+the victim of despair. Moreover, contempt for foreigners, particularly
+Russians, served him instead of a religion, when not ashore, and he soon
+fell to wondering just where was the weak spot in his captor's armor,
+and how he could find and put his finger on it. That there was a weak
+spot he did not doubt at all. He searched his pockets and found half a
+plug of tobacco, but not his meerschaum. A Russian sailor had
+confiscated that some hours before. Maclean consigned the thief to
+perdition, and with some trouble bit off a plug. Then he lay back to
+chew and think. "There's only one thing to do," was the result of his
+reflections. "We'll have to take this boat from the Russians somehow."
+
+But exhausted nature would not be denied, and before he knew it Maclean
+was in the land of dreams. He was awakened by the noisy removal of a
+portion of the hatch. He looked up and saw the moon, also a couple of
+bearded faces looking down at him.
+
+"Good Lord!" he groaned, "I've slept the day out."
+
+"You hingry--men--like--eat?" observed a hoarse voice. And Maclean saw
+an immense steaming pan descending toward him on a line. He caught it
+deftly. A can of water and a tin of biscuits followed. He was instantly
+surrounded by the _Saigon's_ company, who attacked the contents of the
+pan like wolves. He seized a lump of fat meat from the mess, also a
+couple of biscuits, and retired apart. The darkness renewed itself a
+second later, and for some time the hold buzzed with the noise of
+crunching jaws and guttural exclamations.
+
+Of a sudden someone near him struck a match, and Maclean looked over the
+flame into the eyes of Robert Sievers, the _Saigon's_ chief engineer.
+
+"Hello, Mac," said Sievers.
+
+"Good evening, Sievers," replied Maclean politely. "We're still at
+anchor."
+
+"I've remarked it. What do you suppose they intend to do with us?"
+
+"Maroon us, likely, if we let them, on the island yonder."
+
+"How can we prevent them? But I think not. It's my belief this meat is
+poisoned!"
+
+"Tastes vile enough," agreed Maclean, but he went on eating, and Robert
+Sievers, after a momentary hesitation, followed suit.
+
+"We're in the devil of a hole!" he muttered, his mouth full of biscuit.
+Then he swore horribly, for the match had burned his fingers.
+
+Maclean stood up. "Any of you men happen to have a bit of candle in your
+pockets?" he demanded.
+
+Silence for a minute, then a Norwegian fireman spoke up. "Bout dree
+inches," he said.
+
+"He eats 'em," cried another voice, and a roar of laughter greeted the
+announcement.
+
+"Pass it here," commanded Maclean.
+
+Sievers struck another match, and presently the steady flame of a candle
+stump showed Maclean a picture such as Gustave Dore would have loved to
+paint. He glanced at the begrimed faces of the _Saigon's_ wild and
+ghastly looking company, and beyond them for a moment, then stumbled
+over the coal, followed by Sievers, until he was brought up by the iron
+partition of the hold. He made, however, straight for the bulkhead, and
+stooping down, held the candle close to the line of bolts covering the
+propeller's tunnel.
+
+"By Jingo!" cried Sievers. "I see your game. Let me look, Maclean! This
+is my trade."
+
+He bent forward, wrenched at a shoot-bolt, and with a cry of
+satisfaction threw back a plate. The _Saigon's_ company crowded round
+the man-hole thus revealed, muttering with excitement.
+
+"One moment, Sievers!" cried Maclean, for the engineer had one leg
+already in the tunnel. Then he turned to the men. "My lads," he said,
+"it's a case of our lives or the Russians', for I firmly believe the
+accursed pirates mean to kill us. We must take this ship by hook or by
+crook, and I think I see the way to do it!" He concluded with some
+precise instructions, and a few savage sentences, in which he promised
+an unmentionable fate to the unfortunate who made a sound or failed to
+follow to the letter his instructions.
+
+A second later, in a silence that could be felt, he blew out the light,
+and followed Sievers into the tunnel. A few cave-black yards, crawled
+painfully on hands and knees, slipping and slithering along the
+propeller shaft, brought the leaders to the edge of a wider space.
+Sievers struck a match, and a well-like, vertical opening was revealed.
+High overhead towered and threatened an enormous steel crank. Before
+their feet lay a deep pool of slime. The heat was horrible.
+
+"It should be hereabouts," whispered Sievers, and his fingers searched
+the wall. For a moment nothing could be heard but the deep breathing of
+the _Saigon's_ company. Then came a slight but terrifying clang.
+
+"I've got it!" whispered Sievers. "Are you ready?"
+
+"Right!"
+
+Maclean's eyes were dazzled of a sudden with a hot flare of light, and
+the deafening thud of the condensers smote in his ears. He never quite
+coherently remembered that which immediately ensued, for something
+struck him on the head.
+
+When he came to his full senses again he was lying on a grating beside
+the body of the Russian cleaner he had strangled. The _Saigon's_ men
+were all around him. He arose, gasping for breath. Sievers thrust a bar
+into his hand and pointed to a line of ladders. Maclean nodded, crossed
+the grating, and began to climb. Sievers, armed with a hammer, followed
+at his heels.
+
+There were three men in the engine-room, an engineer and two cleaners.
+They took the climbers for stokers, and went on with their occupations.
+Maclean sidled to the door across the grating and closed it in the
+twinkling of an eye. The engineer, who was reading a newspaper, heard
+the noise and looked up. Sievers struck him with the hammer and flew at
+one of the cleaners. Maclean rushed at the other with his spade. It was
+all over in a moment, and without any noise that the thudding of the
+donkey-engine did not drown. Maclean changed coats and caps with the
+insensible Russian engineer, while Sievers called the _Saigon's_ men
+from below. He then strapped on the man's dirk, and put his revolver in
+his pocket.
+
+"What next?" asked Sievers.
+
+Maclean glanced at the engine-room clock. The hands pointed to
+seven-fifteen. "Captain and officers are just about half through their
+dinner," he reflected.
+
+"Wait here," he said aloud: "I'm going to reconnoitre. Just keep the
+door ajar when I leave. Let anyone come in that wants to, but crack him
+over the skull once he gets inside."
+
+"Ay, ay, sir!"
+
+Maclean opened the door and stepped out leisurely upon the deck. Before
+him rose the captain's cabin, the officers' quarters, and the bridge
+above. Beyond that stretched the main deck, with the forecastle far
+forward. An officer paced the bridge; some two score sailors were
+grouped about the forecastle door drinking tea, and the rattle of knives
+and forks, the clink of glasses, and sounds of talk and laughter
+proceeding from the saloon astern sufficiently located the leaders of
+his enemies. Maclean thought hard for a moment, then pulling his cap
+over his eyes walked underneath the bridge and looked up. As he had
+expected, and ardently hoped, he perceived the muzzle of a machine-gun
+protruding from the very centre of the iron rampart. Thanking Providence
+for two years spent in the service of the New South Wales Naval Brigade
+in his younger days, he returned to the engine-room door, and after a
+cautious whisper stepped inside.
+
+"Sievers," said he, "the officers are all at dinner astern. Take this
+revolver, and when you hear me knock three times on the railing of the
+bridge, sneak out with all the men and rush the cabin. Most of the crew
+are forward. I'll look after them; there's a Nordenfeldt on the bridge."
+
+"Ay, ay, sir!"
+
+"Give me your hammer!"
+
+"Good luck to you, sir!"
+
+Maclean took the hammer, slipped it under his jacket, and once more
+sought the deck. A steward passed him at a run, and two stokers
+proceeding toward the engine-house saluted his uniform. He pulled his
+cap over his eyes, and began to climb the ladder. The _Nevski_ was
+swinging softly at her anchor, her nose pointing to the land. On the
+distant beach a small fire was burning, and at this the officer of the
+watch was gazing through his telescope. He was quite alone, and standing
+in a shaded corner of the bridge. "What sort of a watch can one man
+keep?" muttered Maclean who had served on an Australian gunboat. He
+stepped to the officer's side, seized the telescope in his left hand,
+and as the startled man turned, he dealt him a terrible blow on the nape
+of his neck with the hammer. The officer fell into his arms sighing out
+his breath. Maclean laid him gently on the floor, and relieved him of
+his revolver. Then he slid softly to the machine-gun, and uttered a low,
+irrepressible cry of joy to find that it was stored with cartridges and
+prepared for action. A moment later its muzzle commanded the deck before
+the forecastle. One of the sailors had just commenced a song. He had a
+fine tenor voice, and the others listened entranced. Maclean, however,
+rapped three times very loudly on the railing with his hammer, and the
+song ceased.
+
+Someone called to him in Russian, but he would not have answered even if
+he understood. His every sense was strained to listen. He counted
+twenty, the song commenced again. Thirty, forty. Then a wild scream
+resounded through the vessel.
+
+"Sievers is dealing with the watch on the after-hold," muttered Maclean.
+"Hurry!" he whispered. "Hurry! Sievers, hurry!"
+
+The sailors forward were now afoot, exclaiming aloud and glancing
+questioningly at one another. A great many more, too, poured out every
+second from the forecastle, made curious by the noise. Maclean grasped
+the crank firmly and gave them every scrap of his attention. There woke
+an increasing buzz of shouts and cries astern. It culminated presently
+in the crack of a revolver, a shriek of pain, and a wild British cheer.
+Then all over the din a loud, insistent whistle shrilled. The sailors
+forward rushed for their stacked arms, and formed in ranks with the
+speed of magic. A petty officer shouted a command, and down the deck
+they started at the double.
+
+"Halt!" Maclean shouted, and he turned the crank of the Nordenfeldt. The
+effect was horrible. A dozen fell at the first discharge. The rest
+halted, and after one dazed instant's wavering, threw down their arms,
+broke and fled for the cover of the forecastle. The air was filled with
+the sound of groans. The deck was like a shambles. Maclean watched three
+or four poor wounded creatures crawl off on their hands and knees for
+shelter and he shuddered violently.
+
+He was already sick to death of war. But the fight was not yet over. He
+heard footsteps on the ladder behind him, and turned just in time to
+escape a sweeping sword stroke. Next instant he was locked in a deadly
+struggle with the captain of the _Nevski_, a brave man, who, it seems,
+had refused to surrender, and had cut his way through all Sievers's men
+in the desperate resolve to retrieve the consequences of his own
+carelessness. Maclean, however, was a practised wrestler, and although
+lean almost as a lath, the muscles he possessed were as strong as steel
+bands. Even as they fell he writhed uppermost, and baffling with an
+active elbow the captain's last effort to transfix him, he dashed his
+adversary's head upon the boards. A second later he arose, breathless,
+but quite uninjured.
+
+Sievers was calling to him: "Maclean! Maclean! I say!"
+
+"Hallo, there!" he gasped back, hoarsely.
+
+"Look out for the captain. He escaped us!"
+
+"I've got him!" croaked Maclean, with a grim glance at his unconscious
+foe. "How about the rest?"
+
+"All sigarnio! What shall I do?"
+
+"Drive them forward to the foc'sle."
+
+Sievers obeyed, and very soon five splendidly upholstered, but
+shamefaced-looking gentlemen, three stewards, and four sailors were
+standing underneath the beacon light before the forecastle companion.
+Maclean noted that already many of the _Saigon's_ men carried swords and
+carbines. He watched the rest arm themselves with the _Nevski_ sailors'
+discarded weapons as they marched their prisoners along the deck. His
+breast began to swell with pride.
+
+"Any casualties?" he demanded.
+
+"Two of ours have crossed over," replied Sievers, "and some of us are
+hurt a bit. But we can't grumble. There are four Russian corpses aft,
+and I see you've bagged seven."
+
+"Damned pirates!" commented Maclean. "I've a mind to shoot the rest of
+them out of hand."
+
+"Just give the word, sir."
+
+"No," said Maclean, "we'll maroon them instead. Lower away all the
+boats but one, Sievers, and bring them under the bows. I can look after
+these dogs!"
+
+"Ay, ay, sir. But first three cheers for Captain Maclean, lads!"
+
+The cheers were given with hearty good-will, and then the men tramped
+off to carry out their new task.
+
+Maclean, whose face was still flushed from the compliment that had been
+paid him, leaned over the machine-gun and surveyed the prisoners.
+
+"Can any of you pirate scum speak English?" he demanded truculently.
+
+"I have that privilege, sir," replied a swart-faced lieutenant.
+
+"Then kindly inform your friends that at the first sign of any monkey
+trick I'll send you all to kingdom come."
+
+The officer complied presumably with this command, and when he had
+finished, addressed Maclean:
+
+"You cannot intend to maroon us, sir?" he cried. "The island yonder is
+totally uninhabited."
+
+"You're a liar!" retorted Maclean. "Fires don't light themselves. Look
+yonder."
+
+The officer choked back an oath. "Have a care what you are doing, sir,"
+he muttered in a strangled voice. "This will lead to a war between your
+country and mine."
+
+"I guess not--not even if I hanged the lot of you--you dirty pirates.
+But if it did, what then?"
+
+"You should see, sir."
+
+"And so would you--see that Englishmen can fight a durned sight better
+than the Japs. I guess you know how _they_ fight by this."
+
+"I have always heard that the English are generous foes, sir----"
+
+"None of your blarney," interrupted Maclean. "Short shrift to pirates,
+is an English motto. You sank our ship: we take yours. Fair exchange is
+no robbery. You should be thankful to get off with your skins."
+
+"At least permit us to take with us our personal belongings."
+
+"Not a match."
+
+"Some provisions?"
+
+"Not a biscuit."
+
+"Some arms, then, to defend ourselves against the natives, if we are
+attacked?"
+
+"Not a penknife."
+
+"Sir, you condemn us to death!"
+
+"Sir, we have but forestalled your intention in regard to us!"
+
+"As God hears me, sir----"
+
+"Shut up!" cried Maclean, "your voice hurts my ears."
+
+Nevertheless, when all was ready, Maclean commanded Sievers to stock the
+boats with water and provisions, and to throw some fifty swords and
+bayonets aboard. Then began the debarkation. Using the officer who could
+speak English as his mouthpiece, Maclean commanded the crew of the
+_Nevski_ to file out one by one from the forecastle, and slide down a
+rope over the vessel's bows into the waiting boats. They numbered one
+hundred and thirty-three all told, but not a man offered to resist, and
+within an hour the last boat had sheered off, carrying with its hale
+company the still unconscious bodies of the Russian captain and the
+officer of the watch. Maclean's next business was to bury the dead,
+which done, he searched the ship. He made two discoveries: He found in
+the captain's cabin a chest containing no less than fifteen thousand
+golden rubles; and locked away in one of the disused bathrooms astern,
+inhumanly disposed of in a tub, the silent form of Captain Brandon. But
+the tough little bulldog of an Englishman was by no means dead, and when
+some three days later the ghost of what had been the _Nevski_ steamed
+out of the bay of Tramoieu, he was already so far recovered from the
+terrible blow that had laid him low, but which had, nevertheless, failed
+to shatter his hard skull, as to be engaged in a confused but constant
+effort to remember. On the following morning he insisted upon getting
+up, and was helped afterward by a steward to the bridge.
+
+Maclean greeted him with a genial smile.
+
+"Well done, sir," he cried heartily. "Glad to see you up again and
+looking so fit. The old _Saigon_ has been as dull as a coffin-ship
+without you."
+
+Captain Brandon nodded, frowned, and glanced around him. A carpenter
+close by was busily at work painting _S.S. Saigon_ upon a row of
+virgin-white life buoys. The captain wondered and glanced up at the
+masts. They were just ordinary masts in the sense that they had no
+fighting tops, but they gleamed with wet paint. He frowned again, and,
+wondering more and more, looked forward. There was not the slightest
+trace of a cannon to be seen--but the deck in one place had a canvas
+covering. He began to crack his fingers, his old habit, but a moment
+later he abruptly turned and faced the mate.
+
+"Maclean," said he.
+
+The eyes of the two men met.
+
+"This is not the _Saigon_, Maclean," said Captain Brandon.
+
+"You'll see it in iron letters on her bows, sir, if you look."
+
+"Come into the chart-room."
+
+Maclean obeyed, chuckling under his breath.
+
+"Tell me how you did it," commanded the captain as he took a chair.
+
+"It was as easy as rolling off a log, sir," replied the first mate. "The
+blighters clapped us into the small after-hold, but totally forgot there
+was such a thing there as a propeller tunnel. We got into the stoke-hole
+and collared the engine-room while the Russians were at dinner. Then,
+while I covered the sailors forward with the machine-gun on the bridge,
+Sievers took the gold-laced crowd aft with a rush. The rest is not worth
+telling, for you know it. All that is to say, barring the fact that
+we're the richer by 15,000 rubles and triple-expansion engines, and the
+poorer by two of our crew the Russian captain killed."
+
+Captain Brandon drew a deep breath.
+
+"What course are we steering," he demanded.
+
+"Straight for Kobe, sir, to carry out our charter. We've every stick of
+the old cargo aboard--the pirates saw to that--also our books and
+papers. The guns are all at the bottom of the sea. We'll be a bit late,
+but we can easily rig up a yarn to explain."
+
+"But the Russians will talk."
+
+"No fear, sir: they'd be too ashamed to own up the truth; ay, and afraid
+as well, for what they did was piracy on the high seas--nothing less.
+You take my tip for it, sir, one of these days we'll hear that the
+_Nevski_ struck a reef."
+
+"We'll have to tell the owners, though--what will they say?"
+
+Maclean closed one eye. "The new _Saigon_ has triple-expansion engines,
+sir. If I know anything of Mr. Keppel, he'll be better pleased with a
+ship in the hand than a cause of action against the Russian Government."
+
+"But our own men?"
+
+"Why, sir, we have 7,000 rubles to share among them. They'll be made for
+life."
+
+"But I thought you said just now there were 15,000?"
+
+"So I did, sir; but there's only you and Sievers and myself know how
+much there is exactly: there was no call to shout it all over the ship.
+And I've figured it out this way: You, as captain, are entitled to the
+most, and you'll want all of four thousand to heal up the memory of that
+crack you got on your skull properly. That'll leave two for Sievers to
+do with as he likes, and two for me to buy Nellie--that's Mrs. Maclean
+that is to be--just the sort of house she's set her heart on these ages
+back. What do you say, sir?"
+
+"What do I say, Maclean?" cried Captain Brandon, his eyes big with
+excitement and surprise, too, perhaps. "Why, I say this: You are that
+rare thing, a sensible, honest man! Tip us your flipper!"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+ICE IN JUNE
+
+A Playwright's Story
+
+By FRED M. WHITE
+
+
+"THAT," said Ethel Marsh judicially, "is the least stupid remark you
+have made during our five weeks' acquaintance."
+
+"Which means that I am improving," John Chesney murmured. "There is hope
+even for me. You cannot possibly understand how greatly I
+appreciate----"
+
+The sentence trailed off incoherently as if the effort had been all too
+much. It was hard to live up to the mental brilliance of Ethel Marsh.
+She had had the advantage, too, of a couple of seasons in town, whilst
+Chesney was of the country palpably. She also had the advantage of being
+distractingly pretty.
+
+Really, she had hoped to make something of Chesney. It seemed to her
+that he was fitted for better things than tennis-playing and riding and
+the like. It seemed strange that he should prefer his little cottage to
+the broader delights of surveying mankind from China to Peru.
+
+The man had possibilities, too. For instance, he knew how to dress.
+There was an air about his flannels, a suggestion in his Norfolk suits.
+He had the knack of the tie so that it sat just right, and his boots....
+A clean-cut face, very tanned; deep, clear gray eyes, very steady. He
+was like a dog attached very much to a careless master. The thing had
+been going on for five weeks.
+
+Ethel was staying with the Frodshams. They were poor for their position,
+albeit given to hospitality--at a price. Most people call this kind of
+thing taking in paying guests. It was a subject delicately veiled.
+Ethel had come down for a fortnight, and she had stayed five weeks.
+Verily the education of John Chesney was a slow process. Chesney was a
+visitor in the neighborhood, too; he had a little furnished cottage just
+by the Goldney Park lodge gates, where a house-keeper did for him. As
+for the rest he was silent. He was a very silent man.
+
+It was too hot for tennis, so the two had wandered into the woods. A
+tiny trout stream bubbled by, the oak and beech ferns were wet with the
+spray of it. Between the trees lances of light fell, shafts of sunshine
+on Ethel's hair and face. It was at this point that Chesney made the
+original remark. It slipped from him as naturally as if he had been
+accustomed to that kind of thing.
+
+"I am afraid you got that from Mr. John Kennedy," Ethel said. "I am sure
+that you have seen Mr. Kennedy's comedy 'Flies in Ointment.' Confess
+now!"
+
+"Well, I have," Chesney confessed accordingly. "I--I saw it the night it
+was produced. On the whole it struck me as rather a feeble thing."
+
+"Oh, really? We are getting on, Mr. Chesney. Let me tell you that I
+think it is the cleverest modern comedy I have ever seen."
+
+"Yes! In that case you like the part of 'Dorothy Kent?'"
+
+Ethel's dainty color deepened slightly. She glanced suspiciously at the
+speaker. But he was gazing solidly, stolidly, into space--like a man who
+had just dined on beef. The idea was too preposterous. The idea of John
+Chesney chaffing her, chaffing anybody.
+
+"I thought perhaps you did," Chesney went on. "Mr. Kent is a bit of a
+butterfly, a good sort at the bottom, but decidedly of the species
+lepidopterae----"
+
+"Stop!" Ethel cried. "Where did you get that word from? Whence comes it
+in the vocabulary of a youth--a youth? Oh, you know what I mean."
+
+"I believe it is a general name for insects," Chesney said humbly. "Mrs.
+Kent is a good sort, but a little conceited. Apt to fancy herself, you
+know. Young widows of her type often do. She is tired of the artificial
+existence of town, and goes off into the country, where she leads the
+simple life. She meets a young man there, who, well, 'pon my word, is
+rather like me. He was a bit of an ass----"
+
+"He was nothing of the kind," Ethel cried indignantly. "He was splendid.
+And he made that woman love him, he made her acknowledge that she had
+met her match at last. And he turned out to be one of the most
+brilliant----"
+
+"My dear Miss Ethel, after all it was only a play. You remind me of
+'Mrs. Kent,' and you say that I remind you of the hero of the play
+who----"
+
+"I didn't, Mr. Chesney. I said nothing of the kind. It is unfair of
+you----"
+
+"When the likeness is plain enough," Chesney said stubbornly. "You are
+'Mrs. Kent,' and I am the hero of the comedy. Do you think that there is
+any possibility that some day you and--of course not yet, but----"
+
+Miss Marsh sat there questioning the evidence of her coral-pink ears.
+She knew that she was furiously angry because she felt so cool about it.
+She knew that the more furious one was, the more calm and self-contained
+the senses become. The man meant nothing, either--one could see that by
+the respectful expression of his eye. Still----
+
+"You are quite wrong," Ethel said. "You have altogether misunderstood
+the _motif_ of the play. I presume you know what a _motif_ is?"
+
+"I think so," Chesney said humbly. "It is a word they apply in music
+when you don't happen to understand what the composer--especially the
+modern composer--is driving at."
+
+"Oh, let it pass," Ethel said hopelessly. "You have misunderstood the
+gist of the play, then! 'Walter Severn' in the comedy is a man of
+singular points. He is a great author. Instead of being that woman's
+plaything, he is her merciless analyst. The great scene in the play
+comes when she finds this out. Now, you do not for a moment presume to
+put yourself on a level with 'Walter Severn,' do you?"
+
+Chesney was bound to admit the height of his audacity. His eyes were
+fixed humbly on his Minerva; he was Telemachus seated at the feet of the
+goddess. And even yet he did not seem really cognizant of the enormity
+of his offence. He saw the sunlight on that sweetly serious face, he saw
+the beams playing with the golden meshes of her hair. No doubt he was
+fully conscious of his own inferiority, for he did not speak again. It
+was for him to wait. The silence deepened; in the heart of the wood a
+blackbird was piping madly on a blackthorn.
+
+"Before you go away," Chesney hazarded, "I should very much like----"
+
+"But I am not going away, at least not yet. Besides, I have a purpose to
+serve. I am waiting until those impossible people leave Goldney Park. I
+understand that they have already gone, but on that head I am not sure.
+I want to go over the house. The late owner, Mr. Mainbrace, was a great
+friend of my family. Before he died he was so good as to express a wish
+that the heir to the property should come and see us and--but that part
+is altogether too ridiculous. And as an only daughter----"
+
+"I see," Chesney said reflectively. "The heir and yourself. It sounds
+ridiculous. Now, if you had been in the least like the romantic type of
+young woman, perhaps----"
+
+"How do you know that I am not? Am I like Byron's woman: 'Seek roses in
+December, ice in June'? Well, perhaps you are right. After all, one
+doesn't find ice in June. However, the heir to the Goldney Park estate
+and myself never met. He let the place to those awful Gosway people for
+three years and went abroad. There was not even the suspicion of a
+romance. But I am curious to see the house, all the same."
+
+"Nothing easier, Miss Marsh. Let us go and see it after luncheon. The
+Gosways have gone, you may take my word for that, and only a caretaker
+is in possession. Will you come with me this afternoon?"
+
+The prospect was not displeasing. Miss Marsh poised it in her mind for a
+few moments. There was Chesney's education to be thought of as well. On
+the whole, she decided that there might be less pleasant ways of
+spending a hot August afternoon.
+
+"I think I'll come," she said. "I want to see the old furniture and the
+pictures. I love old furniture. Perhaps if the heir to the property had
+gone on his knees whilst I was seated on a priceless Chippendale settee,
+I might----"
+
+"You might, but I don't think you would," Chesney interrupted. "Whatever
+your faults may be I am sure you are not mercenary."
+
+"Really! How good of you! The thing that we are apt to call
+depravity----"
+
+"Is often another name for the promptings of poor human nature."
+
+Miss Marsh turned and stared at the speaker. Really, his education was
+progressing at a most amazing rate. Without the least sign of mental
+distress he had delivered himself of an epigram. There was quite a
+flavor of Piccadilly about it. And Chesney did not appear in the least
+conscious of his achievement. Ethel rose and shook out the folds of her
+dainty muslin dress.
+
+"Isn't it getting late?" she asked. "I'm sure it is lunch time. You can
+walk as far as the gate with me, and I will meet you here at three
+o'clock."
+
+She passed thoughtfully across the lawn to the house, her pretty brows
+knitted in a thoughtful frown. Was she giving her pupil too much
+latitude? Certainly he had begun to show symptoms of an audacious
+presumption, which in the earlier days had been conspicuous by its
+absence. Whereupon Miss Marsh sighed three times without being in the
+least aware of the painful fact.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"This," said Chesney, "is the Norman Tower, built by John Mainbrace, who
+was the original founder of the family. The first two trees in the
+avenue of oaks that leads up to the house were planted by Queen
+Elizabeth. She also slept on several occasions in the house; indeed, the
+bedroom she occupied is intact to this day. The Virgin Queen seemed to
+pass most of her time, apart from affairs of state, in occupying
+bedrooms, so that the descendants of her courtiers might be able to
+boast about it afterward. Those who could not give the royal lady a
+shakedown had special bedrooms fitted up and lied about them. It was an
+innocent deception."
+
+Miss Marsh eyed her pupil distrustfully. The educational progress was
+flattering, and at the same time a little disturbing. She had never seen
+Chesney in this gay and frivolous, not to say excited, mood before. The
+man was positively glib. There were distinct flashes of wit in his
+discourse, too. And where did he get so close and intimate a knowledge
+of the old house from?
+
+He knew every nook and corner. He took her through the grand old park
+where the herd of fallow deer were grazing; he showed her the Dutch and
+Italian gardens; he knew even the history of the sundial on the terrace.
+And yet they had not been within the house, though the great hall door
+stood hospitably open. They moved at length out of the glare of the
+sunshine into the grateful shadows. Glint of armor and gleam of canvas
+were all there. Ethel walked along in an ecstasy of quiet enjoyment.
+Rumor had not lied as to the artistic beauties of Goldney Park. The
+Mainbraces must have been a tasteful family. They had it all here, from
+the oaken carvings of the wandering monks down through Grinling Gibbons
+and Pugin, and away to Chippendale and Adam, and other masters of the
+Georgian era. They came at length to the chamber sacred to the Virgin
+Queen; they contemplated the glorious view from the window in silent
+appreciation tinged with rapture.
+
+"It's exquisite," Ethel said in a low voice. "If this were my house I
+should be very much tempted to commit an act of sacrilege. I should want
+this for my own room. I'm afraid I could not resist such an
+opportunity."
+
+"Easily done," said Chesney. "No trouble to discover from the family
+archives that a mistake had been made, and that Elizabeth of blessed
+memory had not slept in this room. Being strong-minded she preferred a
+north aspect, and this is due south. You would get a reputation for
+sound historical knowledge as well."
+
+Certainly the education was progressing. But Ethel let it pass. She was
+leaning out of the latticed windows with the creamy roses about her
+hair; she was falling unconsciously under the glamour of the place.
+
+"It is exquisite," she sighed. "If this were only mine!"
+
+"Well, it is not too late. The heir will be here before long, probably.
+You have only to introduce the name of Mr. Mainbrace and say who you
+are, and then----"
+
+"Oh, no. If I happened to be in love with a man--what am I saying? Of
+course, no girl who respects herself could possibly marry a man for the
+sake of his position. Even 'Mrs. Dorothy Kent,' to whom you compared me
+this morning, was above that kind of thing. She married the man she
+loved after all, you know. But I forget--you did not think much of the
+comedy."
+
+"I didn't. I thought it was vague and incomplete. I am certain of it
+now. This is the real thing; the other was merely artificial. And when
+the hero brought 'Dorothy Kent' to the home of his ancestors he already
+knew that she loved him. And I am glad to know that you would never
+marry a man like that because it gives me courage----"
+
+"Gives you courage! Whatever for?"
+
+"Why, to make a confession. You laughed at me just now when I presumed
+to criticize your favorite modern comedy. As a matter of fact, I have
+every right to criticize it. You see, I happen to be the author. I am
+'John Kennedy'! I have been writing for the stage, or trying to write
+for the stage, for years. I got my new idea from that old wish of my
+uncle's that you and I should come together. It struck me as a pretty
+suggestion for a comedy."
+
+"Stop, stop," Ethel cried. "One thing at a time, if you please.
+Positively you overwhelm me with surprise. In one breath you tell me you
+are 'John Kennedy,' and then, without giving a poor girl a chance, you
+say you are the owner of Goldney Park."
+
+"But I didn't," Chesney protested. "I never said anything of the kind."
+
+"No, but you inferred it. You say you got the idea from your uncle--I
+mean the suggestion that you and I--oh, I really cannot say it."
+
+"I'm afraid I'm but a poor dramatist after all," Chesney said lamely. "I
+intended to keep that confession till after I had--but no matter. At any
+rate, there is no getting away from the fact that my pen name is 'John
+Kennedy.'"
+
+"And you wrote 'Flies in Ointment'? And you have been laughing at me all
+this time? You were amused because I took you for a simple countryman,
+you whom men call the Sheridan of to-day! After all the pains I took
+with your education."
+
+Ethel's voice rose hysterically. Points of flame stood out from the
+level of her memory of the past five weeks and scorched her. How this
+man must have been amused, how consumedly he must have laughed at her!
+And she had never guessed it, never once had she had an inkling of the
+truth.
+
+"You have behaved disgracefully, cruelly," she said unsteadily.
+
+"I don't think so," Chesney said coolly. "After all is said and done, we
+were both posing, you know. You were playing 'Mrs. Kent' to my hero. It
+seemed a pity to disturb so pleasant a pastoral. And no harm has been
+done."
+
+Ethel was not quite so sure of that. But then for the nonce she was
+regarding the matter from a strictly personal point of view.
+
+"I hardly think you were playing the game," she said.
+
+"Why not? I come down here where nobody knows me. It is my whim to keep
+quiet the fact that Goldney Park belongs to me. As to my dramatic
+tastes, they don't concern anybody but myself. I take a cottage down
+here until those tenants of mine are ready to go. They are such utter
+bounders that I have no desire to disclose my identity to them. And so
+it falls about that I meet you. Then I recollect all that my uncle has
+said about you. I cultivate your acquaintance. It wasn't my fault that
+you took me for a countryman with no idea beyond riding a horse and
+shooting a pheasant. Your patronage was very pretty and pleasing, and I
+am one of those men who always laugh or cry inside. It is perhaps a
+misfortune that I can always joke with a grave face. But don't forget
+that the man who laughs inside is also the man who bleeds inside, and
+these feel the worst. Come, Ethel, you are not going to be angry because
+you have lost the game playing with your own weapons."
+
+The education was finished, the schoolmaster was abroad--very much
+abroad. In his cool, masterful way Chesney had taken matters into his
+own hands. He was none the less handsome because he looked so stern, so
+sure of his ground.
+
+"You are a man and I am a woman," she faltered.
+
+"Of course. How could the comedy proceed otherwise? Now where shall we
+move these Elizabethan relics? After what you said just now they could
+not possibly remain here. Among the family archives I dare say----"
+
+Chesney paused; he was conscious of the fact that two large diamond
+drops were stealing down Ethel's cheeks. It seemed the most natural
+thing in the world for him to cross over and take her hands in his.
+
+"My dear child, what have I said to pain you," he said. "I am truly
+sorry."
+
+"You--you take too much for granted," Ethel sobbed. "You make me feel so
+small and silly. And you have no right to assume that I--I could care
+for anybody simply because he happens to possess a p--p--place like
+Goldney Park."
+
+"But, my darling, I didn't. I was delighted when you said just now that
+you would never marry a man you did not care for, even if he could give
+you Chippendale for breakfast, so to speak. I watched your face then. I
+am sure that you were speaking from the bottom of your heart. I have
+been watching you for the last five weeks, my sweetheart. And they have
+been the happiest weeks in my life.
+
+"Laughing at me, I suppose! It's all the same if you do laugh inside."
+
+"No, I don't think I laughed," Chesney said thoughtfully. "I only know
+that I have been very much charmed. And besides, see how useful it has
+been to me to be in a position to hear all the weak points in my
+literary armor. When I come to write my next comedy, it will be far in
+advance of 'Flies in Ointment.' I have learned so much of human nature,
+you see."
+
+Ethel winked the tears from her lids; her eyes were all the brighter for
+the passing shower, like a sky in April, Chesney thought. A smile was on
+her face, her lips were parted. As a lover Chesney was charming. She
+wondered how she was playing her part. But she need not have had any
+anxiety. There was nothing wanting in the eyes of the man opposite, and
+his face said so.
+
+"You are going to put me into it?" she asked.
+
+"Why, of course. There is no other woman so far as I can see. Why are
+you pulling my roses to pieces like that? Do you know that that rose
+tree was planted a hundred years ago by Thomas a Becket after the battle
+of Agincourt? My dear, I am so happy that I could talk nonsense all day.
+And I say, Ethel----"
+
+The girl broke off one of the creamy roses and handed it shyly to
+Chesney.
+
+"_Vae victis_," she said with a flushing smile. "It is yours. You have
+conquered."
+
+"Yes, but I want all the fruits of victory. I ask for a hand and you
+give me--a rose. Am I not going to have the hand as well as the rose,
+dear?"
+
+He had the hand and the rose and the slender waist; he drew her toward
+him in his strong, masterful way, and his lips lay on hers in a
+lingering pressure. It was a long time before the girl looked up; then
+her eyes were full of shy happiness.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+THE DITTY-BOX
+
+A Pawnbroker's Story
+
+By OWEN OLIVER
+
+
+IN THE course of our dealings over the curiosities that my brother sent
+home from Burma, Mr. Levy and I became very good friends. When we had
+finished one of our deals we generally had a chat in the quaint little
+room behind his queer little shop in the old-world alley frequented by
+sailormen. On one of these occasions he mentioned that the cigar which
+he had given me was the brand which he always smoked; and the quality of
+the cigar suggested opulence.
+
+"If you can afford cigars like this," I remarked, "you must make some
+pretty good bargains with your curiosities!"
+
+"Good and bad," he said. "That's the way in business--in life, if you
+come to that!" He was a bit of a philosopher.
+
+"You make more good bargains than bad ones, I'll be bound," I asserted.
+
+"Yes," he agreed; "but it isn't so much that. The bad aren't very bad,
+as a rule; and some of the good are very good. That's where I get my
+profit."
+
+"What was the best bargain you ever made?" I asked.
+
+He filled his glass and pushed the decanter toward me.
+
+"The best bargain I ever made," he said, "was over a ditty-box."
+
+I helped myself to a little whiskey.
+
+"A ditty-box? I thought they were ordinary sailors' chests that they
+keep their clothes in?"
+
+"Not exactly chests," he corrected. "They're smallish boxes that they
+keep their needles and thread in, and their money, and anything else
+that they set store by--their letters or their sweethearts' photos, or
+their wives'--or other people's! There's no profit in them, and I don't
+deal in them in a general way. I got my gain out of this one in a
+roundabout fashion; but it was handsome. If you've got half an hour to
+spare I'll tell you about it."
+
+This was his story:
+
+It was eight years ago, and I'd had Isaac for seven years, and concluded
+that he was to be trusted. So I took it into my head to have a
+fortnight's holiday and leave him in charge of the shop. Everything was
+in order when I came back, and the books balanced to a penny. Business
+had been pretty good, he told me, but nothing out of the ordinary.
+
+"Unless," he said, "I've stumbled on a good thing by accident. It's a
+ditty-box; rather a superior one, and a good bit bigger than usual;
+almost a chest; brass bound and a nice bit of poker-work on it; a girl's
+head. I've put it in your bedroom."
+
+"Ah!" I said. "Ah-h!" He wouldn't make this fuss over a bit of
+poker-work, I knew.
+
+"The mate of the _Saucy Jane_ brought it here," he went on. "It belonged
+to the captain. George Markby, the name was; and that's poker-work on
+it, too. He sickened of a fever over at Rotterdam and died at sea; and
+they sold off his things to send the money to his widow. I gave a
+sovereign for it. There's a tray inside with a lock-up till. Keys all
+complete. Ought to fetch thirty-five shillings."
+
+"As much as that?" I said. I knew there must be a good deal more in it
+than appeared, but it's no use hurrying Isaac. He likes to tell things
+his own way.
+
+"I thought it might suit you to lock up your books and papers. That was
+all--till the day before yesterday. Then a ginger-haired sailor came in.
+North countryman. Wanted a ditty-box, he said. I told him we weren't
+marine outfitters, and he'd better try Barnard's, round the corner. He
+said he didn't want the ordinary sort, but something out of the common;
+extra large size; brass-bound; tray with a lock-up till. 'Mind if it
+was a trifle old?' I asked. 'Carved or cut about a bit? You know how
+some chaps use their knives on them, just to pass the time.' He said he
+didn't care for things that were hacked about, but he wouldn't object to
+a bit of poker-work on it. I told him I'd look through the warehouse and
+let him know in the morning, and he went. Byles, the dock policeman, was
+standing outside. I went and asked him who the chap was. He said he was
+cook on the _Anne Traylor_, just come in, and he believed he'd done
+time. If he hadn't I'll swear he ought to have, from the look of him.
+
+"About half an hour afterward in walks an oldish chap with a stoop and a
+gray goat's beard. He wanted a ditty-box, too; something extra large and
+old, and strong, and a tray with a lock-up till in it. He was a fireman
+on the _Anne Traylor_, I found; a shifty sort of chap that couldn't look
+you in the face. He offered to go to a couple of pounds for the right
+thing. I told him I'd look through our stuff and let him know if we had
+one of the sort.
+
+"Just as I was closing, a smart young fellow swaggered in. He was second
+mate of the _Anne Traylor_, and he'd heard of the death of her old
+captain on the _Saucy Jane_, and that we'd bought some of his effects,
+and he'd like to have a memento; just a matter of sentiment, he
+explained. I asked him what form the sentiment took, and he said a
+ditty-box; and if we had the one that belonged to the old man he'd give
+two pounds five for it. I put him off like the others.
+
+"Two Swedish sailors came in after the shutters were up, while the door
+was still open. They wanted a ditty-box of the identical description. I
+told them I'd look for it, same as I told the rest. You always brought
+me up not to close too soon with a customer who was keen on a thing."
+
+"Very good, Isaac," I said. "Very good! Go on!"
+
+"In the evening I made inquiries at the 'Duke of Wellington,' where the
+dock policemen go, and the two-penny-halfpenny money lenders and such;
+and old Mrs. Higgins, the landlady, knows more about the crews that come
+here than anyone. Lots of them knew old Markby, it seemed; a very
+respectable old chap and a favorite with his men, but a bit of a miser,
+and a trifle queer in his ways. He boasted that he didn't believe in
+banks and such things, and he'd got his money hidden where even his wife
+didn't know. And the conclusion I've come to is that those chaps believe
+it's in the ditty-box, and they mean to have it."
+
+"Ah!" I said. "We'll have something to say to that, Isaac! You told them
+we hadn't got it, of course."
+
+"Of course," he said; "and of course they didn't believe me! I had a
+rare bother with the ginger-haired man yesterday morning, and had to
+send the boy for a policeman before he'd go. And in the afternoon the
+Swedes tried to sneak through the shop into the warehouse, but I jumped
+out of the shop parlor and hustled them off. I've put longer screws in
+the bars to the windows; but I'd be easier if you'd let me sleep here."
+
+Isaac always thought that he could look after me better than I could
+look after myself!
+
+"I'm all right, Isaac," I said; "but we'll have a look at the box before
+you go. It might be worth a bit more if it had a secret drawer, eh?"
+
+When the shop was closed we went upstairs and laid the box on my bed,
+and turned it over and tapped it, and put a lamp inside, and examined
+every inch. We couldn't find a trace of a secret drawer, or anything
+scratched on it to say where the old captain had hidden his long
+stocking. So I concluded that the talk was the usual nonsense, and I
+daresay I'd have sold it and thought no more about it, if the
+goat's-beard man hadn't come in the first thing the next morning. He
+didn't beat about the bush, but said he wanted Captain Markby's ditty-box
+that we'd bought, and he'd give two pounds ten for it. I told him I
+wished I'd got it to sell, since he was so generous, but ditty-boxes
+weren't in my line.
+
+The others that Isaac had spoken of came in too. I was tempted to sell
+it to the mate for three pounds, but I couldn't quite make up my mind,
+and told him to come again the next morning. That very night the two
+Swedes broke into the shop. The police caught them. They're always on
+the look-out round my place, knowing that it's a fiver to them on the
+quiet if they catch anyone breaking in. The Swedes got three months
+apiece.
+
+That made up my mind. I showed the mate an ordinary box when he called,
+and he went off grumbling that it was nothing like the one he'd asked
+about, and I'd played the fool with him. I never saw him again, or the
+Swedes either; but the old man and the ginger-headed chap were always
+looking in the window. They seemed to have chummed up. I had an
+anonymous letter that I put down to them--written in red ink that I
+suppose they meant me to take for blood. It warned me against keeping "a
+ditty-box that others have a better claim to, and is like to cost you
+dear." D-e-r-e they spelt it, and one t in ditty.
+
+Two days later they called to ask if the box had come my way yet. "Yes,"
+I said, "and I'm going to keep it. It's got two blackguards three
+months, and it will get two others a good hiding if they don't mind.
+Clear out, and don't come here again." They didn't, but we often saw
+them hanging round, and when I went out one of them generally followed
+me. I didn't worry about that, for I could have settled the two of them
+easily if I wasn't taken unaware. I was always a bit obstinate, and I'd
+sooner have chopped the chest up for firewood than have been bullied
+into letting them have it; but I was sorry that I hadn't taken the
+mate's offer, for Isaac and I had measured it all over inside and out,
+and calculated that there wasn't space anywhere for a secret drawer.
+
+I'd had it about three months; and then a young girl, about twenty, came
+into the shop one afternoon, when Isaac was at tea. She was a pale slip
+of a young thing, and her clothes looked as if they'd been worn all
+through the summer, and it was autumn then; and she hesitated as if she
+was half afraid of me.
+
+"Well, little missie," I said. "What is it?" I spoke to her with the
+smooth side of my tongue uppermost, as a big, rough chap generally does
+to a girl of that sort, if there's anything decent about him.
+
+"My father was Captain Markby," she said, and I liked the way she spoke.
+"He died at sea, and they sold his things here. I want to find something
+of his, and I thought that perhaps you might have bought it?"
+
+I knew directly what she meant, but I looked very innocent.
+
+"If it was anything in the curiosity line, I might have," I answered.
+"You see the sort of things I deal in." I waved my hand round the place.
+
+"No," she said. "It wasn't a curiosity. It was an oak chest with brass
+corners. I think they call it a ditty-box."
+
+"A ditty-box," I said. "They're too common to be curious. Was there
+anything special about it?"
+
+"It had a tray in it, and he'd drawn a head on it with a red-hot iron; a
+girl's head. He meant it for me; but I don't expect you'd recognize me
+by it. I hope not!" She smiled faintly.
+
+"I hope not," I agreed, "judging from what I've seen of such figures." I
+laughed, and she laughed a little, too. "And you want to buy it, if you
+can find it?"
+
+"Ye-es," she said. "At least--I haven't very much money; but I would pay
+you as soon as I could, if--I suppose you wouldn't be so kind--so very
+kind--as to agree to that?"
+
+"Umph!" I said. "I don't generally give credit; but as it was your
+father's, I might stretch a point for once if I should find that I have
+it."
+
+"Oh, _thank_ you!" she said with a flush. "It is a kindness that I have
+no right to expect. _Thank_ you!"
+
+"I'll have a look round among my things," I promised. "I haven't bought
+such a box myself; but my assistant might have; or I might be able to
+find it for you in some of the shops round here. I'll see what I can
+do." I meant to let her have it, but I wanted to find out more about it
+first.
+
+"How kind you are!" she cried. "I--you see I want it very particularly,
+Mr. Levy."
+
+"Being associated with your father," I said, "naturally you would.
+Perhaps if I don't come across the ditty-box, I might find something
+else of his that would do, eh?"
+
+"No-o," she said. "It wouldn't. You see we--my mother and I--aren't well
+off. We knew that father had some money, but we couldn't find it, or
+learn anything about it; and we think it must be in the box, or a paper
+telling us about it."
+
+I shook my head.
+
+"There's no paper in any box that I have," I assured her. "We always go
+through the things that we buy very carefully."
+
+"You wouldn't find it," she explained eagerly. "There was a secret
+place. He showed it to me when I was a little girl. I don't expect he
+thought I would remember, but I did. You take off the brass corners on
+top, and then the lower part of the lid drops out. The lid's in two
+pieces and you could put papers--or bank notes--in between."
+
+I couldn't help smiling.
+
+"Aren't you rather foolish to tell me?" I suggested.
+
+She looked at me appealingly.
+
+"Am I?" she asked.
+
+"No," I said. "As it happens, you aren't; but I wouldn't tell anyone
+else, if I were you. They _might_ think they'd like those bank notes for
+themselves. _I_ might if--well, if you weren't a good deal younger and
+more in need of them than I am."
+
+"I think you are a very good and kind man, Mr. Levy," she said solemnly.
+
+"I'm afraid not, little missie," I told her; "but there are some a good
+deal worse; and some of them have an inkling of what may be in that box,
+if I'm not mistaken. They've been inquiring after it."
+
+"Oh!" She started. "There were two horrid men who seemed to be watching
+me when I came in here. I half thought I remembered one of them: an old
+man with a stoop. I believe I must have seen him aboard my father's
+ship. I felt rather nervous--because it's such a dark alley." She looked
+anxiously at the door.
+
+"It is a bit dark," I agreed. "Would you feel safer if I saw you to a
+main thoroughfare?"
+
+"I should feel _quite_ safe then," she declared, and she smiled like a
+child does. "I really don't know _how_ to thank you enough for your
+goodness to me."
+
+I called Isaac to look after the shop, and put on my hat and walked off
+with her. She was a bright little creature to talk to, and when she was
+excited she looked very pretty. I found that she was going to walk all
+the way, so I said that I would see her right to her road. She seemed
+pleased to have my company, and jabbered nineteen to the dozen. It was
+such a change to have someone to talk to, she said, because they had
+moved and knew nobody here. She told me that she tried to earn money by
+teaching music and by painting. I said that I was badly in want of a few
+little sketches, and she promised to bring some for me to look at.
+
+"I would ask you to accept them," she said, with a flush, "if we weren't
+so poor."
+
+"If it weren't for that," I said, "I should ask you to have some tea
+before I leave you, without fear that you would be too proud to accept.
+It would be a pleasure to me. Will you?" We were just outside a good
+place, and I stopped.
+
+"It is very kind of you," she said, "but I don't think--I suppose I _am_
+foolishly proud." She laughed an uneasy laugh.
+
+"You mustn't let your pride spoil my pleasure," I told her, and grinned
+at myself for talking like a book. "You can repay me when you find your
+fortune, if you insist; but I hope you won't."
+
+She looked up at me quickly.
+
+"No," she said. "I couldn't treat your kindness like that. Thank you,
+Mr. Levy."
+
+So we went in, and I ordered tea and chicken and cakes. The poor little
+thing was positively hungry, I could see; and when she mentioned her
+mother the tears came into her eyes. I understood what she was thinking,
+and I had some meat patties put up in a package. When I left her at the
+corner of her road I put the package into her hands, and boarded a 'bus
+with a run before she had time to object. She shook her head at me when
+I was on top of the 'bus; but when I took off my hat she waved her hand,
+and laughed as if she was a great mind to cry. It's hard for an old
+woman and a young girl when they're left like that.
+
+I had the corners of that ditty-box off as soon as Isaac had gone for
+the night. The lid was double, as she had said. Between the two boards I
+found a portrait of an elderly woman--her mother, no doubt--and three
+photos of herself; two in short frocks and one with her hair in a plait
+when she was about seventeen. She looked stouter and jollier then, poor
+girl. There was one other thing: a half sheet of note-paper. "Memo in
+case of accident. Money up chimney in best bedroom. Geo. Markby, sixth
+of April, 1897."
+
+I started to change my clothes to go there and tell them; but just as I
+had taken off my waistcoat I altered my mind. The money wouldn't be in
+the rooms where they lived then, but in their old house; and that was
+probably occupied by someone else now, and even if the money was still
+there she would not be able to get it. It was no use raising her hopes,
+just to disappoint her. I would try to get the money before I spoke, I
+decided.
+
+She came at eleven the next morning, and timidly produced a few little
+sketches, mostly copies of things. I'd like to say that they were good,
+but I can't. It was just schoolgirl painting, nothing else. She wanted
+to give me some, but I wouldn't hear of that. She had sold a few for
+eighteenpence apiece, she said. I said that I wanted four to frame for
+ships' cabins, and I'd give twelve-and-six for them, and that would
+leave me a fair margin. I was afraid to offer more, for fear she would
+suspect me; and as it was she was dubious.
+
+"You're sure you _will_ get a profit?" she asked.
+
+"You ask anyone round here about me," I said. "They'll soon tell you
+that I look out sharp for that. They'll look very nice when they're
+framed; and I make a good bit out of the frames, you see. Now about this
+ditty-box. I've got on the track of one that might turn out right; but
+there's a difficulty that I'd like to put to you. Suppose that there's
+no money in it, only a clue to where your father hid it. Wouldn't that
+be likely to be somewhere where you can't get at it? On board his ship,
+for example? Or in your old house?
+
+"If it's in the house," she said, "I could get in. At least it was empty
+a week ago. Mother heard from an old neighbor. But perhaps it would be
+better to get someone else to go, and say that they wanted to look at
+the house?" She glanced at me doubtfully.
+
+"You mean me?" She nodded slowly. "You are afraid that I might keep some
+of it?"
+
+She stared at me in sheer amazement.
+
+"Why, of course not!" she cried. "I was only thinking that it was a long
+way to ask you to go; and that I must not impose on your kindness."
+
+"Give me the address," I said, "in case I should want it any time."
+
+She gave me an address in Andeville. Then I changed the subject. I
+walked part of the way home with her. Then I had my dinner and went off
+to Andeville.
+
+It was about an hour by train. By the time that I had found the agent
+and got the key it was growing dusk. I was some time arguing with him,
+because he wanted to send a man with me to lock up afterward. "We've had
+tramps get in several times," he explained, "and they've done a lot of
+damage; torn up the flooring and such senseless mischief." It occurred
+to me directly that the tramps were some of the men who had come after
+the ditty-box.
+
+I persuaded him at last that I'd lock up all right and he let me go
+alone. I soon spotted what would be the best bedroom. I fumbled up the
+chimney and lit a match or two, and found a heavy canvas bag and a
+smaller one that rustled like notes. I was just looking for the last
+time when I heard soft steps behind me. I glanced round and saw two men
+before the match flickered out. The light caught the face of the
+foremost. It was the old man with the goat's beard. Then I was struck on
+the head and knocked senseless.
+
+It was about six when I came to and lit another match and looked at my
+watch. The bags were gone, of course. I never saw them again or the two
+men. It was as well for them I didn't!
+
+It was no use telling the agent or anybody. I never thought about that,
+only what I was to do about the girl and her mother. I didn't think very
+much about the mother, if you come to that. It seemed to me that I'd
+made a mess of it and lost their money, and I couldn't bear to think of
+the girl's disappointment. What upset me most was that I knew she'd
+believe every word of my story, and never dream that I'd taken the money
+myself, as some people would. She was such a trusting little thing,
+and--well, I may as well own up that I liked her. If I hadn't been
+fifteen years older than she was, and felt sure that she'd never look at
+a Jew--and a much rougher chap then than I am now--I should have had
+serious thoughts of courting her. And so--well, I knew that a hundred
+pounds was what they hoped for; and it didn't make very much odds to me.
+I took out the paper that night and put in twenty five-pound notes, and
+did it up again. A bit of folly that you wouldn't have suspected me of,
+eh? Then you think me a bigger fool than most people do! At the same
+time, it was only fair and honest. I'd had her money and lost it, you
+see.
+
+I was going to take the chest to their lodgings in a cab the next
+morning, but she called in early to ask if I had found it. I had an
+unhappy sort of feeling when I saw her come smiling into the shop,
+thinking that she wouldn't need to come any more. It's queer how a man
+feels over a little slip of a girl when he's knocked about all over the
+world and known hundreds of women and thought nothing of them!
+
+I'd carried it down into this room, and I took her in and showed it.
+Her delight was pretty to see. She fidgeted about at my elbow like a
+child while I was taking the corners off; and when she saw the notes she
+danced and clapped her hands; and when I gave them to her she sat down
+and hugged them and laughed and cried.
+
+"If you knew how poor we've been!" she said, wiping her eyes. "How
+lonely and worried and miserable! Your kindness has been the only nice
+thing ever since father died. Twenty times five! That's a hundred.
+They're real notes aren't they? I haven't seen one for ages."
+
+"They're real enough," I told her. "I'll give you gold for them, if you
+like."
+
+"I'd rather have their very selves," she said with a laugh. She studied
+one carefully; and suddenly she dropped them with a cry and sprang to
+her feet. Her face had gone white.
+
+"Mr. Levy!" she cried. "Oh, Mr. Levy! _You put them there!_"
+
+I told her a lie right out; and I'm not ashamed of it. I was a hard man
+of business, I said; and a Jew; and she was a silly sentimental child,
+or she'd never take such an idea into her head; and she needn't suppose
+I kept my shop for charity, and she'd know better when she was older.
+She heard me out. Then she put her hand on my shoulder.
+
+"Dear kind friend," she said, "father died in May this year. The note
+that I looked at was dated in June!" And I stood and stared at her like
+a fool. I suppose I looked a bit cut up, for she stroked my arm gently.
+
+"You dear, good fellow!" she said. She seemed to have grown from a child
+into a woman in a few minutes. "I can't take them, but it will help me
+to be a better girl, to have known someone like you!"
+
+"Like me!" I said, and laughed. "I'm just--just a rough, money-grubbing
+Jew. That's all I am."
+
+She shook her head like mad.
+
+"You may say what you like," she told me; "but you can't alter what I
+think. You're good--good--good!"
+
+Then I told her just what had happened.
+
+"So, you see, you owe me nothing," I wound up.
+
+She wiped her eyes and took hold of me by the sleeve.
+
+"I will tell you what I owe you," she said. "Food when I was hungry;
+kindness when I was wretched; your time, your care--yes, and the risk of
+your life. If you had had your way you would have given me all that
+money. You--Mr. Levy, you say that it is just a matter of business. What
+profit did you expect to make?"
+
+"I expected--to make you happy," I said; and she looked up at me
+suddenly; and I saw what I saw. "Little girl!" I cried. "May I try? In
+another way."
+
+I held out my arms, and she dropped into them.
+
+"My profits!" I said.
+
+"Oh!" she cried. "I hope so. I will try--try--try!"
+
+Mr. Levy offered me a fresh cigar and took another himself.
+
+"It's a class of profit that's difficult to estimate," he remarked. "I
+had a difficulty with Isaac over the matter. You see he has 5 per cent.
+over the business that he introduces, but that was only meant for small
+transactions, I argued. He argued that there were no profits at all; not
+meaning any disrespect to her, but holding that there was no money in
+it; or, if there was, it was a loss because I'd have to keep her, and
+nobody knew how a wife would turn out. She held much the same, except
+that she was sure she was going to turn out good; but she thought I
+ought to find some plan of doing something for Isaac. We settled it that
+way. He wanted to get married, so I gave him a rise and let them have
+the rooms over the shop to live in; and there they are now."
+
+"And how do you reckon the profits yourself?" I asked.
+
+"Well," he said "in these last eight years I've cleared forty thousand
+pounds, though you wouldn't think it in this little shop. I reckon that
+I cleared a good bit more over that ditty-box. Come round to my house
+one evening, and I'll introduce you to her."
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+THE YELLOW CAT
+
+An Idyll of the Summer
+
+By ANNIE E.P. SEARING
+
+
+THE minister of Blue Mountain Church, and the minister's wife, were
+enjoying their first autumn fire, and the presence of the cat on the
+hearth between them.
+
+"He came home this afternoon," the minister's wife was saying, "while I
+was picking those last peppers in the garden, and he jumped on my
+shoulder and purred against my ear as unconcernedly as if he'd only been
+for a stroll in the lower pasture, instead of gone for three months--the
+little wretch!"
+
+"It does seem extraordinary"--the minister unbent his long legs and
+recrossed them carefully, in order to remove his foot from the way of
+the tawny back where it stretched out in blissful elongation--"very
+extraordinary, that an animal could lead that sort of double life,
+disappearing completely when summer comes and returning promptly with
+the fall. I daresay it's a reversion to the old hunting instinct. No
+doubt we could find him if we knew how to trail him on the mountains."
+
+"The strangest thing about it is that this year and last he came back
+fat and sleek--always before, you know, he has been so gaunt and starved
+looking in the fall." She leaned over and stroked the cat under his
+chin; he purred deeply in response, and looked up into her eyes, his own
+like wells of unfathomed speech. "I have an eerie feeling," she said,
+"that if he could talk he'd have great things to tell."
+
+The minister laughed, and puffed away at his corncob pipe. "Tales of the
+chase, my dear, of hecatombs of field-mice and squirrels!"
+
+But she shook her head. "Not this summer--that cat has spent these last
+two summers with human beings who have treated him as a kind of
+fetich--just as we do!" As she rubbed his ear she murmured regretfully:
+"To think of all you've heard and seen and done, and you can't tell us
+one thing!"
+
+The Yellow Cat's eyes narrowed to mere slits of black across two amber
+agates; then he shook his ears free, yawned, and gave himself up to
+closed lids and dreams. If he could have told it all, just as it
+happened, not one word of it could those good souls have
+comprehended--and this was the way of it.
+
+It was near the close of a June day when the cat made his entrance into
+that hidden life of the summers from which his exits had been as sudden,
+though less dramatic. In the heart of the hills, where a mountain
+torrent has fretted its way for miles through a rocky gorge, there is a
+place where the cleft widens into a miniature valley, and the stream
+slips along quietly between banks of moss before it plunges again on its
+riotous path down the mountain. Here the charcoal-burners, half a
+century ago, had made a clearing, and left their dome-shaped stone kiln
+to cover itself with the green velvet and lace of lichen and vine. The
+man who was stooping over the water, cleaning trout for his supper, had
+found it so and made it his own one time in his wandering quest for
+solitude. The kiln now boasted a chimney, a door, and one wide window
+that looked away over the stream's next plunge, over other mountains and
+valleys to far horizons of the world of men. This was the hermitage to
+which he brought his fagged-out nerves from the cormorant city that
+feeds on the blood and brains of humans. Here through the brief truce of
+summer he found time to fish and hunt enough for his daily wants, time
+to read, to write, time to dream and to smoke his evening pipe, to think
+long thoughts, and more blessed than all--to sleep! When autumn came he
+would go back with renewed life and a pile of manuscript to feed to his
+hungry cormorant. He was chewing the cud of contentment as he bent to
+his fish cleaning, when, glancing to one side where the fire, between
+stones, was awaiting his frying-pan, he caught sight among the bushes of
+two gleaming eyes, and then the sleek back and lashing tail of the
+Yellow Cat. The man, being a cat lover was versed in their ways, so for
+a time he paid no attention, then began to talk softly.
+
+"If you'd come out of that," he said, as he scraped the scales, "and not
+sit there watching me like a Comanche Indian, I'd invite you to supper!"
+
+Whether it was the tone of his voice or the smell of the fish that
+conquered, the tawny creature was suddenly across the open with a rush
+and on the stooping shoulders. That was the beginning of the
+companionship that lasted until fall. The next season brought the animal
+as unexpectedly, and they took up the old relation where it had left off
+the previous summer. They trudged together through miles of forest,
+sometimes the cat on the man's shoulder, but often making side
+excursions on his own account and coming back with the proud burden of
+bird or tiny beast. Together they watched the days decline in red and
+gold glory from the ledge where the stream drops over the next height,
+or when it rained, companioned each other by the hearth in the hut.
+There was between them that satisfying and intimate communion of
+inarticulate speech only possible between man and beast.
+
+There came a day when the man sat hour after hour over his writing,
+letting the hills call in vain. The cat slept himself out, and when paws
+in the ink and tracks over the paper proved of no avail, he jumped down
+and marched himself haughtily off through the door and across the
+clearing to the forest, tail in air. Late that afternoon the man was
+arrested midway of a thought rounding into phrase by the sudden
+darkness. There was a fierce rush of wind, as if some giant had sighed
+and roused himself. The door of the hut slammed shut and the blast from
+the window scattered the papers about the floor. As he went to pull down
+the sash the cat sprang in, shaking from his feet the drops of rain
+already slanting in a white sheet across the little valley. At the same
+moment there was a "halloo" outside, and a woman burst open the door,
+turning quickly to shut out behind her the onrush of the shower and the
+biting cold of the wind. She stood shaking the drops from her hair, and
+then she looked into the astonished face of the man and laughed.
+
+She was as slim and straight as a young poplar, clad in white
+shirt-waist and khaki Turkish trousers with gaiters laced to the knee.
+Her hair was blown about in a red-gold snarl, and her eyes looked out as
+unabashed as a boy's. The two stared at each other for a time in
+silence, and finally it was the woman who spoke first.
+
+"This isn't exactly what I call a warm welcome--not just what the cat
+led me to expect! It was really the cat who brought me--I met him over
+on Slide Mountain--he fled and I pursued, and now here we are!"
+
+She made a hasty survey of the hut, and then of its owner, putting her
+head on one side as she looked about her with a quick, bird-like
+movement, he still staring in stupefaction.
+
+"Of course you detest having me here, but you won't put me out in the
+rain, again, will you?"
+
+At once he was his courteous self. With the same motion he dumped the
+astonished cat from the cushioned chair by the writing table, and drew
+it forward to the fire. Then he threw on a fresh stick of pine that
+flared up in a bright blaze, and with deferring gentleness took the
+sweater that hung from her shoulders and hung it to dry over a section
+of tree-trunk that served as a chimney seat.
+
+"You are as welcome to my hut as any princess to her palace," he smiled
+on her, "indeed, it is yours while you choose to stay in it!"
+
+"Don't you think," she made reply, as he drew another chair up opposite
+to her, "that under the circumstances we might dispense with fine
+speeches? It is hardly, I suppose, what one would call a usual
+situation, is it?"
+
+He looked at her as she stretched her small feet comfortably to the
+blaze, her face quite unconcerned.
+
+"No," he acquiesced, "it certainly is not usual--or I should hate
+it--the 'usual' is what I fly from!"
+
+She threw back her head, clasping her hands behind it as she laughed.
+She seemed to luxuriate as frankly in the heat and the dryness as the
+cat between them.
+
+"And I"--she turned the comprehension of her eyes upon him--"I cross the
+ocean every year in the same flight!"
+
+The storm drove leaves and flying branches against the window, while
+they sat, for what seemed a long time, in contented silence. He found
+himself as openly absorbing her charm as if she had been a tree or a
+mountain sunset, while she was making further tours of inspection with
+her eyes about the room.
+
+"It is entirely adorable," she smiled at him, "but it piques my
+curiosity!'
+
+"Ask all the questions you wish--no secrets here."
+
+"Then what, if you please, is the object I see swung aloft there in the
+dome?"
+
+"My canvas hammock which I lower at night to climb into and go to bed,
+and pull up in the daytime to clear the decks."
+
+"And the big earthen pot in the fireplace--it has gruesome suggestions
+of the 'Forty Thieves!'"
+
+"Only a sort of perpetual hot-water tank. The fire never quite goes out
+on this domestic hearth, and proves a very acceptable companion at this
+high altitude. There is always the kettle on the crane, as you see it
+there, but limitless hot water is the fine art of housekeeping--but,
+perhaps you don't know the joy there is to be found in the fine art of
+housekeeping?"
+
+"No, I do not," her eyes took on a whimsical expression, "but I'd like
+to learn--anything in the way of a new joy! In the way of small joys I
+am already quite a connoisseur, indeed I might call myself a collector
+in that line--of _bibelot_ editions, you understand, for thus far I seem
+to have been unable to acquire any of the larger specimens! Would you be
+willing to take me on as a pupil in housekeeping?"
+
+"It would add to my employment a crowning joy--not a _bibelot_!"
+
+"Pinchbeck fine speeches again," she shrugged. "Do you stop here all the
+long summer quite alone?"
+
+"All the 'short summer,'" he corrected, "save for the society of the
+cat, who dropped down last year from nowhere. He must have approved of
+the accommodations, for he has chosen me, you see, a second time for a
+summer resort."
+
+"Yes--I think he was trying to protest about you being his exclusive
+find, when I invited myself to follow him down the mountain--leading and
+eluding are so much alike, one is often mistaken, is it not so?"
+
+She was sitting forward now, chin in hands, elbows on her knees, gazing
+into the flames where a red banner waved above the back log. When she
+turned to him again the westering sun had broken through the clouds and
+was sending a flare of rosy light in at the window. Studying her face
+more fully, he saw that she was years--fully ten years--older than he
+had supposed. The boyish grace that sat so lightly was after all the
+audacious ease of a woman of the world, sure of herself.
+
+"I, too, am living the hermit life for the summer. I am the happy
+possessor of a throat that demands an annual mountain-cure. Switzerland
+with its perpetual spectacular note gets on my nerves, so last year we
+found this region--I and my two faithful old servitors. Do you know the
+abandoned tannery in the West Branch Clove? That has been fitted up for
+our use, and there we live the simple life as I am able to attain
+it--but you have so far outdone me that you have filled my soul with
+discontent!"
+
+"Alas," said the man, "you have served me the very same trick! I could
+almost wish--"
+
+"That I had not come!"
+
+"Say, rather, that you would come again!"
+
+She stood up and reached for her sweater, waiting for him to open the
+door. The round of the little valley was a glittering green bowl filled
+with pink cloud scuds. They stepped out into a jubilant world washed
+clean and freshly smiling. She put out her hand in good-bye.
+
+"I almost think I shall come again! If you were a person with whom one
+could be solitary--who knows!"
+
+When she appeared the next time she found him by the noise of his
+chopping. They climbed to the top of the moss-covered boulder that hangs
+poised over the ledge where the stream leaps into the abyss. Below them
+the hills rolled in an infinite recession of leaf-clad peaks to the sky
+line, where they melted to a blur of bluish-green mist.
+
+"Oh, these mountains of America!" she cried, "their greenness is a thing
+of dreams to us who know only bare icy and alps!"
+
+"Far lovelier," he said, "to look down upon than to look up to, I think.
+To be a part of the height comes pretty near to being happy, for the
+moment."
+
+She turned from the view to study her companion. The lines in the
+corners of his kind, tired eyes, the lean, strong figure, hair graying
+about the temples. He grew a little impatient under it before she spoke.
+
+"Do you know," she said slowly, "I am going to like you! To like you
+immensely--and to trust you!"
+
+"Thank you, I shall try to be worthy"--even his derision was gentle--"I
+seem to remember having been trusted before by members of your sex--even
+liked a little, though not perhaps 'immensely'! At any rate this
+certainly promises to be an experience quite by itself!"
+
+"Quite by itself," she echoed.
+
+"Wouldn't it be as well for you to know my name, say, as a beginning?"
+
+"No," she nodded, "that's just what I don't want! I only want to know
+you. Names are extraneous things--tags, labels--let us waive them. If I
+tell you how I feel about this meeting of ours will you try to
+understand me?"
+
+The answer was less in words than in the assent of his honest gray eyes.
+
+"I have been surfeited all my life," she went on, "with love--I want no
+more of it! The one thing I do want, more than anything else, is a man
+friend. I have thought a great deal about such a friendship--the give
+and take on equal terms, the sexless companionship of mind--what it
+could be like!"
+
+He brushed the twigs from the lichens between them and made no answer.
+
+"Fate--call the power what you will"--she met the disclaimer that
+puckered the corners of his mouth--"fate brought us together. It was the
+response to my longing for such a friendship!"
+
+"It was the Yellow Cat!"
+
+"The Yellow Cat plus fate! While I sat there by your fire I recognized
+you for that friend!"
+
+Far below over the tree tops cloud shadows and sunlight were playing
+some wonderful game of follow-my-leader; a hawk hung poised on tilting
+wings; and on the veil of mist that was the spirit of the brook where it
+cast itself from the ledge curved the arch of a rainbow. The man pointed
+to the augury.
+
+"You might try me," he said, and they shook hands on the compact,
+laughing half shamefacedly at their own solemnity.
+
+"As woman to woman," he offered.
+
+"Let it be rather as man to man," she shrugged.
+
+"As you like--as women we should have to begin by explaining ourselves."
+
+"Precisely, and men companion each other on impersonal grounds."
+
+"Then it is a man's friendship?"
+
+"Better still," she mused, "we'll pattern it after the ideals of the
+disembodied! We'll make this summer, you and I together, a gem from the
+heart of life--I will have it so!"
+
+So it came about that like two children they played together, worked,
+walked, or read and talked by the open fire when cold storms came. Every
+morning she came over the wood-road that led by winding ways from her
+valley, and at sunset she went back over the trail alone. He might go as
+far as the outlook half way over the mountain where the path begins to
+go down, but no farther; as for any fear, she seemed to know nothing of
+its workings, and the revolver she wore in a case that hung from her
+belt was a mere convention.
+
+One morning she came with eyes dancing--it was to be an especial day--a
+fete--and the gods had smiled on her planning and given them perfect
+weather. Never such sunshine, such crystal air, such high-hung clouds!
+Breakfast over, they hurried about the miniature housework, and packed
+the kit for a long day's tramp. Then they started forth, the cat
+following, tail aloft. Beyond a dim peak, where the clove opens
+southward, by the side of a tiny lake they lunched and took their
+noonday rest. She watched the smoke curl up from his pipe where he lay
+at peace with the scheme of things.
+
+"Do you know, Man, dear," she said, "I am glad I don't in the least
+guess who you are! I have no doubt you write the most delightful stories
+in the world--but never put me in one, please!"
+
+He took the pipe out of his mouth and looked at her long before he
+replied.
+
+"Woman, dear," he said, "I have put you in a place--your own place--and
+it is not in my novels!"
+
+She scrambled to her feet laughing.
+
+"It's very well to make stories, but it is really more diverting to live
+them! Come, I must lead you now with your eyes shut tight to my
+surprise!"
+
+So hand in hand they went along a smooth green wood-road until she
+stopped him.
+
+"Look," she cried, "now look!"
+
+Straight away till the road narrowed to a point of light against the sky
+where the mountain dipped down, banks of mountain laurel rose on either
+side in giant hedges of rose and white, while high above them waved the
+elms and beeches of the forest.
+
+"It is the gardening of the gods!"
+
+"It is my own treasure-trove! I found it last year and I have been
+waiting to bring you to it on my fete--what you call birthday! And now
+wish me some beautiful thing--it may come true! There is a superstition
+in my country--but I shall not tell you--unless the wish comes true!"
+
+He broke off a spray of the waxen buds and crowned her solemnly where
+she stood.
+
+"I have already wished for you--the most beautiful thing in the world!"
+
+She shook her head, sorrowful. "Man, dear, the only thing in all the
+world I still want is the impossible!"
+
+"Only the impossible is worth while--and I have wished!"
+
+She shook her head again, laughing a little ruefully. "It could not
+arrive--my impossible--and yet you almost tempt me to hope!"
+
+"Anything--everything may arrive! You once thought that such a
+friendship as this of ours could not, and lo, we have achieved it!"
+
+"I wonder"--her eyes seemed fixed on some far prospect, a world beyond
+the flowery way--"I wonder if we have! And I wonder why you have never
+made a guess about my world when you have at least let me get a peep now
+and then into yours?"
+
+"I don't care a rap about your 'world,'" he smiled into her eyes, "while
+I have you!"
+
+"No curiosity about my--my profession?"
+
+"Not a bit--though it was clear enough from the first that it was the
+stage!"
+
+She made an odd little outcry at his powers of divination.
+
+"Then I must look it--before the footlights from my birth! Since you are
+so clever, Mr. Man, will you also be merciful when you come to weigh me
+in those scales you try to hide beneath the garment of your kindness?
+Think, when you judge me, what it is for a woman never to be
+herself--always to have to play a part!"
+
+He reached and took her hand suddenly, drawing her to him with a
+movement that was almost rough.
+
+"This is no play acting--this is real! No footlights--no audience--only
+you and me in all this world!"
+
+But she drew away, insistently aloof. She would have none of his
+caresses.
+
+"This, too," she said, as she moved apart and stood waiting for him to
+follow, "is a part of the play--I do not deceive myself! When I go back
+to my world--my trade, I shall remember this little time that you and I
+have snatched from the grudging grasp of life as an act--a scene only!
+It's a perfect pastoral, Man, dear, but unreal--absurdly unreal--and we
+know it ourselves while we play the game!"
+
+Down through the flower-bordered vista the cat went stalking his prey,
+his sinuous body a tawny streak winding along the green path. These
+trivial humans, with their subtle attractions and compunctions, were as
+though they never had been when the chase was on--the real business and
+purpose of life!
+
+For the rest of the time they were together they avoided the personal.
+Each felt the threat in the air and tacitly averted it. For that one
+perfect day there should be no past, no future, nothing but the golden
+present.
+
+Swinging in his breeze-rocked hammock between door and window the man
+lay awake through the long watches of the night, thinking, thinking,
+while his heart sang. Toward dawn he fell into a deep sleep from which
+he was only awakened by the cat springing up to lick his face in
+reminder of breakfast.
+
+It was when he came back from his plunge in the pool that he first
+noticed a paper pinned to his door-post. Within its folds his doom was
+penned!
+
+"Even you, dear Man, could not wish me the impossible! That superstition
+of my country is that to come true it must be the first wish of your
+fete day--and by one who loves you! Alas, my old servant had already
+wished--that he might get me started for home to-day! Clever
+Friedrich--for he had also packed! When you read this I shall be far on
+my way. You could never find me though you searched the earth--but you
+will never try! It is well as it is, for you see--it was not friendship
+after all!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And yet there was a sequel. During the following year there dropped to
+the man in his hard-pressed literary life, one of those errant plums
+from the political tree that now and then find their way to the right
+basket. He was named for an excellent diplomatic post. His friends
+congratulated him and talked a good deal about "material" and
+opportunities for "unique local color;" his wife chattered unceasingly
+about gowns and social details, while he armed himself, with the
+listless reticence that was become habit, to face new responsibilities
+and rather flavorless experiences. He had so withdrawn himself of late
+to the inner creative life that he moved in a kind of phantasmagoria of
+outer unrealities. It was the nearest to a comfortable adjustment for
+the mis-mating of such a marriage as his, but it was not the best of
+preparations for the discharge of public duties, and he walked toward
+his new future with reluctant feet, abstractedly. In some such mood as
+this, his mind bent on a problem of arrangement of fiction puppets,
+seeing "men as trees walking," he found himself one day making his bows
+at a court function. Along the line of royal highnesses and grand
+duchesses with his wife he moved, himself a string-pulled puppet,
+until--but who, in heaven's name is this?
+
+For one mad moment, as he looked into her eyes, he thought the tightened
+cord he sometimes felt tugging at his tired brain had snapped, and the
+images of sight and memory gone hopelessly confused. She stood near the
+end of the line with the princesses of secondary rank, and the jewels in
+her hair were not more scintillant than her eyes as he bent over her
+hand. She went a little pale, but she greeted him bravely, and when they
+found themselves unobserved for a moment she spoke to him in her soft,
+careful English:
+
+"You recognized me, you remember, for a play actor, and now you are come
+from the world's end to see me perform on my tiny stage! Alas, dear
+critic, since my last excursion, I am no longer letter perfect in my
+part!"
+
+They met but once again. It was in the crush of guests in the great hall
+where her old Prince, in the splendor of his decoration-covered coat,
+was waiting to hand her to her carriage. There was a brief time in which
+to snatch the doubtful sweetness of a few hurried words. She was leaving
+in the early morning for the petty Balkan province where her husband
+held a miniature sway, over a handful of half-savage subjects. Hardly
+more than a renewal of greeting and a farewell, and she was gone!
+
+As the old Prince wrapped her more carefully in her furs, and the
+carriage rolled away in the darkness, he spoke to her, somewhat puzzled:
+
+"I should be sorry to think the American Ambassador has been taking too
+much wine--as you well know, my knowledge of the barbarous English
+tongue is but limited, and yet--I thought, as I joined you, he was
+talking some farrago of nonsense about a _Yellow Cat_!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That year the Yellow Cat came home lean and gaunt, a chastened, humble
+creature, as one who has failed in a long quest, and is glad to stretch
+his weary length before the hearth and reap the neglected benefits of
+the domestic life.
+
+"It is really very odd" said the minister, quite as if he were saying
+something he had never thought of saying before, "where that cat goes in
+the summer!"
+
+"Isn't it?" responded the minister's wife--just as she always did. "It
+fires the imagination! He walks off some fine morning and completely
+shuts the door on our life here--as if he gave us notice not to pry into
+his movements. But this time"--she was leaning to stroke the tawny sides
+with a pitying touch--"this time you may be sure something very sad and
+disappointing happened to him--something in that other life went quite
+wrong! How I wish we could understand what it was!"
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+A COCK AND POLICEMAN
+
+A Tale of Rural England
+
+By RALPH KAYE ASSHETON
+
+
+IT HAPPENED up in Lancashire, and the truth can be vouched for by at
+least half a hundred spectators. It fell in this wise: Bob O' Tims owned
+a game-cock which was the envy of the whole street for lustre of
+coloring and soundness of wind. Its owner was almost unduly proud of his
+possession, and would watch it admiringly as it stalked majestically
+about among its family of hens.
+
+"There's a cock for you!" he would say, with a little wave of his pipe.
+"There's not many cocks like that one. The king himself has got nothing
+like it down at Windsor Castle."
+
+Now, Jimmy Taylor had always been a rival of Bob O' Tims's. Jimmy's
+grandfather had fought at the Battle of Waterloo. This gave him great
+prestige, and it was almost universally believed, in Chellowdene, that
+the preeminence of the British Empire was mainly due to the battle-zeal
+of Jimmy's ancestry. But whenever Jimmy talked about his grandfather,
+Bob skilfully turned the conversation to his game-cock. This made Jimmy
+testy, and one day he told Bob, in contemptuous tones, that "he'd be
+even wi' him yet, in the matter o' game-cocks, as well as everything
+else."
+
+That was one Monday evening, and the following Wednesday Bob O' Tims's
+cock disappeared. When Bob discovered his loss, his face went quite pale
+with anger. Without a word, he flung on his cap and set off for Jimmy
+Taylor's cottage.
+
+When he reached it, he went still whiter. For Jimmy was sitting at the
+door, and up and down the yard in front of him strutted a magnificent
+game-cock.
+
+Bob O' Tims stretched out his forefinger, pointed at the cock, and with
+a stubborn look forming about his mouth and jaw, observed:
+
+"Yon's mine."
+
+"It isn't," responded Jimmy. "It's mine."
+
+"I tell thee, yon's mine. Yo've prigged it."
+
+"It's mine! I bought it at th' fair."
+
+"Thee never bought yon cock at any fair. It's mine, I tell thee."
+
+Words grew high between the disputants, as the cock, in all its bronze
+and golden splendor, marched up and down the yard, until the argument
+between the two men terminated in a quarrel so violent that half-a-dozen
+neighbors came in to see what was the matter. It ended in Bob O' Tims
+insisting that he would take the matter into court. He was as good as
+his word, and the next time that the bench met, Bob O' Tims summoned
+Jimmy Taylor on a charge of having stolen his game-cock.
+
+The magistrates listened to the witnesses on either side. Half-a-dozen
+people were ready to swear that the cock belonged to Bob. But Jimmy
+brought up a couple of witnesses to testify that they had seen him buy a
+similar animal at Turton Fair. The cock was then brought into court. It
+clucked and choked indignantly, and the partisans of Bob and Jimmy swore
+against each other as hard as ever they could. The bench appeared
+perplexed; and it was owing to their inability to come to any decision
+that the magistrate's clerk made his famous suggestion.
+
+"The case appears to me impossible to prove as it stands, your
+worships," he said to the bench. "I would suggest, if I may be allowed,
+that you direct an officer of the court to take the cock to some spot at
+an equal distance between the houses of the plaintiff and of the
+defendant. If he is there placed upon the ground, and left to his own
+devices, he is pretty sure to make his way straight home."
+
+The magistrates accepted the suggestion of the clerk, and gave judgment
+accordingly. A policeman was ordered to carry out their instructions.
+Now, this officer was young and raw, and had only recently been enrolled
+in the constabulary. He was a fat, rosy man, with an air of
+self-importance. He set out from the court with the cock under his arm.
+An excited crowd streamed after the policeman, who stalked on with no
+little pomposity. When he reached the common, which lay between the
+houses of the rival claimants, he stood still for a minute or two,
+grasping the cock and looking judiciously from one side of the broken
+land to the other.
+
+The crowd eagerly commenced to give information.
+
+"You're a bit nearer Bob O' Tims's than you are to Jimmy's!" cried one.
+
+"Nay! Nay!" interposed another spectator, who was a partisan of Bob O'
+Tims. "There's a corner to turn afore you get to Bob's. It's not fair,
+not to make allowance for that."
+
+"Stand back!" cried the policeman majestically--"Stand back, every man
+of you. The critter will be too much put about to go anywhere if you
+don't keep still tongues in your heads."
+
+The officer still stood, with his legs wide apart, turning his head
+slowly from side to side. Once he made a pace in the direction of Jimmy
+Taylor's; then, changing his mind, he took a couple of steps toward Bob
+O' Tims's. Finally, he decided that he had fixed upon the exact locality
+commanded by the law, and with a magisterial air, he again waved back
+the crowd and deposited the cock upon the ground in front of him.
+
+Everybody held their breath. The first thing that the cock did was to
+shake himself until he resembled nothing so much as a living mop. Then
+he began to smooth his feathers down again. Then he stretched his neck,
+flapped his wings and crowed. Finally, with a blink of his bright eyes,
+which almost appeared like a wink to the hushed and expectant crowd, he
+made two solemn steps with his slender legs in the direction of Jimmy
+Taylor's cottage.
+
+"He's going to Jimmy's!" exclaimed the crowd with one voice.
+
+"Can't you all be quiet for a moment or two," interposed the policeman,
+indignantly. "I tell you, if you don't keep still, you'll upset the
+critter's mind, and make the magistrates' decision just good for
+nothing."
+
+The crowd appeared ashamed and relapsed once more into silence.
+
+The policeman stood erect and tall, a few paces in front of them,
+watching the cock with great solemnity. It was standing still now,
+jerking its neck a little. Then it looked round, and, retracing its
+paces, began stepping slowly off in the opposite direction.
+
+"It's going to Bob's!" cried the crowd.
+
+But the cock was doing no such thing; it paused again, scratching in an
+imaginary dust-heap, and then, with a loud crow, stretched its wings and
+flew up into a small tree.
+
+This was disconcerting. The policeman turned with anger upon the crowd.
+
+"I told you you were not giving the critter a chance!" he exclaimed.
+"You'd best be off home. Come, move on! Move on!"
+
+The crowd retreated, but it had no intention of going home. Some of
+those less interested strolled away, but the partisans of Bob and Jimmy
+remained at a little distance, eagerly watching to see what would happen
+next.
+
+The cock, after jerking his head round several times, settled down
+comfortably among his feathers, and went to sleep in the tree.
+
+This was altogether beyond the expectancy of the policeman. Not knowing
+what else to do, he sat down on a broken bit of fence under the tree and
+waited.
+
+The day advanced. The cock slept on and the policeman began to doze. Now
+and then he awoke with a start, and looked up at the obstinate biped
+above his head. Presently the man got down from the fence and shook
+himself.
+
+The partisans of Bob and Jimmy still remained at a discreet distance,
+watching the progress of events. The policeman stood still for a few
+moments, staring at the cock; then he approached the small, stumpy tree
+and clapped his hands vigorously.
+
+The cock woke up, gurgled, and went to sleep again.
+
+The policeman clapped his hands a second time, and then with shrill
+indignation the creature flew down from the tree, and set off in the
+direction of the distant moors.
+
+The proceedings promptly assumed the aspect of a hunt. The cock ran
+along with outstretched wings and neck, and the policeman and the crowd
+ran after it. At last it reached a small cottage, belonging to a widow
+of the name of Gammer. Exerting a final effort, it flew up toward her
+open window and ensconced itself on the top of the good woman's
+tester-bed.
+
+Now Mrs. Gammer was a woman of character. She heard the noise outside;
+and when the breathless policeman arrived at the door of her kitchen,
+she was wiping the soapsuds off her plump red arms, ready for any
+dispute or fray. She stood with her arms held akimbo, as the man in blue
+explained his errand. When he had finished his recital she looked at him
+defiantly.
+
+"And I should like to know what you call yourself, policeman or no
+policeman, to be chasing a poor harmless critter across 'em blazing
+commons on a day like this! You want to go and poke him down from my
+tester-bed, do you? Well, you can just go back and tell the magistrates
+as Mrs. Gammer's got him, and if they want him they must come for him
+themselves."
+
+This was direct defiance of the law, and the policeman commenced a
+remonstrance. His remarks were, however, cut short by Mrs. Gammer.
+
+"I have always said as magistrates was as ignorant as babies, and I only
+wish that they was as harmless," she persisted, in open contempt of the
+government of her country. "You can go back, and tell 'em as Mrs. Gammer
+says so. My house is my house, magistrate or no magistrate, and I won't
+have any policeman messing about on the top of my tester-bed."
+
+The policeman was not certain whether the authority which had been
+entrusted to him in the matter would justify his making a deliberate
+prisoner of Mrs. Gammer. And, as she showed every sign of resorting to
+violence, should he attempt to pass the door, which she barred with her
+stout figure, he decided upon beating a retreat. He went outside again
+and reasserted his shattered dignity by once more driving away the
+crowd; then, not knowing what else to do, he returned to the police
+station and reported the matter to the chief constable.
+
+The chief laughed, and so did everybody else who heard the story. The
+policeman was directed to return to Mrs. Gammer's cottage later in the
+day, and serve her with an order requiring her to give up the cock
+immediately. But when he handed Mrs. Gammer the official paper, she
+laughed in his face.
+
+"You can look round the house for the cock now if you like," she said
+contemptuously, slapping down the order upon the table, "and you can see
+if you can find him."
+
+"Is he still on the top of your tester-bed?" demanded the policeman.
+
+"Go and look," responded Mrs. Gammer, with a snort. "You can take the
+turk's-head brush and brush him down!"
+
+So, armed with the turk's-head brush, the policeman ascended Mrs.
+Gammer's small, steep staircase. When he reached her bedroom, he poked
+into every cranny and corner with the handle of his brush. But no cock
+was to be found.
+
+He descended the stairs, and stood again in the little kitchen. A savory
+smell of cooking arose from a stew-pan on the fire.
+
+"Where's the critter gone to?" he demanded.
+
+"How should I know?" replied Mrs. Gammer testily.
+
+The policeman, still standing in the kitchen, wished that Mrs. Gammer
+would give him an invitation to supper. The widow glanced up sharply at
+him and saw what was in his mind.
+
+"You'd like some supper, I make no doubt, after your wild-goose chase,"
+she said. "Sit down at t' table and take a bit o' stew."
+
+The policeman seated himself with alacrity. The stew which Mrs. Gammer
+placed before him consisted of a mixture of barley, onions and some
+white meat. He ate a hearty supper, and when he stood up he drew his
+hands across his mouth.
+
+"Thank you kindly," he said. "I must be off now, and see where that cock
+has gone to."
+
+Then it was that Mrs. Gammer gave a short and derisive laugh. She began
+to pile up the empty plates and to put the spoons and forks in the basin
+by the sink.
+
+"If you go a-chasing of that cock until you are black and blue in the
+face," she said, "you'll never find him. And the reason why, is that you
+have just helped to eat him up."
+
+"I have eat him up!" he gasped.
+
+"Aye," responded Mrs. Gammer, with brevity. "I made him into soup!"
+
+The policeman remained open-mouthed, staring at the impenitent widow.
+
+"You'd no business ever to do such a thing," he said. "The cock belonged
+to the Law."
+
+"I care nowt for your Law," retorted Mrs. Gammer. "Anyway you've helped
+to eat him!"
+
+A vague sense of cannibalism was haunting the policeman's mind; he felt
+almost as dismayed as if he had made a hearty supper off the
+magistrate's clerk himself.
+
+"You're a very wicked woman," he said to Mrs. Gammer. "And--and----"
+
+He broke off, entirely nonplussed by the situation in which he found
+himself. Mrs. Gammer continued to wash up the spoons and forks with
+utter indifference to his consternation.
+
+"The cock's eat up, and there's an end of it," she said. "You'd best go
+and tell the magistrates all about it."
+
+Sheepish and disconcerted, the policeman slunk home. The next morning
+the chief asked him if he had served the order on Mrs. Gammer.
+
+"I--served it," said he, scratching his head.
+
+"And did you get the bird given up?" demanded his superior officer.
+
+"No, I can't say as I did," replied the policeman.
+
+"Was it still on the top of the tester-bed?" pursued his awkward
+questioner.
+
+"No. It was not on the tester-bed," replied the policeman.
+
+"Then where was it?" insisted the chief.
+
+For several seconds the policeman was silent, then he told a lie.
+
+"I canna say," he answered, "it war gone."
+
+The chief shrugged his shoulders, and sent the man about the business of
+the day. The next time that the magistrates met, the question of Bob O'
+Tims's cock was again brought into court. The magistrate's clerk
+demanded if the case were settled.
+
+To the great relief of the policeman, who was waiting in attendance, Bob
+O' Tims spoke up from the spot where he stood.
+
+"Jim hadna stolen my cock after all, sir," he said, "for it came home
+the next morning."
+
+"Then what happened to the cock that was brought into court on Tuesday?"
+demanded the magistrate's clerk. But nobody seemed to know.
+
+Only, people used to wonder why Widow Gammer almost always gave a
+peculiar kind of snort when she spoke of Police Constable X, and why
+that worthy officer avoided her cottage ever after, and invariably
+turned down a side street if he saw the widow within speaking distance
+of him.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+PRISONERS IN THE TOWER
+
+An Episode of Travel
+
+By LUCY COPINGER
+
+
+"IN THE words of Macaulay this, ladies and gentleman, is the saddest
+spot on earth." The white-haired old Tower guard in charge of the little
+chapel of Saint Peter waved his hand impressively toward the open door.
+"Through that door"--the heads of the American tourists who were doing
+the Tower all turned in unison--"you may see the block upon which many a
+royal head has rested, and beneath these very stones lie buried two
+dukes between two queens--Dukes of Northumberland and of Somerset, with
+the Queens Anne Boleyn and Katherine Howard--all beheaded."
+
+The chapel was a crypt-like place, windowless, dark, and musty, and at
+this mournful climax one of the tourists who was nervous moved suddenly
+off that particular stone upon which she had been standing; the school
+teachers out for self-improvement began to write it all in their
+note-books, while a stout matron evidently of good old Dutch stock
+looked sadly down at the flat, gray stones. "Poor things!" she murmured,
+"and there ain't one of them got a respectable white tombstone with a
+wreath carved on it." Then, in their usual two-by-two line, the party
+moved down the aisle wearily, but triumphant in the fact that they had
+succeeded in doing the Tower, the Abbey, and the Museum all in one day.
+Peggy Wynne, in demurely severe blue suit and jaunty panama, lagged at
+the end of the line while she looked critically at her compatriots.
+
+ "The animals went out two by two,
+ The elephant and the kangaroo,"
+
+she murmured to herself, "and I'm so tired of playing Noah's Ark or a
+Christian Association out for a lark," she continued in unconscious
+poetical despair. Then, warned by the attitude of the guard, that
+wonderful attitude of the haughty Briton in hopes of a tip, she opened
+her ridiculously tiny gold-linked purse and gave herself up to the
+absorbing question as to which of the pieces therein was a shilling.
+Having at last decided this, she presented it to the guard with a
+dazzling smile. It had been so long since Peggy had had an opportunity
+to smile at anything masculine that the smile was unusually bright.
+
+She had already passed through the little door when she suddenly turned
+back. The other tourists, noses in Baedekers, were hurrying on before,
+the guard was busily counting his sixpences, and she slipped back into
+the dim chapel unperceived.
+
+"They'll think I've gone back to those dingy lodgings," she reflected,
+as she groped her way between the benches into an even more shadowy
+corner--a little recess, with a tiny niche in the wall, that had
+probably been the sanctuary of some pious king. She seated herself
+comfortably behind the pillar in the corner and gazed pensively at the
+stones.
+
+"Tombs and tombs and tombs!" she murmured mournfully, "even in Paris,
+instead of Maxim's and the cafes, nothing but tombs! The next time I want
+to see where anybody is buried I will just go out to the cemetery instead
+of coming across that dreadful ocean. Oh, just to have one adventure
+before I go home!" she continued with a long sigh, "a real adventure with
+a real man in it--not a horrid, womanish Frenchman or a stolid, conceited
+Britisher, but a nice, safe American--like--like--like--my American."
+
+Then the dimple in her right cheek that was probably responsible for the
+calling her Peggy, in spite of her many protests for her rightful
+dignity of "Margaret," came out suddenly as it always did when she
+thought of her American. She had called him that from the time when, in
+the midst of the perplexities of the English luggage system, she had
+looked up and found him watching her. The cut of his gray suit and his
+shoes had told her his nationality at once, and they had looked for a
+moment at each other with that peculiar friendliness that compatriots in
+a strange land always feel. She had forgotten him until, leaning from a
+taxi-cab in the Rue de la Paix, she had met the same eyes, this time so
+unrefrainedly joyful in their recognition that she had suddenly blushed.
+When, a week later at Calais, as she stood by the rail of the departing
+Channel steamer she caught a glimpse of him on the dock, he had seemed
+like an old friend, and before she had thought she had smiled in answer
+to his lifted hat. She had grown so sure of seeing him that now when
+they had been in London a week and he had not appeared she found herself
+suddenly sick of tombs and tourists.
+
+Peggy's day had been a strenuous one of trams, motor-busses, abbeys, and
+galleries, and though she realized an adventure might probably await her
+outside, it was pleasant to sit for awhile in the dimness of the quiet
+chapel. From her recess she could look out through the open doors upon
+the tragic Tower Green, where in the sunlight two sparrows were
+frivolously flirting. Even as she watched, the sparrows grew dim, her
+ridiculously tiny purse slipped from her hand, her head with its thick
+dark hair dropped against the pillar, and her lashes touched her cheek.
+After awhile a cautious footfall sounded in the chapel, then somewhere a
+heavy door closed, and all was still.
+
+When Peggy sat up indignantly with the queer sensation that she had been
+violently shaken, darkness surrounded her, a darkness so deep that she
+could not see her hand as she ran it along the bench in front of her.
+With the movement came remembrance of her surroundings, and also a
+realization in strained and aching muscles that a stone pillar is not a
+wise choice for a head-rest.
+
+"Oh!" she gasped painfully.
+
+"Don't be frightened," entreated a voice quite near to her, and out of
+the lesser darkness a tall black figure rose suddenly.
+
+"I am not at all frightened," said Peggy at once. In spite of the
+bigness of the figure there was something reassuring in the voice with
+its crisp, humorous note and its intonation that Peggy at once
+recognized as American.
+
+"What are you doing here?" she continued, inhospitably addressing the
+darkness before her.
+
+"I went to sleep" the voice explained, "on the other side of the
+pillar."
+
+"How silly!" said Peggy, severely, "didn't you see me here?"
+
+"It was a little dim," the voice apologized and, Peggy's silence still
+condemning, "you should have snored," it continued extenuatingly.
+
+Peggy arose with a dignity that she hoped penetrated the darkness. Then
+she groped along the bench.
+
+"My purse," she explained anxiously, "and it had a sixpence for tea and
+two shillings for tips," she continued with an unconscious epitome of
+the joys of traveling. As she groped along bench and floor she was
+conscious of assistance from her companion, and just as she grasped the
+discovered purse she felt purse and hand caught and retained in a firm
+grip.
+
+"I apologize," he said at once, still however, holding on to her hand,
+"I thought it was the purse."
+
+Peggy jerked her hand loose indignantly, and speechless with wrath she
+hurried toward the door only to find that she had mistaken her
+direction. In her effort to recover her bearings she become hopelessly
+confused, stumbled noisily over a bench, and fell headlong into the arms
+of her companion.
+
+"You had better sit down again," he remarked coolly as he returned her
+to her seat and sat down calmly beside her. As he did so Peggy noted
+curiously the dim attractive silhouette of his head and the remarkably
+good line from ear to shoulder.
+
+"I am going at once," she said haughtily, but without moving.
+
+"You can't," the man beside her replied, "and if you promise not to cry
+or fall over any more benches I will tell you why--although I myself do
+not object to the latter," he continued judicially, "but for the sake of
+your own bones, merely."
+
+Peggy ignored the last.
+
+"Why can't I go?" she said defiantly.
+
+"Because the door is locked," he explained succinctly.
+
+"We can both scream or you can throw a bench through the window," said
+Peggy triumphantly.
+
+The unseen laughed a nice laugh that Peggy liked.
+
+"In that latter case, beside the fact that there is no window, we would
+surely be had up before the head-warden of this old jail. Besides, do
+you know what time it is?"
+
+"About tea time," said Peggy who had lunched frugally at one of the
+tea-shops on a cup of tea and a jam roll.
+
+"Just before you woke up," said her companion, "I used my last match--it
+always is the last in a case like this--to look at my watch. It was
+half-past twelve. Remember, you promised----" at a warning gurgle from
+Peggy.
+
+Then suddenly a laugh rang out sweet and clear in the darkness of the
+musty chapel, a laugh that echoed into the recesses of the old
+tombs--perhaps in its musical cadences stirring pleasantly the haughty
+slumber of their noble occupants.
+
+"What are you laughing at?" said the voice suspiciously.
+
+"An adventure at last!" Peggy cried, clapping her hands applaudingly.
+
+"I am glad you take it so cheerfully," returned her companion. "There is
+only one thing to do," he continued practically, "I thought it out for
+myself before you woke up and complicated matters by your appearance. Of
+course with sufficient yelling we can arouse the barrack sentry, and for
+our pains we'd probably have the whole barrack out to arrest us. There
+is no way in which you can offend the noble and independent Briton more
+deeply than by treating lightly his worship of royalty, dead or alive,
+and we would probably be held for committing _lese majeste_ by getting
+ourselves locked up with the numerous relicts of Henry the Eighth. But
+if we wait until morning we can run good chances of slipping out
+unperceived with the first crowd of tourists."
+
+"I feel just like the little princes in the Tower, or Queen Mary or
+Charlotte Corday," murmured Peggy in ecstatic historical confusion, "or
+somebody noble and romantic and beheaded. I think I shall play at being
+Queen Mary. I once learned a piece about her. It was very sad, but I
+always stuck at the fifth line and had to sit down. Since we have to
+stay here till morning we might as well amuse ourselves and you may be
+Rizzio."
+
+"Who was he?" asked her companion sceptically, "sounds like one of those
+Italian fellows."
+
+"He was Queen Mary's chaperon," Peggy explained vaguely, "and he sang
+her love songs."
+
+"Good," said the voice agreeably.
+
+"Can't you think of something else for me?" said the unseen, gloomily
+appalled by the prospect of having doughnut recipes pronounced over his
+remains.
+
+"How would you like to be Darnley?" said Peggy. "He was her husband."
+"I'll be Darnley," came from the darkness so decidedly that Peggy
+jumped.
+
+"You have to get blown-up right off," she hastened to add. "Darnley
+did."
+
+"Oh he did, did he?" the voice spoke with deeper gloom.
+
+"Queen Mary did it," added Peggy.
+
+"Well, even in the Dark Ages matrimony seems to have given your sex the
+same privileges," philosophized her companion cynically.
+
+"How mean!" said Peggy coldly, "I shall play at being Elizabeth all
+alone."
+
+"It wouldn't suit you," said her discarded leading man, "not with your
+voice."
+
+"Why not?" said Peggy.
+
+"Because it's not hard and cold and metallic enough. Because it has too
+much womanly sweetness in it and not enough harsh masculinity."
+
+"What a good dramatic critic you would make!" said Peggy a little
+spitefully, "and since you are reading voices I can tell quite well by
+yours that you are fat and red faced."
+
+The man laughed.
+
+"And by the same token you are all sweetness and blue eyes and dearness
+and dimples," he punished her. Then the banter in his tones died
+suddenly out.
+
+"There's something I want to tell you," he said abruptly, with a
+movement that seemed in the darkness like a sudden squaring of his
+shoulders. "But first I want you to tell me your name."
+
+"What a sudden descent from romance and poetry to mere stupid facts,"
+hedged Peggy. "Think, in this atmosphere of royalties if it should be
+Bridget, or, still more horrible, Mamie."
+
+"Please," the voice persisted in its gravity, "we have been
+fellow-prisoners, you know, and you should be kind."
+
+Peggy told him with the full three-syllabled dignity of the "Margaret."
+
+"Mine," he continued, "is John Barrett."
+
+"Now," cried Peggy, "if this were a proper adventure we have reached the
+place when I should be able to say, 'Why! not the Jack Barrett that
+Brother Billy knew at Harvard?' Then you would cry, 'And this is my old
+chum William's little sister Peggy that used to send him fudge!' and
+then everything would be all right. But I haven't any brother at all,"
+she finished regretfully.
+
+"And Harvard wasn't my college," said her companion. "However," he went
+on, "it would take more than the conventional backing of many brother
+Billies to put me right with you after I've told you what I have to tell
+you."
+
+"Then don't do it," said Peggy softly.
+
+"If I didn't know you'd find it out in a very few minutes I wouldn't,"
+he confessed shamelessly. "But before I tell you I want you to know what
+finding you here meant to me. You've got to realize the temptation
+before you can understand the fall. You always got away from me, from
+that first time in Liverpool----"
+
+"Oh!" said Peggy with a gasp.
+
+"And at Paris and at Calais when you smiled adorably at me----"
+
+"I didn't" said Peggy, blushing in the darkness.
+
+"When you didn't smile adorably at me, then," pursued the voice
+relentlessly. "It was always the same. I found you and you were
+gone--snatched away by an unkind fate in the form of your man from
+Cook's. When you sailed away from me at Calais I was booked to leave
+that same day from Antwerp, but I came on here after you instead. London
+is small--the American tourist London, that is--the Abbey, the Museum,
+the galleries, and the Tower, but I seemed to miss you everywhere. It
+was fate again that sent me here to find you asleep in the corner."
+
+"Now I know you are going to tell something very foolish," said Peggy
+reflectively, "when people begin to talk about fate like that you always
+find they are just trying to shift the responsibility."
+
+"I want you to know it wasn't premeditated, however," pursued the voice.
+"It wasn't till the guard shut the door that I thought of it. You will
+believe that, won't you?" he pleaded.
+
+The dimple appeared suddenly in Peggy's cheek. There came an echo from
+without of many footsteps.
+
+"And so," she took up the tale quickly, "having nicely planned it all
+out you shook me rudely to wake me up, told me the door was locked, and
+that it was midnight when it was only four in the afternoon. And it
+wasn't at all necessary to shake me so hard," she continued, "because I
+woke up when you came in."
+
+"Peggy you knew!" the voice cried with a sudden realization, "you knew
+and you stayed!" He caught her hand, and in the darkness she could feel
+his nearness. Then suddenly the door opened letting into the chapel a
+flood of bright sunlight. "Ladies and gentlemen," the sonorous voice of
+the old guard came to them, "this, in the words of Macaulay, is the
+saddest spot on earth," continued the mournful recital, even as, in
+happy contradiction, Peggy and her American, secure in their little
+recess, looked blissfully into each other's eyes.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+SANKEY'S DOUBLE-HEADER
+
+A Winter's Tale
+
+By FRANK H. SPEARMAN
+
+
+THE oldest man in the train service didn't pretend to say how long
+Sankey had worked for the company. Pat Francis was a very old conductor;
+but old man Sankey was a veteran when Pat Francis began braking. Sankey
+ran a passenger train when Jimmie Brady was running--and Jimmie
+afterward enlisted and was killed in the Custer fight.
+
+There was an odd tradition about Sankey's name. He was a tall, swarthy
+fellow, and carried the blood of a Sioux chief in his veins. It was in
+the time of the Black Hills excitement, when railroad men, struck by the
+gold fever, were abandoning their trains even at way-stations and
+striking across the divide for Clark's Crossing. Men to run the trains
+were hard to get, and Tom Porter, trainmaster, was putting in every man
+he could pick up without reference to age or color. Porter (he died at
+Julesburg afterward) was a great "jollier," and he wasn't afraid of
+anybody on earth. One day a war party of Sioux clattered into town and
+tore around like a storm. They threatened to scalp everything, even to
+the local tickets. They dashed in on Tom Porter, sitting in the
+despatcher's office upstairs, while the despatcher was hiding below,
+under a loose plank in the baggage-room floor. Tom, being bald as a
+sand-hill, considered himself exempt from scalping parties anyway. He
+was working a game of solitaire when they bore down on him, and got them
+interested in it. That led to a parley, which ended by Porter's hiring
+the whole band to brake on freight trains. Old man Sankey was said to
+have been one of that original war party.
+
+Now this is merely a caboose story, told on winter nights when trainmen
+get stalled in the snow that drifts down from the Sioux country. But
+what follows is better attested.
+
+Sankey, to start with, had a peculiar name--an unpronounceable,
+unspellable, unmanageable name. I never heard it, so I can't give it to
+you; but it was as hard to catch as an Indian pony, and that name made
+more trouble on the payrolls than all the other names put together.
+Nobody at headquarters could handle it; it was never turned in twice
+alike, and they were always writing Tom Porter about the thing. Tom
+explained several times that it was Sitting Bull's ambassador who was
+drawing that money, and that he usually signed the pay-roll with a
+tomahawk. But nobody at Omaha ever knew how to take a joke. The first
+time Tom went down, he was called in very solemnly to explain again
+about the name, and being in a hurry and very tired of the whole
+business, Tom spluttered: "Hang it, don't bother me any more about that
+name! If you can't read it make it Sankey, and be done with it."
+
+They took Tom at his word. They actually did make it Sankey; and that's
+how our oldest conductor came to bear the name of the famous singer. And
+more I may tell you: good name as it was--and is--the Sioux never
+disgraced it.
+
+I suppose every old traveler on the system knew Sankey. He was not only
+always ready to answer questions; but, what is more, ready to answer the
+same question twice. It is that which makes conductors gray-headed and
+spoils their chances for heaven--answering the same questions over and
+over again. Children were apt to be startled a bit at first sight of
+Sankey, he was so dark. But Sankey had a very quiet smile that always
+made them friends after the first trip through the sleepers, and they
+sometimes ran about asking for him after he had left the train. Of late
+years--and this hurts a bit--these very same children, grown ever so
+much bigger, and riding again to or from California or Japan or
+Australia, will ask, when they reach the West End, about the Indian
+conductor. But the conductors who now run the overland trains pause at
+the question, checking over the date limits on the margins of the coupon
+tickets, and handing the envelopes back, look at the children, and say
+quietly: "He isn't running any more."
+
+If you have ever gone over our line to the mountains or to the coast,
+you may remember at McCloud, where they change engines and set the diner
+in or out, the pretty little green park to the east of the depot, with a
+row of catalpa trees along the platform line. It looks like a glass of
+spring water. If it happened to be Sankey's run and a regular West End
+day, sunny and delightful, you would be sure to see standing under the
+catalpas a shy, dark-skinned girl of fourteen or fifteen years, silently
+watching the preparations for the departure of the Overland. And after
+the new engine had been backed champing down, and harnessed to its long
+string of vestibuled sleepers; after the air-hose had been connected and
+examined; after the engineer had swung out of his cab, filled his cups,
+and swung in again; after the fireman and his helper had disposed of
+their slice-bar and shovel and given the tender a final sprinkle, and
+after the conductor had walked leisurely forward, compared time with the
+engineer, and cried, "All Abo-o-o-ard!" then, as your coach moved slowly
+ahead, you might notice, under the receding catalpas, the little girl
+waving a parasol or a handkerchief at the outgoing train. That is, at
+Conductor Sankey; for she was his daughter, Neeta Sankey. Her mother was
+Spanish, and died when Neeta was a wee bit. Neeta and the Limited were
+Sankey's whole world.
+
+When Georgie Sinclair began pulling the Limited, running west opposite
+Foley, he struck up a great friendship with Sankey. Sankey, though he
+was hard to start, was full of early-day stories. Georgie, it seemed,
+had the faculty of getting him to talk; perhaps because when he was
+pulling Sankey's train he made extraordinary efforts to keep on time;
+time was a hobby with Sankey. Foley said he was so careful of it that he
+let his watch stop when he was off duty just to save time. Sankey loved
+to breast the winds and the floods and the snows, and if he could get
+home pretty near on schedule, with everybody else late, he was happy;
+and in respect of that, as Sankey used to say, Georgie Sinclair could
+come nearer gratifying Sankey's ambition than any engine-runner we had.
+Even the firemen used to observe that the young engineer, always neat,
+looked still neater on the days when he took out Sankey's train.
+
+By and by there was an introduction under the catalpas. After that it
+was noticed that Georgie began wearing gloves on the engine--not kid
+gloves, but yellow dogskin; and black silk shirts--he bought them in
+Denver. Then--such an odd way engineers have of paying compliments--when
+Georgie pulled into town on Number Two, if it was Sankey's train, the
+big sky-scraper would give a short, hoarse scream, a most peculiar note,
+just as it drew past Sankey's house, which stood on the brow of the hill
+west of the yards. Thus Neeta would know that Number Two and her father,
+and naturally Mr. Sinclair, were in again, and all safe and sound.
+
+When the railway trainmen held their division fair at McCloud there was
+a lantern to be voted to the most popular conductor--a gold-plated
+lantern with a green curtain in the globe. Cal Stewart and Ben Doton,
+who were very swell conductors and great rivals, were the favorites, and
+had the town divided over their chances for winning it. But at the last
+moment Georgie Sinclair stepped up to the booth and cast a storm of
+votes for old man Sankey. Doton's friends and Stewart's laughed at
+first; but Sankey's votes kept pouring in amazingly. The two favorites
+got frightened; they pooled their issues by throwing Stewart's vote to
+Doton. But it wouldn't do. Georgie Sinclair, with a crowd of
+engineers--Cameron, Kennedy, Foley, Bat Mullen, and Burns--came back at
+them with such a swing that in the final five minutes they fairly
+swamped Doton. Sankey took the lantern by a thousand votes. But I
+understood it cost Georgie and his friends a pot of money.
+
+Sankey said all the time that he didn't want the lantern, but just the
+same he always carried that particular lantern, with his full name,
+Sylvester Sankey, ground into the glass just below the green mantle.
+Pretty soon, Neeta being then eighteen, it was rumored that Sinclair was
+engaged to Miss Sankey, and was going to marry her. And marry her he
+did; though that was not until after the wreck in the Blackwood gorge
+after the Big Snow.
+
+It goes by just that name on the West End yet; for never were such a
+winter and such a snow known on the plains and in the mountains. One
+train on the northern division was stalled six weeks that winter, and
+one whole coach was chopped up for kindling wood. The great and
+desperate effort of the company was to hold open the main line, the
+artery which connected the two coasts. It was a hard winter on trainmen.
+Week after week the snow kept falling and blowing. The trick was not to
+clear the line; it was to keep it clear. Every day we sent out trains
+with the fear that we should not see them again for a week. Freight we
+didn't pretend to move; local passenger business had to be abandoned.
+Coal, to keep our engines and our towns supplied, we had to carry; and
+after that all the brains and muscle and motive power were centered on
+keeping One and Two, our through passenger trains, running.
+
+Our trainmen worked like Americans; there were no cowards on our rolls.
+But after too long a strain men become exhausted, benumbed, indifferent;
+reckless, even. The nerves give out, and will-power seems to halt on
+indecision; but decision is the life of the fast train. None of our
+conductors stood the hopeless fight like Sankey. He was patient,
+taciturn, untiring; and in a conflict with the elements, ferocious. All
+the fighting blood of his ancestors seemed to course again in that
+struggle with the winter king. I can see him yet, on bitter days,
+standing alongside the track in a heavy pea-jacket and Napoleon boots, a
+sealskin cap drawn snugly over his straight black hair, watching,
+ordering, signaling, while Number One, with its frost-bitten sleepers
+behind a rotary, tried to buck through ten and twenty-foot cuts which
+lay bank-full of snow west of McCloud.
+
+Not until April did it begin to look as if we should win out. A dozen
+times the line was all but choked on us. And then, when snow-plows were
+disabled and train crews desperate, there came a storm that discounted
+the worst blizzard of the winter. As the reports rolled in on the
+morning of the 5th, growing worse as they grew thicker, Neighbor,
+dragged out, played out, mentally and physically, threw up his hands. It
+snowed all day the 6th, and on Saturday morning the section men reported
+thirty feet in the Blackwood canyon. It was six o'clock when we got the
+word, and daylight before we got the rotary against it. They bucked away
+till noon without much headway, and came in with their gear smashed and
+a driving-rod fractured. It looked as if we were at last beaten. Number
+One pulled into McCloud that day eighteen hours late; it was Sankey's
+and Sinclair's run west.
+
+There was a long council in the round-house. The rotary was knocked out;
+coal was running low in the chutes. If the line wasn't kept open for the
+coal from the mountains, it was plain we should be tied until we could
+ship it from Iowa or Missouri. West of Medicine Pole there was another
+big rotary working east, with plenty of coal behind her; but she was
+reported stuck fast in the Cheyenne Hills. Foley made suggestions, and
+Dad Sinclair made suggestions. Everybody had a suggestion left. The
+trouble was, Neighbor said, they didn't amount to anything, or were
+impossible. "It's a dead block, boys," announced Neighbor sullenly after
+everybody had done. "We are beaten unless we can get Number One through
+to-day. Look there: by the holy poker, it's snowing again."
+
+The air was dark in a minute with whirling clouds. Men turned to the
+windows and quit talking. Every fellow felt the same--hopeless; at
+least, all but one. Sankey, sitting back of the stove, was making
+tracings with a piece of chalk. "You might as well unload your
+passengers, Sankey," said Neighbor. "You'll never get 'em through this
+winter."
+
+And it was then that Sankey proposed his double-header.
+
+He devised a snow-plow which combined in one monster ram about all the
+good material we had left, and submitted the scheme to Neighbor.
+Neighbor studied it, and hacked at it all he could, and brought it over
+to the office. It was like staking everything on the last cast of the
+dice, but we were in the state of mind which precedes a desperate
+venture. It was talked over an hour, and orders were finally given by
+the superintendent to rig up the double-header and get against the snow
+with it.
+
+All that day and most of the night Neighbor worked twenty men on
+Sankey's device. By Sunday morning it was in such shape that we began to
+take heart. "If she don't get through, she'll sure get back again, and
+that's what most of 'em don't do," growled Neighbor, as he and Sankey
+showed the new ram to the engineers.
+
+They had taken the 566, George Sinclair's engine, for one head, and
+Burns's, the 497, for the other. Behind these were Kennedy, with the
+314, and Cameron, with the 296. The engines were set in pairs, headed
+each way, and buckled up like pack mules. Over the pilots and stacks of
+the head engines rose the tremendous plows, which were to tackle the
+worst drifts ever recorded, before or since, on the West End. The ram
+was designed to work both ways. Under the coal, each tender was loaded
+with pig-iron.
+
+The beleaguered passengers on Number One, side-tracked in the yards,
+eagerly watched the preparations Sankey was making to clear the line.
+Every amateur on the train had his camera out taking pictures of the
+ram. The town, gathered in a single great mob, looked silently on, and
+listened to the frosty notes of the sky-scrapers as they went through
+their preliminary manoeuvers. Just as the final word was given by
+Sankey, conductor in charge, the sun burst through the fleecy clouds,
+and a wild cheer followed the ram out of the western yard; it was looked
+on as a sign of good luck to see the sun again.
+
+Little Neeta, up on the hill, must have seen them as they pulled out.
+Surely she heard the choppy ice-bitten screech of the 566; for that was
+never forgotten, whether the service was special or regular. Besides,
+the head cab of the ram carried this time not only Georgie Sinclair, but
+her father as well. Sankey could handle a slice-bar as well as a punch,
+and rode on the head engine, where, if anywhere, the big chances would
+come. What Sankey was not capable of in the train-service we never knew,
+because he rose superior to every emergency that ever confronted him.
+
+Bucking snow is principally brute force; there is very little coaxing.
+West of the bluffs there was a volley of sharp tooting, like code
+signals between a fleet of cruisers, and in just a minute the four
+ponderous engines, two of them in the back motion, fires white and
+throats bursting, steamed wildly into the canyon. Six hundred feet from
+the first cut, Sinclair's whistle signaled again. Burns and Cameron and
+Kennedy answered; and then, literally turning the monster ram loose
+against the dazzling mountain, the crews settled themselves for the
+shock.
+
+At such a moment there is nothing to be done. If anything goes wrong,
+eternity is too close to consider. There came a muffled drumming on the
+steam-chests; a stagger and a terrific impact; and then the recoil, like
+the stroke of a trip-hammer. The snow shot into the air fifty feet, and
+the wind carried a cloud of fleecy confusion over the ram and out of the
+cut. The cabs were buried in white, and the great steel frames of the
+engines sprung like knitting-needles under the frightful force of the
+blow. Pausing for hardly a breath, they began the signaling again; then
+backed up and up and up the line; and again the massive machines were
+hurled screaming into the cut. "We're getting there, Georgie," cried
+Sankey when the rolling and lurching had stopped.
+
+No one else could tell a thing about it, for it was snow and snow and
+snow; above and behind and ahead and beneath. Sinclair coughed the
+flakes out of his eyes and nose and mouth like a baffled collie. He
+looked doubtful of the claim until the mist had blown clear and the
+quivering monsters were again recalled for a dash. Then it was plain
+that Sankey's instinct was right; they were gaining.
+
+Again they went in, lifting a very avalanche over the stacks, packing
+the banks of the cut with walls hard as ice. Again, as the drivers
+stuck, they raced in a frenzy, and into the shriek of the wind went the
+unearthly scrape of the overloaded safeties. Slowly and sullenly the
+machines were backed again. "She's doing the work, Georgie," cried
+Sankey. "For that kind of a cut she's as good as a rotary. Look
+everything over now while I go back and see how the boys are standing
+it. Then we'll give her one more, and give it the hardest kind."
+
+And they did give her one more; and another. Men at Santiago put up no
+stouter fight than these men made that Sunday morning in the canyon of
+the Blackwood. Once they went in, and twice. And the second time the
+bumping drummed more deeply; the drivers held, pushed, panted, and
+gained against the white wall; heaved and stumbled ahead; and with a
+yell from Sinclair and Sankey and the fireman, the double-header shot
+her nose into the clear over the Blackwood gorge. As engine after engine
+flew past the divided walls each cab took up the cry; it was the wildest
+crowd that ever danced to victory. Through they went and half-way across
+the bridge before they could check their monster catapult. Then, at a
+half full, they shot it back again at the cut, for it worked as well one
+way as the other.
+
+"The thing is done," declared Sankey, when they got into position up the
+line for a final shoot to clean out the eastern cut and get head for a
+dash across the bridge and into the west end of the canyon, where there
+lay another mountain of snow to split. "Look the machines over pretty
+close, boys," said he to the engineers. "If nothing's sprung, we'll take
+a full head across the gorge--the bridge will carry anything--and buck
+the west cut. Then after we get Number One through this afternoon,
+Neighbor can put his baby cabs in here and keep 'em chasing all night.
+But it's done snowing," he added, looking at the leaden sky.
+
+He had the plans all figured out for the master mechanic, the shrewd,
+kindly old man. I think, myself, there's no man on earth like a good
+Indian; and, for that matter, none like a bad one. Sankey knew by a
+military instinct just what had to be done and how to do it. If he had
+lived, he was to have been assistant superintendent. That was the word
+that leaked from headquarters afterward. And with a volley of jokes
+between the cabs and a laughing and yelling between toots, down went
+Sankey's double-header again into the Blackwood gorge.
+
+At the same moment, by an awful misunderstanding of orders, down came
+the big rotary from the west end with a dozen cars of coal behind. Mile
+after mile it had wormed east toward Sankey's ram, and it now burrowed
+through the western cut of the Blackwood, crashed through the drift
+Sankey was aiming for, and whirled out into the open, dead against him,
+at forty miles an hour. Each train, in order to make the grade and the
+blockade against it, was straining the cylinders.
+
+Through the swirling snow that half hid the bridge and interposed
+between the rushing plows Sinclair saw them coming. He yelled. Sankey
+saw them a fraction of a second later, and while Sinclair struggled with
+the throttle and the air, Sankey gave the alarm through the whistle to
+the poor fellows in the blind pockets behind. But the track was at the
+worst. Where there was no snow there were "whiskers"; oil itself
+couldn't have been worse to stop on. It was the old and deadly peril of
+fighting blockades from both ends on a single track. The great rams of
+steel and fire had done their work, and with their common enemy
+overcome, they dashed at each other like madmen across the Blackwood
+gorge.
+
+The fireman at the first cry shot out the side. Sankey yelled at
+Sinclair to jump. But Georgie shook his head: he never would jump.
+Without hesitating, Sankey picked him from the levers in his arms,
+planted a sure foot, and hurled him like a coal shovel through the
+gangway far out into the gorge. The other cabs were already empty. But
+the instant's delay in front cost Sankey his life. Before he himself
+could jump the rotary crashed into the 566. They reared like mountain
+lions, pitched sideways and fell headlong into the creek, fifty feet.
+Sankey went under them. He could have saved himself; he chose to save
+George. There wasn't time to do both; he had to choose, and to choose
+instantly. Did he, maybe, think in that flash of Neeta and of whom she
+needed most--of a young and a stalwart protector rather than an old and
+failing one? I do not know; I know only what he did. Every one who
+jumped got clear. Sinclair lit in ten feet of snow, and they pulled him
+out with a rope: he wasn't scratched. Even the bridge was not badly
+strained. Number One pulled over it next day.
+
+Sankey was right; there was no more snow; not even enough to cover the
+dead engines that lay on the rocks. But the line was open: the fight was
+won.
+
+There never was a funeral in McCloud like Sankey's. George Sinclair and
+Neeta followed first, and of the mourners there were as many as there
+were spectators. Every engine on the division carried black for thirty
+days.
+
+Sankey's contrivance for fighting snow has never yet been beaten on the
+high line. It is perilous to go against a drift behind it: something has
+to give. But it gets there, as Sankey got there--always; and in time of
+blockade and desperation on the West End they still send out Sankey's
+double-header; though Sankey, as the conductors tell the children,
+traveling east or traveling west--Sankey isn't running any more.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+AUNT MARY TELEGRAPHS
+
+A Comedy of Everyday Life
+
+By LLOYD E. LONERGAN
+
+
+ "AUNTIE left on the six-o'clock train last night. Meet her at the
+ depot.--CLARA."
+
+This telegram, dated New York, greeted Frank Carey when he reached his
+pleasant little home on Indiana Avenue, Chicago.
+
+"Aunt Mary will be here to-night," he said to his wife, "my rich aunt
+from New York, you know. I am to meet her at the depot."
+
+"When does she arrive?" fluttered pretty little Mrs. Carey, a bride of a
+few months. "Cannot I go with you to the depot?"
+
+Mr. Carey said she could, then he thought for a moment, then he put his
+doubts into words after a second reading of the telegram.
+
+"I wonder what road she is coming in on?" he said.
+
+"'Twas stupid of her," replied his wife, "but call up the railroads and
+find out which one has a six-o'clock train from New York. Silly!"
+
+Mr. Carey kissed his wife and remarked that she was the brightest little
+girl in the world, after which he gaily telephoned, listened intently to
+someone on the other end of the line, made numerous notes, and turned to
+his wife in despair.
+
+"Bless Clara!" he said devoutly.
+
+His wife looked surprised, so he hastily explained.
+
+"There is a six o'clock train from New York on the Pennsylvania, also on
+the Lake Shore, likewise on the Michigan Central, and the Lehigh
+Valley, and the Grand Trunk, and the West Shore, and the B. &. O.!"
+
+"Which one is auntie coming on?" inquired Mrs. Carey with interest.
+
+"All of them," replied her husband wrathfully. "She is sitting on the
+cow-catcher of each and every train, and if I'm not there to meet her
+she'll disinherit me. Haven't you any sense?"
+
+Whereupon there were tears, apologies, and finally a council of war. It
+was Mrs. Carey who solved the problem.
+
+"All we have to do," she cried, "is to meet all the trains. Won't it be
+cute?"
+
+Carey didn't think so, but was afraid to express himself. He simply
+tried to look impressed and listened.
+
+"There are only seven trains," she continued. "Now you," counting on her
+fingers, "are one, and I am two and Mr. and Mrs. Haines next door, who
+belong to my whist club, are four; and Ella Haines is five; and I just
+saw Mr. What's-his-name go in to call on Ella--and he'll be six; and
+that horrid man on the next block who is in your lodge will have to be
+seven."
+
+The "train meeters" were gathered together inside of an hour. Mrs. Carey
+overruled all objections and laughed away all difficulties. She told
+them it would be a lark, and they believed it--at the time! As none of
+them had met Mrs. Smith (Aunt Mary), Carey was called upon for a
+description.
+
+"Aunt Mary," he said, "is of medium height, dark complexion and usually
+dresses in black. She is fifty-eight years old, but tells people she is
+under fifty. You cannot miss her." And with this they were compelled to
+be satisfied.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ella Haines was assigned to the Pennsylvania depot and arrived late. All
+the New York passengers had disembarked, but an old woman was standing
+at the entrance and looking anxiously at the passers-by.
+
+"Mrs. Smith?" said Ella, inquiringly.
+
+"Thank heaven, you have come," was the joyous reply.
+
+"Here," and she stepped to one side and revealed a little girl who was
+gazing out at the tracks. "I've had such a time with that brat and I'll
+never travel with another again. I've just got time to catch my train
+for St. Paul. Good-bye!" Whereupon, disregarding Ella's cries and her
+protestations, the woman rushed madly to the other end of the depot and
+disappeared through a gate which closed behind her with a slam. It was
+the last call for the St. Paul train.
+
+Naturally, Ella did not know what to do. She hung around the depot for
+half an hour, hoping someone would claim the child. Then she put the
+little one in a cab and gave the Careys' address in Indiana Avenue.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Walter Haines went to the Lake Shore depot. One of the first passengers
+to emerge from the New York train was a female, who seemed to answer the
+general description furnished by Carey. She was breathless as if from
+running faster than an old woman should run. As she reached Haines, she
+stopped and glared at him.
+
+"Mrs. Smith?" he inquired, lifting his hat.
+
+The woman grabbed him by the arm. "I knew you would be here, but hurry,
+that man is after me!"
+
+"What man?" asked Haines in surprise.
+
+"Hush, we cannot talk now," was the reply. "Get a carriage and drive
+fast, fast; we must escape him."
+
+"George couldn't come, he sent me. My name is Haines," said the puzzled
+escort.
+
+"I don't care if your name is Beelzebub" was the impatient retort. "You
+get that carriage or I'll write to Roosevelt." And Mr. Haines, very much
+astonished, complied.
+
+He thought as he drove away that he heard someone shouting, but was not
+sure; in fact, he paid no attention, for he was too busy thinking what a
+queer old aunt his friend Carey had.
+
+The "horrid man who belonged to the lodge" was named Perkins. He reached
+the B. & O. depot half an hour ahead of time, so he went across the
+street and had a drink. When he returned he discovered that No. 7 was
+late, and so had another. Also, several more. By the time the train did
+arrive he was in such a mellow state that he couldn't tell a parlor car
+from a lake steamer--and he didn't care! He had likewise forgotten what
+George's aunt looked like, but that, too, was a trivial matter. So he
+stood at the gate, beaming blandly at every person that appeared.
+
+"Are you Georsh's saunt?" he inquired of a tall man with white
+side-whiskers and garbed in ministerial black. His answer was a look of
+horror, but it had no effect on Perkins, who repeated his question at
+intervals without result. His lack of success finally drove him to
+tears.
+
+"Poor Georsh!" he sobbed. "Dear old Georsh! Must have an naunt! Break
+hish heart if he don't have an naunt! Can't fine his naunt! Get him one
+myself!"
+
+A gang of immigrants were passing at the time. Perkins grabbed one of
+them by the arm.
+
+"Be nish fellow," he said persuasively, "be Georsh's aunt."
+
+The immigrant was obdurate, but Perkins was persistent. He drew a roll
+of bills from his pocket and peeled off a five. This he pressed upon his
+new-found friend.
+
+"Be a good aunt," he said, "be a nish aunt, and I'll give you two more
+like thish!"
+
+The Italian, overcome by the sight of so much wealth, fell captive to
+the eloquence of Perkins. The latter was delighted. He escorted his
+victim to a saloon across the street and hurled six drinks into him in
+rapid succession. The immigrant beamed and forgot all his troubles. He
+lit a fifteen-cent cigar and puffed away as if he were used to it.
+
+"Be your-a aunt," he said, "be-a anybody's aunt. You good-a feller."
+
+This sentiment led to another round of drinks, and then the pair tumbled
+into a cab, singing discordantly in two languages. Perkins fortunately
+remembered the address of Haines, and was able to mumble it so that the
+hackman could understand. Therefore there was no bar to his enjoyment.
+
+Of course they stopped en route, for Perkins was brimming over with
+gratitude and the cabman was included in their rejoicing. Long before
+they reached Indiana Avenue, everybody was drunk except the horse.
+
+In the meantime there was all sorts of trouble in the modest residence
+of George Carey. The head of the household had fumed and fretted about
+the Michigan Central depot, and finally started home, auntless. There he
+met his wife, Mrs. Haines and Ella's young man with similar stories.
+Five minutes later a carriage drove up and Ella and her charge alighted.
+
+"Isn't she a dear little girl?" gurgled Miss Haines, who, being petite
+and worried, didn't know anything else to do under the circumstances
+except to gurgle.
+
+Carey gazed at the young woman with distinct disapproval for the first
+time in his life.
+
+"I know the popular impression is that old ladies shrink," he said, "but
+Aunt Mary could never have shrunk to that size. Where did you get her
+and why?"
+
+Falteringly, Miss Haines explained. Then she cried. The child, who had
+regarded them gravely up to this point, took it for a signal. She
+screamed, then she roared. Nobody could comfort her or find out who she
+was.
+
+The arrival of another cab distracted their attention. The bell rang
+loudly. As Carey opened the door, an old woman bounded in. Her hat was
+on one side of her head and her eyes gleamed madly.
+
+"Safe at last!" she cried. Then she ran upstairs, entered Mrs. Haines's
+room, and locked the door. Through the panels came the sound of
+hysterical laughter.
+
+Walter Haines entered the house at this moment. His attitude was
+distinctly apologetic.
+
+"Remarkable old lady, isn't she?" he ventured.
+
+"Who?" asked Mr. Carey.
+
+"Why your aunt, of course; didn't you see her come in?"
+
+Carey choked down his wrath out of respect to the ladies, but it was
+hard work.
+
+"I never saw that woman before," he remarked; "you brought her here
+uninvited, now you take her away."
+
+Naturally this provoked argument. Mrs. Haines sided with her husband,
+Mrs. Carey flew to the aid of her worser half, Miss Haines wept, and the
+little girl screamed. Upstairs, the bogus Aunt Mary was still laughing.
+
+None of the interested parties could tell afterward how long the talk
+continued. A louder noise outside drew them all to the front porch. In
+front of the house was a hansom cab drawn by a disgusted-looking horse.
+He looked and acted like one who had been compelled against his will to
+mingle with disreputable associates.
+
+The driver descended from his seat and fell full length upon the
+pavement. He didn't try to get up, but chanted in a husky tone, "Hail!
+hail! the gang's all here!!!"
+
+Then the door of the cab opened and Mr. Perkins appeared. Nobody could
+deny that he was very much the worse for wear. But Mr. Perkins bore
+himself like a conqueror. He advanced hastily and embraced Carey with
+enthusiasm. Carey recoiled.
+
+"Dear Georsh," said Perkins. "Got you an naunt!"
+
+Apprehensively, Carey ran to the carriage. Huddled upon the floor was an
+object that moved faintly. From the atmosphere Sherlock Holmes would
+have deduced that a whisky refinery had exploded in that cab a few hours
+before. The onlooker gingerly touched the object. It rolled over, then
+it rolled out of the cab and lay on the sidewalk beside the driver.
+
+Perkins kept on smiling. "Your naunt," he remarked, blandly. "Couldn't
+get you what you wanted. Got you thish one!"
+
+At this moment, Carey remembered that he had a telephone. He spurned his
+"aunt" with his foot and passed into the house. He called up Police
+Headquarters. His friend, Sergeant Bob O'Rourke, was on duty, which made
+it easier for him.
+
+"Bob," he said, after greetings had been exchanged, "have you an alarm
+out for a little girl kidnapped from the Pennsylvania station?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And does anybody want a crazy woman, last seen on a Lake Shore train?"
+
+"Yes; her keeper was here half an hour ago," was the reply. "He was
+taking her to Kankakee and she made a get-away. What do you know about
+her?"
+
+"They are both here," was the reply. "Send the wagon, and just for good
+measure I'll throw in an Italian immigrant who came in over the B. & O.
+and a cab-driver. They are both drunk, very drunk, and please take the
+cab away too."
+
+The next half hour gave Indiana Avenue residents plenty to talk about
+for a month. But finally the combat was over, and Carey and his friends
+sat down exhausted.
+
+"But what I would like to know," remarked the head of the house, "where,
+oh where is Aunt Mary?"
+
+It was a messenger-boy who brought the answer--a telegram dated Niagara
+Falls, current date and reading:
+
+ "Stopped over here. Isn't the view from Goat Island wonderful? Leave
+ for Chicago on the first train. Meet me."
+
+There was a sudden painful silence.
+
+"Does anybody know how many trains there are from Niagara Falls?"
+inquired Mrs. Carey, speaking to the company generally. She didn't dare
+to address her husband.
+
+"Just about as many as there are from New York," replied Haines, with a
+woebegone look. "But--"
+
+"Don't finish it," returned Carey, "I am not going to ask you to try
+again, and I am not going to do so myself. Aunt Mary can leave her money
+to anybody she pleases. If I had another night like this the executors
+would be compelled to mail me my cheque to an asylum."
+
+And the next evening Aunt Mary, unattended, reached her nephew's house
+without any trouble at all. She didn't disinherit him; in fact, she felt
+so sorry because of his troubles that she bought Mrs. Carey a complete
+spring outfit regardless of cost.
+
+It's a good thing to have an Aunt Mary, even if she is indefinite in her
+telegrams.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+THE VENGEANCE OF THE WOLF
+
+A Drama in Wales
+
+By J. AQUILA KEMPSTER
+
+
+IN THE great stone hall of Llangarth, Daurn-ap-Tavis, the old Welsh Wolf
+lay dying. Outside was the night and a sullen gale whose winds came
+moaning down the hills and clung about the house with little bodeful
+whispers that grew to long-drawn eerie wails, while pettish rain-squalls
+spent their spite in futile gusts on door and casement.
+
+And through the night from time to time a horseman came, spurring hard
+and spitting out strange Welsh oaths at the winds that harried him. Five
+had passed the door since sun-down, four worthy sons and a nephew of the
+Wolf. They stood now booted and spurred about the old man's couch, a
+rough-looking crew with the mud caking them from head to foot, while the
+leaping flames from the log fire flung their shadows black and distorted
+far up among the rafters.
+
+They hung around him sullenly, but as he looked them up and down the
+sick man's eyes took on a new keenness and a low, throaty laugh that was
+half a growl escaped him.
+
+"Well, Cedric, man, what devil's game have you been playing of late?
+and, Tad, you black rascal--ah, 'twas a pity you were born to Gruffydd
+instead of me. Well, well, boys, the old Wolf's cornered at last,
+cornered at last, and Garm, Levin, Rhys--the Cadwallader's going to live
+and laugh, aye, he's going to live and laugh while a Tavis roasts in
+hell."
+
+Garm started with a low growl, while Cedric kicked savagely at a hound
+that lay beside the logs.
+
+"Aye, Ced, kick the old dog, but it won't stop the Cadwallader's laugh."
+
+Cedric clenched his fists at the taunt and his face grew purple in the
+fire glow, but old Daurn went on remorselessly: "Twenty years he's
+laughed at the Wolf and his whelps, an' think you he'll stop now? He was
+always too lucky for me. I thought when my lads grew strong---- But
+there, he laid me low, the only man that ever did, curse him! There's
+the mark, boys; see the shamed blood rise to it?"
+
+He loosened his shirt with a fretful jerk and they bent over and
+glowered at the red scar which ran across his chest. They had all seen
+it times before, knew the dark quarrel and the darker fight, had tingled
+with shame again and again, but to-night it seemed to hold an added
+sting, for the Wolf was going out with his debt unpaid.
+
+Cedric, the elder, gaped and shuddered, then fell to cursing again, but
+Daurn drew back the quilt and went on talking: "I swore by the body of
+God to get even, and day and night I've watched my chance. I tried at
+Tredegar, and that night ye all mind at Ebbu Vale. Yes, I tell you a
+dozen times, but he's a fox, curse him! a sly old fox, and now the
+Wolf's teeth are broken. What's that, Ced? Look to him, Tad--aye, look
+to all thy cousins. Fine grown lads, big, brave, and fierce, but the
+Cadwallader still lives and laughs; yes, laughs at old Daurn and his
+boys. My God! to think of it."
+
+"Curse me! choke me!" Cedric stormed out in spluttering fury, gripping
+his sword with one hand while he dragged at his coat with the other.
+"I'll cut--cut his bl-black gizzard, blast him. I'm a c-c-coward, eh!
+Right in my t-teeth! Well, wait till th'-th' dawn an' see."
+
+He had crammed his hat over his eyes and with coat buttoned all awry was
+half way to the door before Tad caught and held him, whispering in his
+ear: "Steady, Ced, steady. He's got some plan or I'm a fool. Come back
+an' wait a bit, an' if I'm mistaken I'll surely ride along with ye."
+
+Cedric yielded, doubtful and sullen, but Daurn greeted him bravely:
+"God's truth, lad, you've the spirit of the Wolf at least, but you've
+got no brains to plan. Come close an' listen, an' if ye truly want a
+fight thy father'll never balk thee."
+
+Then with faltering breath but gleaming eyes he unfolded the plan he had
+conceived to make his dying a thing of greater infamy than all his
+bloody days.
+
+The beginnings of the feud between the House of the Wolf and that of
+Llyn Gethin, the Cadwallader, were so remote that probably both had
+forgotten, if they ever knew them, for the old Welsh chieftains passed
+their quarrels on from generation to generation and their hot blood
+rarely cooled in the passing. Llyn was about the only man in the country
+who had been able to hold his own against "the Tavis," but hold it he
+had with perhaps a trifle to spare. Indeed, of late years he had let
+slip many an opportunity for reprisals, and thrice had made overtures of
+peace which had been violently rejected. Llyn had fought fair at least,
+even if he had struck hard, but the life of the Wolf had been as
+treacherous as it was bloody. And day by day and year by year, as
+Daurn's strength began to fail and brooding took the place of action,
+the bitterness of his hatred grew, and out of this at last the plan. It
+was simple.
+
+Daurn was old, dying, and weary of the strife. He would pass at peace
+with the world and particularly with his ancient foe. A messenger should
+be sent inviting Llyn and his sons to Llangarth. They would suspect
+nothing, for all Wales knew the Wolf lay low--would probably come
+unarmed and needs must, as time was short, travel by night. Well, there
+was a convenient and lonely spot some three miles from Llangarth--did
+the lads understand? Aye, they understood, but their breath came heavily
+and they glanced furtively each at the other, while the youngest, Rhys,
+shivered and drew closer to Tad.
+
+Daurn's burning eyes questioned them one by one, and one by one they
+bowed their heads but spake never a word.
+
+"Ye'll swear to it, lads," he whispered hoarsely, and drew a long dagger
+from beneath his pillow. For answer there came the rattle of loosened
+steel, and as he again bared his breast they drew closer in a half
+circle, laying their blades flat above his heart, his own dagger adding
+to the ring of steel.
+
+And then they swore by things unknown to modern men to wipe out the
+shame that had lain so long upon their house, and that before their
+father died.
+
+As their voices ceased the wind outside seemed to take up the burden of
+their bloody oath as if possessed, for it shrieked and wailed down the
+great chimney like some living thing in pain. And then, in a little lull
+following on the sobbing cry, there came a curious straining push that
+shook the closed oak door.
+
+They stood transfixed, for a moment daunted, with their swords half in
+and half out their scabbards, till with a warning gesture to his
+cousins, Black Tad stole softly across the floor and, lifting the heavy
+bar cautiously, opened the door.
+
+He paused an instant on the lintel, motionless and rigid to the point of
+his sword, his eyes fixed on the white face of a girl who was cowered
+back against the further wall. For a fraction of time he hesitated, but
+the awful anguish of the face and the mute, desperate appeal of the
+whole pose settled him. With a rough clatter he sprang into the dim
+passage, rattling his sword and stamping his feet, at the same time
+giving vent with his lips to the yelp of a hound in pain, and following
+it with rough curses and vituperation. Then, without another glance at
+the girl, he re-entered the hall and slammed to the door, grumbling at
+Rhys for not keeping his dogs tied up.
+
+By one o'clock the great hall was still. The men were lying scattered
+about the house, for the most part sleeping as heavily as many jorums of
+rum made possible.
+
+But the firelight flickering in the hall caught ever an answering gleam
+from the old Wolf's eyes as he lay there gray, shaggy, and watchful.
+From time to time his bony fingers plucked restlessly at his beard, and
+now and again his lips stretched back over yellow teeth in an evil smile
+as he gloated over the details of his coming vengeance.
+
+And out in a chill upper hall Gwenith, the fair daughter of a black
+house, sat in a deep embrasure, her arms clinging to the heavy oak bars
+desperately. The wind moaned and sighed about her while her white
+terrified lips echoed the agony of her heart. And the burden of her
+whispered cry was ever, "Davy!--Davy!" and then: "For the Christ's sake!
+Davy!--Davy!--Davy!"
+
+So the night drew on with the men and dogs sleeping torpidly; with the
+old Wolf chuckling grimly as the shadows closed about him, and with the
+child in the cold above sobbing out pitiful prayers for her lover, for
+only yesterday she had plighted her troth to Davy Gethin, the
+Cadwallader's youngest son.
+
+These two had met in the early days when she wandered free over the
+rolling hills, a wild young kilted sprite, fearful of nothing save her
+father and his grim sons. And Davy had wooed her ardently, though in
+secret from the first. It had been charming enough in the past despite
+the fear that ever made her say him nay. Then yesterday he had won her
+from her tears and fears, won her by his brave and tender front, and she
+had placed her little hands on his breast and sworn to follow him
+despite all else when once her father had passed away. And now, twelve
+short hours after her fingers had touched him, her fear had caught her
+by the throat, for they would kill him surely, her prince, the only joy
+she had ever known.
+
+So went the night, with desperate distracted plans, and the dumb agony
+of cold despair. And in the very early dawn, when men and things cling
+close to sleep, she heard a gentle stirring--a muffled footfall on the
+stairs, and Black Tad stood at her side, a great shadow, questioning
+her.
+
+"Mistress, what heard you?"
+
+And she answered quick with loathing: "All! all the vile, shameful
+thing!"
+
+"They are our foes" he muttered moodily.
+
+"Foes! Foes! Nay, none of you are worthy any foe--save the hangman! Ah,
+God will curse you! Cruel! Cruel!"
+
+She leaned out of her seat toward him, her panting breath and fierce
+words lashing him so that he stepped back a pace, dazed--she was ever
+such a gentle child.
+
+"What would you, Gwen?"
+
+"What would I! My God!--a fair fight at least. Oh, Tad, and I thought
+you were a brave man."
+
+"I--I--damme, I, what can I do?--and what does it matter?"
+
+"Matter?--a foul blot!--matter to you and Ced and father--nothing!
+Murderers! I hate you all! What has the Cadwallader done? All Wales
+knows 'twas ever father set on him, not he on father--Always!--always, I
+say! Aye, I remember that bloody night at Ebbu Vale. Shame! Shame! And
+the harrying and burning at Rhyll, when the mother and her babes
+perished. No, you weren't there, Tad, but you know and I know who was.
+Ah, Tad, she's crying to God--that mother, and holding the little dead
+things in her hands, close up to his face. And now you'd murder Llyn,
+for all he's ever been for peace."
+
+"Hush-s-sh! not so loud, Gwen."
+
+"Not so loud! not so loud!" she jibed bitterly. "If you fear my poor
+voice now, what will it be when all Wales is ringing with this last foul
+deed?"
+
+Tad breathed hard, then caught her wrists suddenly, crushing them in his
+fierceness: "Listen, Gwenith. After all I'm no Tavis--I'm Gruffydd, and
+I love you."
+
+She shrank away with wide, fearful eyes, her breath coming in little
+painful gasps.
+
+"What--what do you mean, Tad?"
+
+"I love you, Gwen."
+
+"And----?"
+
+"Well, I'm no Tavis--I'm Gruffydd."
+
+Slowly the meaning which he himself hardly understood dawned on her.
+
+"You'll save them, Tad?"
+
+"Na, na. A fair fight is what you said. 'Tis all I can do."
+
+"And you will?"
+
+"I love you," he persisted stubbornly.
+
+She closed her eyes tightly and leaned back against the wooden shutter,
+her hands still held close in his grasp. And she strove to see clearly
+through the mist of horror and pain. It was a chance, at least a
+fighting chance, to save Davy, her prince; the only chance, the only
+way, and outside that what else mattered?
+
+Her eyes opened and her lips trembled; then she got her strength back
+and faced him in the dim dawn.
+
+"My life for theirs, Tad,--is that it?"
+
+Her eyes and her question shamed him, but he clung to his text doggedly,
+for he had loved her long and hopelessly in his wild, stubborn way, and
+this was his first and only desperate chance.
+
+"I love ye, Gwenith, I love ye!"
+
+There came a stir in the far hall, a long-drawn yawn; and at the sound
+the girl whispered fiercely: "Well, it's a bargain; give them fair
+warning and I'll--I'll do--give you your will. Yes, I swear it by the
+dear Saint David. Quick! let me go--no, not now!--Tad, I command you,
+I--I--Quick! that's Garm's voice; let me go."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Llyn Gethin! a word in your ear before we ride on."
+
+It was Tad who spoke to the old Cadwallader out in the moonlight. Llyn
+had answered Daurn's urgent message for peace, and a few miles north of
+Llangarth had met Tad. At the words the old man looked at him curiously,
+but reined his horse in, while his sons watched the pair suspiciously,
+for they were young, their blood and their hate still ran hotly, and
+save for their father would have had none of this death-bed
+reconciliation.
+
+"Well, lad, what is it?" asked Llyn, when they were out of earshot.
+
+"A word of warning, sir--from one who hates you."
+
+"Ah! You were ever a good hater, boy. What is it?"
+
+"'Tis a trick o 'mine, sir--this visit--and you'd better ride back."
+
+"I think not, Tad."
+
+"Well, have your way, but if you ride with me you ride to hell."
+
+"We ride with you, Tad."
+
+"Your blood be on you and your sons, then, Llyn Gethin. You're safe to
+the stone bridge; after that fend for yourself. I--I'm a cursed traitor,
+but, by David, I strike with my house. There, I've warned you, and God
+forgive me."
+
+"Amen, lad! Will you shake hands before we ride?"
+
+"No, choke me! I'd sooner ding my dagger in your neck."
+
+So they rejoined the waiting group and rode forward, Tad moodily in
+advance, Llyn and his sons in a whispering bunch some yards behind. It
+had been Tad's own suggestion that he ride forward and meet the Gethins
+so they might be lured the more easily to the turn beyond the bridge.
+Now they followed on till they saw the white masonry gleaming in the
+moonlight, and then the dark form of Tad's horse crossing it, when there
+was a halt and a grim tightening of belts and loosening of swords. And
+as the man on the bridge threw up his arm, Llyn answered the sign
+hoarsely: "God keep thee, son of Gruffydd!" he cried. Then as his sons
+closed in he turned on them sternly: "Remember, lads! who touches him
+touches me. Ah! steady now! Forward!"
+
+Even as they clattered on the bridge Tad's challenge and signal to his
+kinsmen rang out furiously:
+
+"The Wolf! The Wolf and Saint David!"
+
+Then came a rush of horse and steel and wild-eyed men, which but for
+their preparation would have swept the Gethins down. As it was they met
+it fiercely as it came. They had not come unarmed--perhaps wise old Llyn
+distrusted such late penitence even as did his sons. Be that as it may,
+the cry of "Cadwallader!" rose against "The Wolf!" and bore it back, for
+even in the first wild rush, Cedric fell away before a long, swift
+thrust, and a moment later Rhys, the youngest of the house went down and
+died beneath the stamping iron hoofs.
+
+When Llyn saw this he called to stop the fight, but Tad, in a frenzy of
+horror and remorse, flung on again with Garth and Levin striking wild
+beside him. 'Twas a wicked rush, but now the fight stood five to three,
+and in the crash Levin slipped and got a dagger in his throat, while Tad
+spurred through an open way. Then as he reined and turned, the end was
+come, for Garm's shrill death-cry tore the air, and he was left alone.
+
+Thrice he charged like a wounded boar, shouting hoarsely for the house
+he had betrayed. "The Wolf! The Wolf! Saint David and the Wolf!"
+
+And ever he found that open way and ever their steel avoided him.
+
+At last he reined in his sweating mare and fell to cursing, his face
+distraught with agony and wet with blood and sweat and tears. So he
+stood, desperate--at bay, and taunted them with every vileness his
+furious tongue could frame. Then faltered at last with a great
+heartbroken sob, for they sat silent and still and would not give him
+fight.
+
+On the road at his horse's feet Cedric lay and Rhys, and over yonder in
+the grass the other two. He swayed weakly as he looked, then slid from
+his saddle and stooping, kissed his cousins one by one, with those grim,
+silent figures looking on. He broke his sword across his knee--his
+father, Gruffydd's sword--and flung the pieces with an oath at Llyn.
+Then, ere they could guess his meaning, his dagger flashed, and with a
+last weak cry for "the Wolf," he fell with the men of his House.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Back at Llangarth the great hall was aglow and Daurn chuckled and waited
+and plucked at his beard, till, just past midnight, there came a sudden
+commotion and the heavy tramp of horses in the outer court. Then Gwenith
+ran in white and wild, and kneeling, buried her sobs in the drapery of
+the couch. And ere her father could question her a group of sombre
+figures filled the doorway.
+
+'Twas a dream--surely 'twas a fearful dream! Or were they ghosts? Yes,
+that was it; see the blood on them! He was either dreaming or these were
+the very dead.
+
+They drew up to the couch, Llyn and his tall, stern sons. Daurn knew
+them well and strove to curse them, but the Cadwallader's grave voice
+hushed him to a sudden fear.
+
+"Peace be with thee, Daurn-ap-Tavis, we come--to bid thee farewell."
+
+Daurn gasped and stuttered, his fingers clawing fearfully while a cold
+sweat broke out over his forehead. But ere he found his voice two of
+Llyn's sons, David and Sion, drew away to the door, and later, Llewellen
+and Pen. They came back heavily and laid their burdens gently by the
+fire logs and returned, then came again and went. Five times in all. And
+an awful fear was in Daurn's eyes as he glared at those still, muffled
+shapes lying close beside him in the firelight.
+
+Then Llyn spoke, slow and sorrowfully, as he stooped and one by one drew
+the face-cloths from the dead.
+
+"Peace be with thee, Daurn-ap-Tavis; thy son Cedric--bids thee farewell.
+
+"Rhys--bids thee farewell.
+
+"Also Tad, thy brother's son--bids thee farewell."
+
+But the end was come, for Daurn, with a little childish cry, had gone to
+seek his sons. Llyn stooped and gently closed the old Wolf's eyes, then
+with bent head and weary step passed from the room.
+
+But young Davy stole back softly and knelt near the stricken girl at the
+foot of the couch.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+THE WOOING OF BETTINA
+
+A Story of Finance
+
+By W.Y. SHEPPARD
+
+
+MR. PAUL STRUMLEY stood on the veranda of Mr. Richard Stokes's sumptuous
+home in the fashionable suburb of Lawrenceville and faced the daughter
+of the house indignantly. The daughter of the house was also plainly
+perturbed. Their mutual agitation was sharply accentuated by the fresh
+calmness of the spring morning, which seemed to hover like a north-bound
+bird over the wide, velvety lawn.
+
+"Bettina," announced Mr. Strumley suddenly, "your father is--is----"
+
+"An old goose."
+
+"No, a brute!"
+
+This explosion appeared momentarily to relieve his state of mind. But in
+his breast there was still left a sufficiency of outraged dignity to
+warm his cheeks hotly, and not by any means without an abundance of
+cause. Scarcely an hour before he had nervously, yet exultantly,
+alighted from his big touring car in front of the Commercial Bank, to
+seek the president of that institution in the sanctity of his private
+office. There, briefly but eloquently, he announced the engagement of
+Miss Bettina Stokes to Mr. Paul Strumley, and naively requested for the
+happy young people a full share of the parental sanction and blessing.
+And his callow confidence can hardly be condemned on recalling that he
+was one of the wealthiest and most popular young swains in the city. Mr.
+Stokes, however, did not seem to take this into consideration. On the
+contrary, he rose to the occasion with an outburst of disapprobation too
+inflammatory to be set on paper, and quickly followed it with a
+picturesque and uncompromising ultimatum. In the confused distress of
+the unexpected Mr. Strumley found himself unable to marshal a single
+specimen of logical refutation. He could only retreat in haste, to
+recover, if possible, at leisure.
+
+But this leisure, the time it had taken him to hurl the machine across
+town to Bettina, had proven sadly insufficient. When he rushed up the
+steps to the veranda, where sat the object of his affections rocking in
+beautiful serenity, he was still choking from indignation, and had found
+it hard to tell her in coherent sentences that her father had
+energetically refused the honor of an alliance with the highly
+respectable Strumley family.
+
+The grounds, however, on which had been based this unreasonable
+objection were of all things under the sun the most preposterous. Mr.
+Stokes had emphatically declared that his daughter's happiness was too
+dear to him to be foolishly entrusted to one who could not even manage
+his own affairs, let alone the affairs of a wife, and, presumably later,
+of a family. Mr. Strumley was rich at present, so much was readily
+conceded; but he was not capable himself of taking care of what a
+thrifty parent had laid by for him. He in his weak-mindedness was
+compelled to hire the brains of a mere substitute, a manager, if you
+prefer. Should anything happen, and such things happen every day, where
+would Mr. Strumley be? And where, pray, would be his wife and family? In
+the poorhouse!
+
+"My daughter is too good for a man who cannot manage his own concerns,"
+the irate father had summed up. "When you have shown yourself capable,
+my lad, of competing in the world with grown-up intellects, then there
+will be time enough for you to contemplate matrimony--and not until
+then. Good morning to you, Mr. Strumley."
+
+"And he snapped his jaws together like a vise," recalled Paul, coming
+out from his gloomy retrospection.
+
+"If he shut them so," and Bettina worked her pretty chin out to its
+farthest extension, "well, that means he is like the man from Missouri;
+you've got to show him before he changes his mind one iota."
+
+"I ought to have been humping over a desk from the start," regretted Mr.
+Strumley, feeling his bulging biceps dolefully. "It's all right stroking
+a crew, and heaps of fun, too, but it doesn't win you a wife. Now
+there's your dad, he couldn't pull a soap box across a bath tub; but he
+can pull through a 'deal' I couldn't budge with a hand-spike."
+
+Miss Bettina sighed sympathetically, and smiled appreciatively. She felt
+deeply for her lover, and was justly proud of such a capable parent.
+"Every one does say papa is an excellent business man," she remarked;
+"and he certainly can swing some wonderful deals. Only yesterday I
+accidentally overheard him telling Mr. Proctor that he held an option--I
+think that was the word--from Haynes, Forster & Company on thousands and
+thousands of acres of timber land in Arkansas. He said it would expire
+to-day at two o'clock, but that he was going to buy the land for
+cash--'spot cash' he said was what they demanded."
+
+Mr. Strumley smiled ruefully. "And I guess it will be some of my 'spot
+cash,'" he ruminated. "I am not saying anything against your father,
+Bettina, but if it wasn't for such idle good-for-nothings as myself, who
+let their money accumulate in his bank, I doubt if he could swing many
+of these 'big deals.' If we were like he wanted us to be, we'd be
+swinging them ourselves."
+
+After Mr. Strumley had finished his bit of philosophy, he fell to
+communing with himself. Apparently his own wisdom had stirred a new
+thought within his breast. It had. He was beginning to wonder what would
+happen if Bettina's father suddenly found himself bereft of sufficient
+"spot cash" to take advantage of this option. Anyone having a second
+call on same might be fortunate enough to swing the "big deal"--and
+profit by it, according to his intentions!
+
+"Paul," Bettina broke in upon his meditations, a little note of hopeful
+pleading in her voice, "it might not be too late for you to--to
+reform?"
+
+Mr. Strumley aroused himself with difficulty, and looked into her
+bewitching face before replying. Then: "Maybe you are right," he mused;
+"at any rate I have an idea." And kissing her thoughtfully, he strode
+down the steps toward where encouragingly panted his car.
+
+The car proudly bore Mr. Strumley and his idea to the brand-new offices
+of a certain young friend of his who had himself only recently
+metamorphosed from the shell to the swivel chair. Mr. Greenlee looked up
+in mute surprise. But Mr. Strumley ignored it and came to the point with
+a rush. Did Mr. Greenlee have twenty thousand dollars in cash to spare?
+He did? Good! Would he lend it to Mr. Strumley on gilt-edge collateral?
+Never mind exclamations; they had no market value. Eight per cent. did.
+Then Mr. Greenlee was willing to make the loan? That was talking
+business; and Mr. Strumley with the securities would call in two hours
+for the cash. That would give Mr. Greenlee ample time in which to get it
+from his bank--the Commercial.
+
+When outside Mr. Strumley allowed himself to smile. Suddenly this
+evidence of inward hilarity broadened into a heartily exploded greeting,
+as a familiar figure turned the corner and advanced directly toward him.
+It was another wealthy customer of the aforesaid bank.
+
+"I was just on my way to your office, Mr. Proctor," Paul announced
+pleasantly, at the same time cautiously drawing to one side the customer
+of the Commercial. "I intend investing heavily in real estate," he
+vouchsafed with admirable sang-froid; "and need, right away, in spot
+cash, about thirty thousand dollars. Have you got that much to spare at
+8 per cent., on first class security?"
+
+Eight per cent! Mr. Proctor's expression expanded. He made his living by
+lending money for much less. If dear Mr. Strumley would call at his
+office within two hours he should have it every cent--just as soon as he
+could get a check cashed at the Commercial.
+
+Next the faithful machine whirled Paul to the rooms of his staid
+attorney and general manager, Mr. John Edwards.
+
+That elderly gentleman welcomed him with his nearest approach to a
+smile. But the young man was in no mood for an elaborate exchange of
+exhilarations. Without preface he inquired the amount of his deposit
+subject to check in the Commercial Bank. Fifty thousand dollars! A most
+delightful sum. He needed it every cent within an hour. Also he wanted
+from his safe-deposit box enough A1 collateral to secure loans of twenty
+and thirty thousand, respectively. But first would Mr. Edwards kindly
+call up and get second option on all Arkansas timber lands represented
+by Haynes, Forster & Company? Mr. Strumley believed that the first
+option was held by a local party. Furthermore he knew it expired to-day;
+and had reasons to believe that a local party would not be able to take
+advantage of it, and he, Mr. Strumley, thought that he could handle the
+property to a good purpose.
+
+For the first time Mr. Edwards learned that his young client had a will
+of his own. After a few fruitless exhortations he rose to obey, but
+remarking: "Right much money in these hard times to withdraw in a lump
+from the bank." Then, with a sidelong glance at the grave, boyish face,
+he added significantly: "Know you would not do anything to jeopardize
+Mr. Stokes's financial standing."
+
+"Oh, a bagatelle like that wouldn't embarrass as shrewd and resourceful
+a business man as he," assured Paul breezily.
+
+"Money is pretty tight," mused the lawyer. But he called up Haynes,
+Forster & Company without further remonstrances and afterward went out
+to perform his commissions. Soon Mr. Strumley lighted a cigar and
+followed. There would be something doing in the way of entertainment
+presently in the neighborhood of the musty old Commercial Bank.
+
+In front of that institution he had the good fortune to meet the town
+miser, who seldom strayed far from the portals behind which reposed his
+hoard. Mr. Strumley halted to liberally wish the local celebrity an
+abundance of good health and many days of prosperity. Incidentally he
+noted through the massive doors that his three cash-seeking friends were
+in the line before the paying teller's window, the lawyer being last
+and Mr. Greenlee first. When the latter came out, still busily trying to
+cram the packages of bills properly in the satchel he carried, Paul
+remarked confidentially to his companion:
+
+"Must be something doing to-day. The big guns are drawing all of theirs
+out."
+
+The old fellow gave a start as the suggestion shot home. Before Paul
+could nurse it further, he had sprinted off up the street like mad,
+chattering to himself about the desirability of returning immediately
+with his certificates of deposit.
+
+It is an old adage that no one knows the genesis of a "run on the bank."
+Maybe Mr. Strumley was the exception which proves the validity of the
+rule. At any rate he considered with large satisfaction the magical
+gathering of a panic-inoculated crowd, which, sans courage, sans reason,
+sans everything but a thirst for the touch of their adored cash,
+clamored loudly, despairingly, for the instant return of their dearly
+beloved.
+
+At last through the meshes of the mad throng appeared the shiny pate of
+Mr. John Edwards. He uttered an exclamation of relief at the sight of
+his calm client.
+
+"Hope you got it before the storm broke?" Mr. Strumley greeted amiably.
+
+"S-s-sh!" cautioned the attorney dramatically. "I was about to go in
+search of you." Then he added in even a lower key: "Mr. Stokes asked me
+to persuade you not to withdraw the money until he had had a chance to
+get the flurry well in hand."
+
+"But the money is mine, and I want it now," expostulated the young man.
+
+"Come with me, please, and listen to reason," beseeched the lawyer,
+drawing him resolutely in the direction of a side entrance. "It would be
+a dire misfortune, sir, a calamity to the community, if the bank were
+forced to close its doors. So far, however, it is only the small
+depositors who are clamoring; but the others will quickly enough follow
+if you do not let your fifty thousand remain to help wipe out this
+first rush. The bank, though, is as sound as a dollar."
+
+In another instant they were through the door, and before Mr. Strumley
+could reply, for the second time that morning he stood in the presence
+of Bettina's father.
+
+"As Mr. Edwards will tell you," explained Paul, unable altogether to
+suppress his nervousness, "I hold second option for to-day on large
+timber tracts in Arkansas, represented by Messrs. Haynes, Forster &
+Company. The first option, I was advised, will expire at two o'clock;
+and my party was of the belief it would not be closed. It is a big deal,
+Mr. Stokes,"--Mr. Stokes winced perceptibly--"and I was extremely
+anxious to swing it, because--er--well, because it's my first big
+venture and much depends on its success."
+
+"Yes," mused Mr. Stokes sadly, "it is quite probable the first option
+may be allowed to lapse, and I understand good money is to be made in
+Arkansas timber." His face had grown a trifle ashy. "Of course, this
+being the case, I feel in honor bound, Mr. Strumley, to instantly recall
+my request."
+
+Paul gave a gasp of admiration. He was glad Bettina's father was "game."
+So was Bettina. In the up-boiling of his feelings he emphatically vetoed
+the determination of the banker. Indeed, so well and eloquently did he
+argue for the retention and use of his funds by the Commercial, that
+even the self-effacing man of "deals" could not resist the onslaught. He
+rose with unconcealed emotion and grasped the hand of the young man
+whose generosity would save the credit of the old financial institution.
+
+Later, flushed with victory, Mr. Strumley returned to the cushions of
+his touring car; and the jubilantly chugging machine whizzed him off in
+the direction where, surrounded by cash, awaited the 8 per cent.
+expectations of Messrs. Proctor and Greenlee. Later still he descended
+with said cash upon the offices of Haynes, Forster & Company. And even
+later, after an exhilarating spin in the country, he arrived safe and
+blithesome at his well-appointed rooms in the Hotel Fulton, ready to
+remove with good soap and pure aqua the stains of mart and road before
+calling on Miss Bettina Stokes.
+
+The first thing that attracted his eyes on entering his little sitting
+room was a neatly wrapped parcel on the table. On the top of it reclined
+a dainty, snowy envelope. Mr. Strumley approached suspiciously. Then he
+recognized the handwriting and uttered an exclamation of joy. It was
+from Bettina.
+
+In the short time he held the missive poised reverently in his hand Paul
+permitted a glow of satisfaction to permeate his being. He had done well
+and was justly entitled to a moment of self laudation. Mr.
+Stokes--Bettina's father--would no longer be against him, for who could
+not say he was not capable of competing in the world-arena with
+full-grown, gladiatorial intellects? He had even successfully crossed
+blades with Mr. Stokes's own best brand of Damascene gray matter. And he
+had won the fray, for the everlasting good and happiness of all parties
+concerned. In anticipation he already felt himself thrilling proudly
+beneath the crown of Bettina's love and her father's benediction.
+
+The crackle of the delicate linen beneath his grasp brought him sweetly
+back to the real. What delicious token could Bettina be sending him? Of
+course her father had told her all. How happy she, too, must be! Mr.
+Strumley broke the seal of the envelope and read:
+
+"MR. PAUL STRUMLEY,
+City.
+
+"DEAR SIR:
+
+ "I herewith return your letters, photographs, etc. Papa has told me
+ all. It was at first impossible to believe you capable of taking such
+ a base advantage of my confidence about the Arkansas option; but I am
+ at last thoroughly convinced that you incited the run on the bank to
+ embarrass poor papa and compel him to let the deal fall into your
+ traitorous hands. And the by-play of yours in returning the money you
+ did not really need, though it has completely deceived him, has in
+ my eyes only added odium to your treachery. I trust that I have made
+ it quite clear that in the future we can meet only as strangers.
+
+"BETTINA STOKES."
+
+Mr. Strumley let the letter slip unnoticed through his palsied fingers.
+He sat down with heavy stupefaction. So this was the sud-spray of his
+beautiful bubble? It was incomprehensible! Bettina! Bettina! Oh, how
+could she? Where was her faith? No small voice answered from within the
+depths of his breast; and Mr. Strumley got clumsily to his feet. He was
+painfully conscious that he must do something--think something. But what
+was he to do? What was he to think? Could he ever make her understand?
+Make her believe? At least he could go and try.
+
+Mr. Strumley finished his toilet nervously; and repaired to the home of
+Bettina, to cast his hope on the waters of her faith and charity. The
+butler courteously informed him that she was "not in." But Mr. Stokes
+was in the library. Would Mr. Strumley like to see him? Mr. Strumley
+thought not.
+
+It was a bad night for Paul. From side to side he tossed in search of
+inspiration. Day came; and he rolled wearily over to catch the first
+beams of the gladsome spring sunshine. From its torrid home ninety-three
+million miles afar it hurried to his bedside. It shimmered in his face
+and laughed with warm invigoration into the torpid cells of his brain.
+It awakened them, filled them with new life, hope--inspiration!
+
+Mr. Strumley leaped from his bed to the bath-tub, and fluttered
+frolicsomely in the crystal tide. When he sprang out there was the flush
+of vigorous young manhood on his skin and the glow of an expectant
+lover's ardency in his breast. Everything was arranged satisfactorily in
+the space beneath Mr. Strumley's water-tousled hair, wherein sat the
+goddess of human happiness--reason.
+
+Mr. Strumley, after a hurried stop-over at the office of his astounded
+charge d'affaires, reached the Commercial Bank before the messenger
+boys. While waiting in the balm of the spring morning for the doors to
+open he circumnavigated the block nine times--he counted them. Coming
+in on the last tack he sighted the portly form of the banker careening
+with dignified speed around the corner. Another instant he had crossed
+the mat and disappeared into his financial harbor. Mr. Strumley steered
+rapidly in his wake.
+
+Again he stood in the presence of Bettina's father. This time, however,
+he was calm. In fact, the atmosphere about the two men was heavily
+charged with the essence of good fellowship. Mr. Stokes held out his
+hand cordially. The younger man pressed its broad palm with almost
+filial veneration. He noted, too, with a slight touch of remorse, that
+the banker's countenance was harassed. Evidently his heart still ached
+for the lost Arkansas timber. Mr. Strumley smiled philanthropically.
+
+He had something to say to Mr. Stokes, and began to say it with the easy
+enunciation of one who rests confident in the sunshine of righteousness.
+He spoke evenly, fluently. Of course Mr. Stokes at first might be a
+trifle perplexed. But please bear with him, hear him through, then he
+himself should be the sole judge.
+
+He, Mr. Strumley, did not care a rap--no, not a single rap, for every
+tree that grew in the entire state of Arkansas. What he wanted to do was
+to show Mr. Stokes--Bettina's father--that he was worth the while. That
+is, he wanted to demonstrate--it was a good word--to demonstrate that he
+had brains in his cranium as good as many another variety that boasted a
+trade mark of wider popularity. Had he done it? And if what he had done
+did not concur with the elements of high finance, he would like Mr.
+Stokes--Bettina's father--to tell him what it did concur with. Now,
+there was the whole story from its incipiency. And as conclusive proof
+that he did not mean to profit by the deal financially, would Mr. Stokes
+kindly examine those papers?
+
+Mr. Stokes looked at the documents tossed on the desk before him; and
+saw that they were several warranty deeds, conveying to Richard Stokes,
+his heirs and assigns forever, all titles and claims of all kinds
+whatsoever in certain therein-after described tracts or parcels of land
+in the state of Arkansas, for value received.
+
+Mr. Strumley leaned back and contentedly watched a flush overspread the
+banker's face. His automobile waited at the door to whisk him to
+Bettina, and he was ready to carry on the campaign there the moment her
+father had finished his effusions of gratitude. Meanwhile the flush
+deepened; and, all impatience to fly to his lady-love, Paul egged on the
+speech.
+
+"You will note, Mr. Stokes," he volunteered, "that the price is exactly
+the same you had proposed paying. At your convenience, of course, you
+can remit this amount to my attorney, Mr. Edwards."
+
+Mr. Stokes rose slowly. The flush had become apoplectic.
+
+"Mr. Strumley," he began, his large voice trembling, "this trick of
+yours is unworthy of an honorable man. Here, sir, take these papers and
+leave my office immediately."
+
+Mr. Strumley rose also. Like the banker's voice, he, too, was trembling.
+
+"But, sir----" he commenced to expostulate.
+
+"Go!" thundered the father of Bettina.
+
+Dazed, confused by the suddenness of the blast, Paul groped his way
+through the bank to the refuge of his car. Mechanically he put one hand
+on the lever and glanced ahead for obstacles. Crossing the street, not
+twenty yards ahead, tripped the most dangerous one conceivable--the
+beautiful Bettina herself!
+
+Mr. Strumley's hand fell limply to his knee. Fascinated he watched her
+reach the curb and with a little skip spring to the pavement. Then she
+came straight toward him; but he could see she was blissfully oblivious
+of his nearness. Suddenly an odd wave of emotion surged through his
+brain. His heart leaped with primitive savagery of love, and every fibre
+in him rebelled fiercely against the decrees and limitations of modern
+courtship. He had failed in the game as governed and modified by the
+rules of polite society and high finance. The primogenital man-spirit in
+him cried out for its inning. Mr. Strumley, as umpire, hearkened to its
+clamor.
+
+"Bettina!" he called, as that young lady came calmly abreast of the car,
+"wait a moment. I must speak with you."
+
+She started with a half-frightened exclamation; but met his look, at
+first defiantly, scornfully, then hesitatingly, faltering as she tried
+to take another step onward.
+
+"Bettina!" Mr. Strumley's voice vibrated determinedly, "I said I wished
+to speak with you. I can explain--everything."
+
+She halted reluctantly, and partly turned. In a moment he was at her
+side, his hand upon her arm. His glance had in it all the compelling
+strength of unadulterated, pristine manhood. She seemed to feel its
+potency, and without remonstrance suffered him to lead her toward the
+machine.
+
+For a moment, for a single moment, Mr. Strumley was exhilaratingly
+conscious of being borne aloft on a great wave of victorious gladness.
+Then the waters of triumph let him down with a shock.
+
+"Bettina!"
+
+At the word they both pivoted like pieces of automata. Mr. Stokes, large
+and severe, was standing between the portals of his financial
+fortification.
+
+"Bettina!" His voice was almost irresistible in the force of its
+parental summons.
+
+At the sound of it the primeval lover, newly renascent in Mr. Strumley's
+breast, cowed before the power of genitorial insistency. Then it came
+back into its own exultantly.
+
+"Bettina, my darling, get in," he commanded.
+
+She faltered, turned rebelliously, turned again and obeyed.
+
+"Bettina!" The voice of the childless banker faded off in the distance,
+its last echo drowned in the full-throated: "Bettina, we are going to be
+married at once," that broke joyously from Mr. Strumley's lips. "I have
+followed the example of the Romans, and taken me a wife from the
+Sabines."
+
+Bettina peeped up at him from beneath the dark screens of her lashes.
+"Then I, like the wise Sabian ladies, shall save the day for peace and
+for Rome," she smiled archly.
+
+And the machine laughed "Chug-chug!"
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+THE JAM GOD
+
+A Tale of Nigeria
+
+By H.M. EGBERT
+
+
+LIEUTENANT PETERS, of the Royal Nigerian Service, was lying upon the
+ground face downward, under a prickly tree. The sun was nearly vertical,
+and the little round shadow in which he reclined was interlaced with
+streaks of hot light. As the sun moved, Peters rolled into the shade
+automatically. His eyes were shut, and he was in that hot borderland
+which is the nearest approach to sleep at noontide in Nigeria.
+
+The flies were pestering him, and he was thirsty--not with that thirst
+of the mouth which may be quenched with a long draught, but with the
+thirst of the throat that sands and sears. He felt thirsty all over. He
+had been thirsty, like this, ever since he struck the bend of the Niger.
+What made it worse, every night he dreamed of fruits that were snatched
+away, like the food of Tantalus, as he approached to grasp them. Two
+nights before he had been wandering knee-deep in English strawberry
+beds; the night before he had been shaking down limes and oranges from
+groves of trees set with green leaves and studded with golden fruit.
+Once he had dreamed of a new fruit, a cross between a pear and a
+watermelon; but when he cut into it he found nothing but hard, small
+seeds, with a pineapple flavor, which he detested.
+
+Peters was dreaming now, for he twined his fingers in the long grass and
+tossed uneasily.
+
+"I'll pick them all," he muttered sleepily. "All mixed together, with
+ten or twelve pounds of damp, brown sugar, and boiled into jam."
+
+He woke and felt his teeth for the hundredth time, to note whether any
+untoward looseness betokened the advent of the dreaded scurvy.
+Reassured, he stretched his limbs and rolled over into the shade of the
+tree.
+
+"When I get back to a white man's country," he murmured--"when I get
+home to England what is it I am going to do? Why, I shall go into a
+restaurant and order some rich brown soup. Then I shall have _pate de
+foie gras_ sandwiches. Then scrambled eggs, chocolate, and muffins
+buttered with whipped cream. Then half a dozen cans of jam. I shall
+either begin with strawberry and conclude with apricot, or else I shall
+begin with apricot and wind up with raspberry. It doesn't matter much;
+any kind of jam will do except pineapple."
+
+He opened his eyes, brushed away the flies that swarmed noisily round
+him, took out his hard-tack, and opened a small can of dried beef. He
+munched for a while, sipping occasionally from the tepid water in his
+canteen. When he had finished he put the can-opener back in the pocket
+of his tunic and rose, his face overspread with a look of resolution.
+
+"I believe," he cried, "I believe that I could eat even a can of
+pineapple!"
+
+He rose, the light of his illusion still in his eyes, and began
+staggering weakly under the blazing sun in the direction of his camp. He
+was weaker than he had thought, and when he reached the shelter of his
+tent he sank down exhausted upon the bed. Through the open flap he could
+see, five hundred yards away, the round, beehive-shaped huts of the
+native village and, in their centre, the square palace of King
+Mtetanyanga, built of sticks and Niger mud, surrounded by its stockade,
+the royal flag, a Turkish bath-towel stained yellow and blue, floating
+proudly above.
+
+Lieutenant Peters had been sent by the Nigerian Government along the
+upper Niger to conclude treaties with the different kings and sweep them
+within the British sphere of interest. The French were out upon a
+similar errand, for in this region the two nations possessed only a
+vague and very indeterminate boundary line. Peters had been successful
+until he came to the village of King Mtetanyanga, who had balked at
+affixing his cross to the piece of mysterious parchment on the ground
+that it was unlawful to do so during the festival of the great Ju-Ju,
+whose worshipers could be heard wailing and beating tom-toms nightly in
+some unknown part of the jungle. What this Ju-Ju fetish was nobody could
+tell; it had come into the village recently, from the coast, men
+whispered; it possessed awful and mysterious potency; was guarded
+zealously by some score of priests, who veiled its awful vision; and it
+was the greatest Ju-Ju for hundreds of miles along the Niger, tribes
+from distant regions frequently arriving to sacrifice pigs to it.
+
+However, Lieutenant Raguet, the French commissioner, had been equally
+unsuccessful in inducing the dusky monarch to affix his signature to the
+French treaty, and the ambassadors of the rival nations were both
+encamped near the village, waiting for the Ju-Ju festivities to reach
+their plethoric conclusion before the king sobered up and attended to
+business.
+
+Raguet, strolling into his rival's camp that evening, found Peters in
+his tent, flushed, and breathing heavily.
+
+"Tcht! tcht! you are seeck," said the Frenchman sympathetically. "That
+ees too bad. Have you quinine?"
+
+"Quinine be hanged," cried Peters huskily. "I've taken the stuff until
+I've floated in it. There's only one thing can cure me, Raguet. I've
+been living on crackers and canned beef for over a month, and I'm pining
+for jam. Have you got any jam?"
+
+"Dsham, dsham?" repeated Raguet with a puzzled expression.
+
+"Yes, les preserves--le fruit et le sugar, bouilli--you know what I
+mean."
+
+"Ah, ze preserve!" said the Frenchman, with an expression of
+enlightenment. "Ze preserve, I have him not."
+
+"I tell you what, Raguet," said Peters irritably, "I've got to get some
+jam somewhere or I shall kick the bucket. I'm craving for it, man. If I
+had one can of the stuff it would put me upon my feet instantly, I can
+feel it. Now it's ten to one I'll be too sick to see the king after the
+ceremonies are over, and he'll sign your treaty instead of mine. And
+I've given him three opera hats, a phonograph, and a gallon of rum,
+curse the luck! What did you give him, Raguet?"
+
+"Me? I give him a umbrella with ze gold embroider," the Frenchman
+answered.
+
+"My government won't let me give the little kings umbrellas," said
+Peters in vexation. "It makes the big chiefs jealous. I say, Raguet," he
+rambled on, sitting up dizzily, "what is this Ju-Ju idol of theirs?"
+
+"I know not," said the French lieutenant. "Only ze king and ze priests
+have seen him. If zey tell, zey die--ze idol keel zem."
+
+"I suppose they'll be keeping up these infernal tom-toms for another
+week," grumbled the sick man, lying back and half closing his eyes from
+weariness. "Well, I'll have to try to get well in time."
+
+The Frenchman resisted the impulse to leap back in surprise, but his
+eyes narrowed till they were slits in his face. So! This Englishman did
+not know that this had been the last day of the sacrifices, that at
+midnight a hecatomb of pigs was to be killed and eaten in the bush in
+honor of the Ju-Ju. Nor that the king, when he had broached and drunk
+the cask of rum, would be in a mood to discuss the treaty. Peters
+evidently was unaware how much his majesty had been affronted by his
+failure to present him with an umbrella. La! la! Fortune was evidently
+upon his side. All this flashed through the Frenchman's mind in an
+instant. A solitary chuckle escaped him, but he turned it into an
+exclamation of grief, sighed deeply, seated himself upon the bed, and
+kissed Peters affectionately on either cheek.
+
+"My Peters, my poor friend," he began, "you must not theenk of leaving
+your tent for ze next two, t'ree days. Ze fever, he is very bad onless
+you receive him in bed. I shall take care of you."
+
+"You're a good fellow, Raguet," said Peters, wiping his face
+surreptitiously with the backs of his hands. When his visitor had left
+he turned over and sank into a half-delirious doze that lasted until the
+sun sank with appalling suddenness, and night rushed over the land.
+Tossing upon his bed, all through the velvet darkness he was dimly
+conscious, through his delirious dreams, of tom-toms beaten in the bush.
+His throat was parched, and in his dreams he drank greedily from his
+canteen; but each time that he awoke he saw it hanging empty from the
+tent flap. Presently a large, bright, yellow object rose up in front of
+him. Greedily he set his teeth into it; and even as he did so it
+disappeared, and he awoke, gasping and choking under the broiling
+blackness.
+
+"I'll have to take that canteen down to the stream and fill it," he
+muttered, rising unsteadily and proceeding toward the bank. To his
+surprise he found that rain had fallen. He was treading in ooze, which
+rose higher and higher until it clogged his footsteps. He struggled, but
+now it held him fast, and he was sinking slowly, but persistently, now
+to the waist, now to the shoulders. Frantically he thrust his hands
+downward to free himself, and withdrew them sticky with--jam! He scooped
+up great handsful greedily; and even as he raised it to his mouth it
+vanished, and he awoke once more in his tent.
+
+He flung himself out of bed with an oath, took down his canteen, and
+started toward the river. The noise of the tom-toms was louder than
+ever, proceeding, apparently, from some point in the bush a little to
+the left of the king's palace. Scrambling and struggling through the
+thorn thickets, he reached the sandy bed of the stream, filled his
+water-bottle at a pool, and drank greedily.
+
+It was that still hour of night when the many-voiced clamor of the bush
+grows hushed, because the lions are coming down to drink at the waters.
+The rising moon threw a pale light over the land. The tom-toms were
+still resounding in the bush, but to Peters's distorted mind they took
+on the sound of ripe mangoes falling to the ground and bursting open as
+they struck the soil. He counted, "one, two, three," and waited. He
+counted again. There must be thousands of them. Peters began to edge
+his way through the reeds in the direction of the sound. After a while
+he came to a wall of rocks perpendicular and almost insurmountable. He
+paused and considered, licking his lips greedily as the thud, thud
+continued, now, apparently, directly in front of him. All at once his
+eyes, curiously sensitive to external impressions, discovered a little,
+secret trail between two boulders. He followed it; a great stone
+revolved at his touch, and he found himself inside the sacred groves. He
+went on, gulping greedily in anticipation of the feast which awaited
+him.
+
+Suddenly he stopped short. He had seen something that brought back to
+him with a rush the realization of his whereabouts. Seated in the
+shelter of a cactus tree, not fifty yards away, was King Mtetanyanga,
+wearing his three opera hats, one upon another, in the form of a triple
+crown, and drinking his own rum with Raguet, under the shade of Raguet's
+umbrella. Prone at their feet crouched Tom, the interpreter.
+
+"His Majesty say, 'How you fix him Ju-Ju?'" translated Tom.
+
+"Tell His Majesty, my Ju-Ju stronger than the Englishman's Ju-Ju,"
+answered the Frenchman. "My Ju-Ju eat up his Ju-Ju. He very sick. If I
+choose, he die."
+
+"Ugh!" grunted the king, when this explanation was vouchsafed,
+apparently impressed.
+
+"Tell His Majesty my Ju-Ju stronger than his own Ju-Ju. If he no sign
+treaty, eat up his Ju-Ju," Raguet went on.
+
+A flow of language came from the king's lips.
+
+"His Majesty say, he bring his Ju-Ju, see whose greater," said the
+interpreter.
+
+Vaguely aware that treachery was impending, but crazed now by the
+falling mangoes, Peters left them palavering and followed the trail. All
+at once he emerged into a tiny clearing and stood blinking at a fire,
+round which a group of men--priests, as he knew, from their buffalo
+horns and crane feathers--were reclining, hammering upon tom-toms and
+shouting in various stages of intoxication. The firelight blinded their
+eyes. Peters stood still uncertainly. Then his eyes fell upon a
+sawed-off tree-trunk, in the hollow of which lay something wrapped in a
+white cloth, surrounded with snake-skins. He had come by this secret
+road into the actual presence of the great Ju-Ju.
+
+Curiously he inserted his hand, lifted the object out, and examined it.
+Inside was something of a strange, yet familiar shape, oval, and
+flattened at the ends. He lifted it out of its wrappings, and there, in
+his hand, he saw a can, bearing the legend:
+
+ GREENAWAY'S BEST JAM.
+
+He looked at it in solemn and holy meditation; then, sitting down, he
+drew the can-opener from his tunic and wiped it clean upon his sleeve.
+
+After awhile a babel of sound broke in upon his ears. Men had come
+running up, brandishing spears, stopped, flung themselves upon the
+ground prostrate in front of him. The priests were there, frantically
+abasing themselves; Mtetanyanga, his opera hats rolling, unheeded, on
+the ground. Their cries ceased; they veiled their eyes. Then from the
+dust came the feeble tones of the interpreter.
+
+"His Majesty say, you eat him Ju-Ju--yours greatest Ju-Ju, he want to
+sign treaty."
+
+But Peters, waving the empty can over his head, shouted:
+
+"I've eaten jam, I've eaten jam! It's pineapple--and I don't care!"
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+WHEN FATHER WORKED
+
+A Suburban Story
+
+By CHARLTON LAWRENCE EDHOLM
+
+
+ "H'everybody works but Fadher,
+ H'and 'e sets 'round h'all diy----"
+
+THUS in chorus shrilled the infant Cadges like the morning stars singing
+together, but still more like the transplanted little cockneys they
+were.
+
+The placid brow of Mr. Thomas Cadge was darkened with disapproval, he
+shifted his stubby brier pipe to the other corner of his mouth, edged a
+little from his seat on the sunny front stoop and, craning his neck
+around the corner of his house, revealed an unwashed area extending from
+collarbone to left ear.
+
+"Shet up, you kids!" he barked. "Wot for? Becos I say so, that's why. I
+don't like that song, 'taint fit for Sunday."
+
+With a soothing consciousness that he had upheld the sacred character of
+the Sabbath, Mr. Cadge settled back to the comfort of his sun-bath and
+smoke. But he had scarcely emitted three puffs before the piping voice
+of Arabella Cadge was again wafted to his ears. She sang solo this time,
+and the selection was of a semi-devotional nature, more in keeping with
+the day:
+
+ "Oh fadher, dear fadher, come 'ome wid me now,
+ De clock on de steeple strikes----"
+
+"Shet up, drat you!" again commanded her parent. "If I has to get up and
+go arter you----"
+
+The balance of this direful threat may never be known, for at that
+moment Mr. Job Snavely, garbed in the black broadcloth which he wore one
+day out of seven, paused in front of Mr. Cadge's door and bade him good
+morning.
+
+"Mornin'," responded the ruffled father.
+
+"Your little girl is quite a song bird," continued Mr. Snavely, with his
+usual facility in making well-meant small-talk more irritating than a
+hurled brick.
+
+"She sings too much," commented Mr. Cadge, shortly, "I likes people wot
+knows when to 'old their tongues."
+
+"Very true, very true!" amiably replied Mr. Snavely, "but for all that,
+there is nothing sweeter than the artless babble of babes; I declare it
+almost brought the tears to my eyes when I heard them prattling,
+'Everybody works but father,' it is so very, very appro----"
+
+Mr. Snavely checked himself abruptly, for the light in the small, green
+eyes of Thomas Cadge was baleful, and his square jaw protruded
+menacingly. The kindly critic of music had a vague feeling that the
+subject might be changed to advantage.
+
+"Been to church this morning, I suppose?" he inquired briskly with the
+assurance of a man just returning from that duty.
+
+"No I 'asn't," retorted Cadge, "and wot's more the old woman 'asn't, and
+the kids 'asn't neither. 'Cos why? 'Cos in this 'ere free country of
+yours, a laboring man can't make a living for 'is family, workin' 'ard
+as I does, Sundays, nights, and h'all the time. The missus and the kids
+stays from church 'cos their duds ain't fit, and I stays 'ome 'cos I've
+got to work like a slave to pay you for seven dollars' worth of spoiled
+vegetables and mouldy groceries. That's the reason I works on Sundays,
+if you've got to know."
+
+"Work on Sundays!" gasped the grocer. "Work! work?" and he stared at the
+reclining figure of Mr. Cadge in unfeigned astonishment.
+
+"Yes, work. This 'ere construction company wot's doing the job of
+grading this vacant block, employs me to sort of look after things,
+their shovels, scoops, and the like. A kind of private police officer,
+I am," he concluded, drawing himself up a little and puffing into the
+air.
+
+"And when are you on duty?" asked Mr. Snavely.
+
+"Nights," replied Cadge, "nights and Sundays, when the tools ain't in
+use."
+
+"I hope they pay you well for it?"
+
+"Ah, but they don't. 'Ow much do you think I get for stayin' awake
+nights and doin' without my church on Sunday? Three measly dollars a
+week and the rent of this 'ere 'ouse, if you can call it a 'ouse."
+
+It would have been difficult to determine just what name to give the
+residence of Mr. Thomas Cadge. It would hardly be called a cottage,
+though not because it was more spacious than the name implied; nor was
+it a piano-box, in spite of the fact that a piano would have fitted
+snugly within its walls, for no manufacturer would have trusted a
+valuable instrument in so flimsy a shell. It was not a real-estate
+office, as the sign which decorated its entire front proclaimed it to
+be, for through a jagged hole in the window facing the street projected
+a rusty iron stovepipe, which was wired to the facade of the building,
+and emitted the sooty smoke that had almost totally obscured and
+canceled the legend, "Suburban Star Realty Syndicate."
+
+Moreover, a litter of tin cans, impartially distributed at the front and
+back doors, indicated the domestic use to which this temporary office
+had been put. A smell of steaming suds that pervaded the place likewise
+indicated the manner in which Mrs. Cadge eked out her lord's stipend.
+This impression was confirmed by the chorus of irrepressible little
+Cadges proclaiming:
+
+ "Mother tikes in washin',
+ H'and so does sister h'Ann,
+ H'everybody works at our 'ouse,
+ But my old----"
+
+--a burst of melody which was abruptly checked with a tomato can hurled
+like a hand-grenade by their unmusical father.
+
+"Look here, Cadge," said Mr. Snavely, with the air of proprietorship one
+adopts to hopeless debtors, "three dollars a week is not going to keep
+your family, to say nothing of paying up that seven dollars. I can't
+carry you forever, you know. Why don't you get a daylight job?"
+
+"Ah, that is easy enough said," protested that injured individual.
+"'Aven't I tramped the streets day after day, lookin' for work?"
+
+"Them as 'as a good paying business don't know wot it means to look for
+a job," pursued Cadge bitterly.
+
+"Yes they do," asserted the grocer cheerfully. "I was given work at
+sweeping floors in the very store I now own. The fact is, I am sorry for
+you, Cadge, and I have been looking around to get you a job."
+
+Mr. Cadge seemed depressed.
+
+"And I am glad to say," chirruped Mr. Snavely, "that I have found a
+small piece of work for you, which will be worth a dollar and a half a
+day."
+
+Cadge's brow was still gloomy.
+
+"Of course, it is real work," added his kind-hearted creditor, briskly,
+"no sitting in the sun and watching other people's shovels; but a
+customer of mine, a widow lady, that lives along Catnip Creek, wants a
+man to pile up a wall of loose stones to keep her land from washing away
+in high water."
+
+Thomas Cadge shook his head with the air of Caesar virtuously refusing
+the crown.
+
+"No, no, Snavely, it wouldn't do," he said. "I can see that it would
+interfere with my present h'occupation, and I can't afford to risk
+losing this 'ere job. Supposin' my family was to be turned out of
+doors!"
+
+"Nonsense! It will only take you about four days to build the wall, and
+at one-fifty per day, that will be six dollars, twice your week's wages
+right there, and almost enough to pay what you owe me."
+
+"I am afraid it can't be done, Snavely; the company might not like it;
+you see, I would be competing with them, that's their line."
+
+"They wouldn't handle so small a job. You know that, Cadge."
+
+"Yes, but a man can't draw pay for two positions at once; 't ain't
+honest."
+
+"Why, this is not a regular situation," protested the upright Snavely,
+who saw his bill still unpaid; "you could work on it at odd times if you
+like. She'll pay you by the piece, I am pretty sure, and you will get
+your six dollars cash when the wall is done."
+
+The furtive eyes of the hunter of work avoided those of his benefactor.
+He was pondering a new excuse when he happened to notice Master Cadge,
+aged nine, Thomas Cadge, Jr., aged eight, and Arabella Cadge, whose
+years were six, busily constructing a fort of cobblestones, and an idea
+struck him.
+
+"Very well," he said, loftily waving his pipe, "I'll drop in Monday and
+talk this over with you, Snavely. Then if the job suits me I may take
+it. I don't like to talk business on Sunday, you know."
+
+Thus rebuked, Mr. Snavely resumed his homeward way.
+
+The following Monday Cadge overslept; Tuesday found him with a headache
+as a result, which by Wednesday had settled in a tooth; Thursday he felt
+so much better that he feared to do anything which might check his
+convalescence; Friday was an unlucky day, but so desirous was he of work
+that he manfully conquered his superstitious qualms and strolled over to
+the little shop where Mr. Job Snavely dealt in groceries and vegetables.
+
+The details regarding the work were furnished with cheerful alacrity,
+the tradesman going so far as to accompany his protege to the home of
+their patron, Mrs. Pipkin, a withered little lady who lived with her
+cats on the bank of the creek.
+
+The work to be performed demanded more brawn than brain and no vast
+amount of either. All that was required was to pile up the boulders and
+cobblestones which littered the bed of the stream, as a rough,
+unmortared wall, along the sloping bank of Mrs. Pipkin's property.
+
+It was evident that Mrs. Pipkin herself had not the slightest notion of
+how much a wall should cost, as she was ignorant of the two factors
+which determined it, namely, the wages of day-laborers and the time
+required to build the wall; therefore she requested Mr. Snavely, as a
+man of affairs, to make the bargain for her.
+
+It was well that she did so, for Mr. Cadge's ideas on the subject were
+as boundless as hers were limited. Day wages, he affirmed, ranged from
+two dollars up for common labor, and as building a wall was highly
+skilled labor he thought three and a half or four dollars per diem would
+be about right, going on the basis of at least six days of eight hours
+each.
+
+Mr. Snavely, on the contrary, after looking over the ground declared
+that four days' steady work would build a wall running the entire length
+of the widow's lot. Furthermore, that a dollar and a quarter a day was
+fair wages for such employment, while laborers would scramble for the
+job at a dollar and a half. As a concession to Mr. Cadge, he was willing
+to allow him to take his own time and agreed to pay six dollars when the
+wall should be completed.
+
+Mr. Cadge waxed indignant and very voluble, while Mr. Snavely was a mild
+man of few words; but the simple laborer was no match for a man who made
+his living by small chaffering. He was forced to give in, and Saturday
+morning, bright and early, he appeared on the banks of Catnip Creek
+accompanied by Master Cadge, Thomas Cadge, Jr., and Arabella Cadge.
+
+"Daddy's going to give you kids a treat to-day," he announced. "My eye!
+wot larks we will 'ave. Nothing to do all day long but play building a
+stone fort right on the brook, and Daddy will show you 'ow to build it."
+
+The little Cadges were perfectly charmed at this condescension on the
+part of their sire, who seldom acknowledged their presence except with a
+cuff in passing. They were eager to begin, and as they had no need to
+strip their legs, which were always bare, the work proceeded apace.
+
+Cadge, Sr., ensconced himself in the sunniest nook of the bank, and
+directed his offspring what stones to select and where to place them,
+and above all, to make haste, since the enemy would soon appear to
+attack the fort.
+
+Before their Saturday holiday was over, the children had discovered that
+their father was a strenuous playfellow. In vain they suggested fishing,
+hunting Injuns, or gathering wild flowers; they had set out to build a
+fort on Catnip Creek, and build it they must.
+
+They entertained hopes of sneaking off alone when they should go home
+for lunch, but Mr. Cadge had provided for this contingency. His wife
+appeared at noon with slices of bread and butter for the Cadgelings, to
+which was added a cold beefsteak and a bucket of beer for the support of
+their house. Having already lunched at home, she was permitted to lay a
+tier of heavier stones along the wall while waiting for her family to
+finish the repast.
+
+It was an arduous day for the tribe of Cadge, excepting, of course, its
+head. Not until the first star came out and the owls began to hoot along
+the Catnip did he declare himself satisfied with the day's work and
+proceed homeward to supper. Widow Pipkin's wall was half finished.
+
+Not until Saturday was the patient father able to enlist once more the
+services of his offspring, for, "What if they are your own kids!"
+retorted Mrs. Cadge from her wash-board. "I've rubbed my 'ands raw to
+give 'em the eddication you and me lacks, and to school they go. You
+build that wall yourself, or wait until the week's end for your pay."
+
+The former alternative was not to be thought of, and the Widow Pipkin
+wondered mildly whether the half finished wall was ever to be completed.
+
+But Saturday at dawn Cadge once more appeared, driving before him three
+tear-stained and reluctant Cadgelets. They had inherited part of their
+father's disposition in regard to real work, likewise his unwillingness
+to be imposed upon. Constructing fortifications along the Catnip was
+well enough for one Saturday, but their backs still ached from their
+exertions, and they had only disdain for the restricted paternal
+imagination which suggested that this time they build stone castles.
+
+Their sire waxed eloquent over the art of castle building and the sport
+of imprisoning ogres in them, but was finally compelled to assume the
+attitude of an ogre himself, and threatened to skin them alive if they
+did not do as they were bid.
+
+It was a long, hard day for the whole Cadge family. The little Cadges
+worked like galley-slaves in fear of the lash; their mother, out of pity
+for them, laid two tiers of cobbles when she came at noon, and even
+Cadge himself was tempted on one or two occasions to descend from his
+nook and lend a hand, but restrained himself.
+
+Again the owls hooted along the stream and bullfrogs croaked from the
+reedy places. Cadge knocked the dottle out of his pipe and arose,
+stretching his short, muscular limbs, which had become cramped from
+sitting still so long.
+
+"Run along 'ome, kiddies," he said, "and tell the old woman not to wait
+supper for me. There's a man down town as wants to see me about a job.
+I'll 'ave a bite with 'im."
+
+The little Cadges disappeared in the twilight and their father presented
+himself at the Widow Pipkin's door to receive his hard-earned wages.
+
+"Oh, dear me! I can't pay you to-night," answered Mrs. Pipkin. "I never
+keep any money in the house."
+
+Cadge grumbled something about, a check would do. He was pretty sure
+that the barkeeper at Spider Grogan's place would cash it.
+
+"Oh, but mine is a savings account, and I will have to go down to the
+bank myself and get the money; but, never mind, you shall have it first
+thing Monday morning."
+
+The thirsty man could find no solution to this problem and, although he
+urged the Widow Pipkin to think of a way, as his "missus needed the
+medicine something orful," that kind-hearted old lady could suggest
+nothing more to the point than going at once with a mustard poultice to
+the sufferer.
+
+Old women are so set in their notions that the anxious husband was a
+full half hour dissuading her, and, when he reached home with both hands
+in his empty pockets, Mrs. Cadge was washing the dishes.
+
+"Did the man give you a job?" inquired his wife brightly.
+
+"Wot man? Wot job? Where's my supper?" snapped Cadge. Then, as the
+ingenious ruse occurred to him, a flood of language rose to his lips and
+would not be dammed, though everything else was.
+
+"Gone and hogged all the supper, did you!" he growled. "H'it's a nice
+state of affairs, when a man comes 'ome from a 'ard day's work to a
+h'empty table."
+
+"But it was such a little steak, Tom," urged his wife, "and the children
+were so hungry that I let them finish it."
+
+There was no money in the house, and Snavely, the only credit grocer,
+had closed his shop, so Mr. Cadge's supper that night was bread and
+cheese without kisses.
+
+Sunday was a long-remembered day of misery for Cadge's wife and
+children, who played the scapegoat for Mr. Snavely and whipping-boy for
+Mrs. Pipkin.
+
+Monday morning the head of the house arose early and, before Mrs. Pipkin
+had finished her beauty sleep, that hard-working man was at the door
+demanding his pay. An hour was all the time she required for dressing.
+Mr. Cadge wished he had broken his fast before leaving home.
+
+"Really, I don't know whether I ought to pay you," replied Widow Pipkin
+when she finally answered his last, desperate ring. "Mr. Snavely made
+the bargain, and I should like to have him see the work before settling
+with you."
+
+She jingled some silver in her plump chain purse as she spoke.
+
+Aha, the widow had deceived him! It was eight o'clock, the bank would
+not open for an hour, she had had the money in the house all the time.
+The deceitfulness of women!
+
+Mr. Cadge's blood rose to his head. His little green eyes smouldered.
+Fortunately for the widow, Mr. Snavely drove up at that moment on his
+delivery wagon, and cheerfully agreed to appraise the work.
+
+"Oh, come now, Cadge, my man, you don't call that a finished job, I
+hope? Why, it is three foot short at each end and lacks a tier at the
+top. You had better pitch in for an hour or two and make a fair job of
+it, and then you'll get your money."
+
+"Wot do you call a fair job, I should like to know?" replied the heated
+Cadge; "look at them 'ere boulders, as I fished out of the h'icy water
+at peek o' day! Look at all them little stones, h'every one of them as
+cost me backache and sweat. H'if that job ain't worth six dollars it
+ain't worth six cents."
+
+"Mebbe so, mebbe so, my good man," responded the grocer, genially, "but
+whatever it's worth, I don't pay for a job until it's finished."
+
+At this point Cadge's torrent of eloquence swept away all punctuating
+pauses and he became slightly incoherent, but the drift of his harangue
+was that because he had worked like a slave and finished the wall in two
+days they wanted to rob him of his money. "I'll 'ave the six dollars for
+my work, or I'll 'ave the lor on you," he concluded.
+
+The amiable but tactless Snavely saw a happy solution of the problem.
+"Never mind, Mrs. Pipkin," he said, "there shall be no lawsuit. You pay
+me the six dollars, and I will write Cadge a receipt for the seven
+dollars he owes me. I lose a dollar that way, to be sure, but then it is
+just the same as finding six."
+
+"Ho! that's your game is it?" snarled Cadge, gasping with indignation.
+"That's 'ow you two plot against a poor 'ard-workin' man with a family,
+to beat him out of 'is pay. H'it's a put-up job, that's wot h'it is! But
+you don't get the best of Tom Cadge that way. I'll 'ave a h'orficer 'ere
+if I don't get my money, you bloomin' old plotters, you!"
+
+"Yes, you had better call an officer," agreed Mr. Snavely. "I saw one
+around the corner as I passed; the same one your brats were pelting from
+behind a fence last week."
+
+Mr. Cadge tacked adroitly. "No, I ain't going to spend my money with the
+loryers, as'd want twelve dollars to get you back six. I'll tear down
+the wall, that's wot I'll do. If I don't get my pay the loidy don't get
+her wall, and you can tike your measly job and give it to some poor man
+wot needs it."
+
+Mr. Snavely had one foot on the wheel and swung lightly into his cart.
+"Have it your own way, Cadge," he responded cheerfully. "You can finish
+the wall and get your six dollars cash, or you can leave it as it stands
+and take my receipt for seven, or you can tear it down and have your
+labor for your pains; but mind, if the police catch you destroying
+property, you will get a month in the chain gang."
+
+"I don't care if I get sixty days!" screamed the outraged laborer. "The
+city can look after my missus and the kids if their nateral provider is
+took from them. That wall is comin' down! I'm h'only a workin'-man, and
+I don't mind bein' spit on once in a while, but I won't stand for it
+bein' rubbed in."
+
+It was a sultry June day, the first of the summer vacation, and toward
+noon Mrs. Cadge set out to take her husband a bite of lunch. The little
+Cadges accompanied her, eager to exhibit the noble castle which they had
+completed on Catnip Creek. When they came to that charming stream, their
+eyes flew open in amazement and their jaws dropped.
+
+"Why, mamma, look at daddy!" they cried in unison. "Daddy's workin'!"
+
+Incredible though it seemed, it was true indeed. Father worked. Mrs.
+Cadge wondered whether she, too, was to have a vacation, after her years
+of drudgery.
+
+Cadge worked furiously, his rage uncooled by the waters of the Catnip
+which flowed through his shoes. He had discarded coat, vest, and hat,
+and was hurling rocks with the strength of a maddened giant, clear
+across the stream. What splendid muscles he had!
+
+A tier or two of Mrs. Pipkin's wall was already down. The telephone
+within her cottage was ringing madly.
+
+Even as the Cadgelings watched their parent sweating at his toil, a
+blue-coated figure ran swiftly down the bank, caught the hard-working
+man by the collar, and firmly led him away to where steady work awaited
+him.
+
+Mrs. Cadge watched him go with mingled feelings. She had seen him depart
+thus before, and remembered how much easier it was that month to feed
+four mouths instead of five. Besides, the exercise on the rock pile
+would do him good, poor man. A night-watchman's position was so
+confining.
+
+Mr. Snavely had driven up to the curb, and the Widow Pipkin ran out all
+of a flutter. They sympathetically related to Mrs. Cadge the events of
+the morning which had led to her husband's arrest.
+
+"And there was only an hour's work to be done on the job," said Mr.
+Snavely judicially.
+
+"I would gladly pay six dollars cash to have it just as it was this
+morning," added the tremulous Widow Pipkin, "and I'd make it ten if it
+were done as Mr. Snavely says."
+
+"And I'd still be willing to write a receipt for the full seven dollars
+for six dollars cash," interposed that astute philanthropist.
+
+Mrs. Cadge's shrewd, birdlike eyes were half closed in mental
+computation; ten dollars for the wall and one dollar discount on the
+grocery bill, that would make eleven dollars clear.
+
+"Come along, kiddies," she said, "you and me will pitch in and finish
+that wall to the queen's taste in an hour or two!" And she did.
+
+Eleven dollars clear, and the watchman's pay still going on, Cadge on
+the rock pile, hence the biggest mouth of the family fed by the city.
+Indeed, indeed, the little Cadges were not the only ones who enjoyed a
+vacation when father worked!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Golden Stories, by Various
+
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